It’s been the most amplified four
days of my life.
I used to think I was fearless.
Then I watched my wife endure twenty one hours of contractions and fight her
way through an hour and a half of pushing to bring our little baby into the
world. To say I was “afraid” during labor would be like saying I was “happy”
after delivery. Imagining the multitude of birth related complications that
might arise and endanger my wife’s health, all of which were theoretically
possible but statistically improbable, I was terrified. I experienced fear,
true fear, for the first time in as long as I can remember.
I used to think I was graceful
under pressure, level-headed and resourceful when sh*t hit the fan. That
fantasy lies in a million little pieces on the floor of the hospital recovery
room. The helplessness I felt that first night with our baby girl, not being
able to console her as she seemed to struggle with her little breaths, was so
foreign yet so intense. In the minutes before the nurse on-call arrived, I glimpsed a sense of helplessness so deeply that it felt molecular.
I used to think I was content, at
least as content as a restless soul could hope to be. Then I experienced my
first skin to skin contact with my baby girl, thirty six hours into her young
life. I found a serenity that I could not have imagined possible. I wonder if
Siddhartha would have left his newborn in search of enlightenment had he experienced the bliss of connecting with something (and
someone) so pure.
I caught a glimpse of my reflection in
the mirror this morning while shaving, it was the first time I had seen myself
in four days. I could barely recognize the person looking back at me. His
confidence had been shaken, his sense of perspective toppled, his grounding uprooted,
his history rephrased, his future recast.
And yet, it didn’t feel like a
crisis. It felt more like an evolution. It felt awesome.

Felicidades!
ReplyDeletethe words are paltry but nevertheless, congratulations!! lovely and amazing
ReplyDeleteawesome it is! congratulations to all three of you :-). as you said and we were told when liv arrived: life will never be the same. love, anne, christoph and liv
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the next step of adulthood! For a man, childbirth is a multitude of feelings and emotions: from emasculination to abject fear to incredible pride to an uncomfortable sense of disconnect. Whatever you feel, it is all natural and to be expected. First, congratulations to the three of you! Second, feel free to pick up the phone and call me: I have been there twice and can empathize with whatever you are feeling.
ReplyDeleteITB, Geoffrey
Thanks much Geoffrey. I'll definitely be taking you up on the offer, @daddybriefshelpline here we come!
DeleteSay goodbye to who you were, your new name is Dad! Congrats man, there ain't no drug that makes you feel as intense as parenthood! :)
ReplyDeleteI think I' m still working my way up to Pa, still at the pee m poo cleaner level!
DeleteWelcome to Parenthood and this is just the start! Congrats and all the best to you both.
ReplyDeleteHow beautiful ! The happiness of being Dad this just beginning!... bjs Flavia
ReplyDeleteFantastic news. Congratulations. Fatherhood is the most humbling experience I have engaged with, and imagine that will continue. Cheers to the brotherhood of fatherhood.
ReplyDeleteCheers indeed, it really is a 'hood like no other
DeleteWelcome to the best club in the world. All those "I used to think ..." done and gone, and beware of that littlist finger on her left hand, as it has a way of wrapping you around it.
ReplyDeleteHa ha! I think she's already got me wrapped around that lil finger : )
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to you and "Mom". Losing your old identity and becomimg Mom and Dad is the absolute best.
ReplyDeleteNow you know what unconditional love is.
I thought I knew unconditional love, but nope, now I do!
DeleteAre you creating a PowerPoint on the inefficiencies of diaper changing and the breakthrough innovation that will change it forever?
ReplyDeleteActually Ryu, did that on day two, now I'm working on a version of Siri that can understand infants.... hey, you'd finally have a VR system that gets you : )
DeleteCongratulations! Parabéns! Enhorabuena!
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your new and most important role of being a dad
Congratulations to all three of you. Best and hardest job ever. Every day seems like a miracle of beauty and joy - even when the toddler is throwing food from his high chair and shouting the word, "No!"
ReplyDelete