But I will not be kept down by the man, even if that man is a woman with a blonde ponytail in a blood-spattered nurse’s uniform. I’m thirty-nine years old, Goddamnit. I stand a better chance of getting dry-humped by George Clooney during an autumn hayride than conceiving another child.
So I beg.
She stares at me with an expression that lives somewhere between contempt and fear.
“I am going to leave the room for a few minutes. What you do in that time is your own deal. I don’t want to know anything about it.”
And ten minutes later I am being transported to my private room in a wheelchair. On my face is one very wide grin, on my lap is one very large pillow, and below that is one very goopy, Tupperware-encased, contraband placenta.
When I arrive at my room, I hide the placenta-ware in a dark corner and settle in. My husband is sitting on the bed, cradling our new baby daughter. It is then that I remember why I’m here. Not to get even with my box-crapping friend. No, I am here to be with the brand-new human that my husband and I have created. So I turn my attention to my beautiful family. And for thirty-six hours the placenta sits in a plastic tub under a pile of blankets and luggage, doing God knows what. Rotting? Maybe. Creating another life? I don’t know.
So when K calls the following day to announce that she will “be there in five minutes,” I stumble around in a panic. I’m not ready! I haven’t gift wrapped it! I should have refrigerated it! What if it stinks?! What if when she opens it, the smell is so offensive she screams and draws the attention of a passing ethics committee? . . .
I tell myself that it doesn’t matter. This will be good. This will be just.
And then K walks into the room, and when she sees the new baby she begins to cry, I begin to cry, the baby begins to cry, and the whole thing is so moving I lose my nerve. Thirty minutes later K leaves with no knowledge of how close she’d come to being face-to-face with my insides.
Twenty-four hours later we are discharged. But I can’t leave the evidence in the hospital—I gave Nurse Ratched my word. So it comes home with us, along with the baby, some balloons, and about fifty pairs of disposable panties.
And once we’re home I can’t throw it in the trash—it’s human remains. I can’t do that to my garbageman (though, evidently, I can’t wait to do it to a close friend).
So into the freezer it goes. I tell myself that I will follow through with the plan. But the sad truth is that it falls down the priority list, somewhere under “keep new human alive” and “try to find a pair of pants that fits my now hamburger-shaped vagina.”
Until my husband gets a new job and we are suddenly in the throes of moving from Los Angeles to Chicago.
Now I am in a bind, one that gives me a newfound respect for serial killers. You don’t realize how hard it is to dispose of human organs until you’ve got one about to be evicted from its under-the-Häagen-Dazs hiding place.
I consider burying it in the yard. Not for hippie voodoo reasons, just to get rid of the damn thing. But there’s already an offer on our house, and I worry that the housing inspector will uncover the evidence, causing the buyers to back out on the basis that the house has been built on disturbingly fresh Indian burial ground.
Meanwhile, we finish packing. My husband leaves to drive the dog and his stamp collection across the country. I tuck the baby under one arm and the frozen entrée under another, and the three of us head out to spend our last night in town at a skeezy hotel by the airport.
That’s when K calls, suggesting that we spend our last night at her house. She’s out of the country, but her aunt Ellen is house-sitting and she won’t mind.
Sweet Caroline, there is a God.
So off we go, into the belly of the beast! Well, into a very nice guest room . . . inside the belly of the beast!
I consider leaving the placenta-sicle in K’s freezer, but after all this time that just feels lazy. Also, I don’t want to chance her aunt thinking it’s a tray of leftovers and trying to reheat it—that’s a form of collateral damage that I’m just not willing to risk.
There is only one conceivable option: I must bury it in K’s yard.
Now it is the morning of our departure.
The baby is napping.
The cab will be here in twenty minutes.
It’s now or never.
It’s raining. Not wanting to endure a five-hour cross-country flight with soggy shoes, I take them off, then grab the thawing organ. I run outside in my bare feet, heading straight to K’s gardening shed. I grab a shovel, and in the pouring rain I run down the old wooden staircase that leads to the garden. It is then that I lose my footing.
Up, into the air—I, the shovel, the placenta, we all go . . . slipping and sliding, down countless stairs, no shoes to stop me . . . As I watch the shovel spin in the air above my head, it occurs to me that I may die in the next moment. I will have made it through childbirth only to be killed by the placenta almost nine months later . . . and wouldn’t that be ironic.
The shovel comes down on top of my leg, leaving me with a three-inch gash. I am alive. Bleeding, in pain, and laughing hysterically, but alive.
I continue down the stairs, limping toward the back fence, where I find a small, Charlie Brown–looking shrub, under which I dig a hole. I plop the big, bloody ice cube into the hole and then bury it. I give it a couple of solid pats and say a small prayer that Aunt Ellen’s Chihuahua, “Mister Pants,” doesn’t dig it up. Battered and bruised, I pump a halfhearted victory fist into the air and run back up to the house.
Aunt Ellen is standing on the back deck, holding a cup of coffee. She is staring at me.
I am dripping wet, bare feet caked in mud, blood streaming down my leg. I am holding a shovel. There is no question that I look like a careless and slovenly murderer.
I can hear the cab honking in the driveway. And though there is no time for it, I tell Aunt Ellen that I’ve just buried a placenta in her niece’s yard.
She smiles. “How sweet. You planted fertility in her garden!”
My jaw tightens. She’s absolutely right. If you believe in that crap—which K does—that’s exactly what I’ve done. Not only have I not gotten my revenge, I’ve essentially provided K with the hippie-voodoo means to produce a child, including a placenta that will one day most certainly find itself in my hands—or, knowing K, in my digestive tract, courtesy of a plate of home-cooked plasagna.
So here I am, back at square one of my poo-revenge plot. I’m thinking now that it’s time I took a simpler “eye for an eye” approach. My birthday is in October. Until then, I’ll be stocking up on gift boxes and eating plenty of roughage.
*OKAY. LET ME JUST SAY THIS: We were very young when this happened. It was a period of high shenanigans. Also, K was an “artist.” And it was the ’90s. Now if she were to do this to me today, I can’t guarantee that I wouldn’t call the cops on her, or at the very least lose her phone number. But at the time, it was one of the strangest and most surprising incidents of my then young and way too easily impressed life.
nine
FIGHT THE PINK
Back when I was newly pregnant, sometime during the first trimester we found ourselves at the OB’s office for a routine ultrasound to determine that the kid was healthy and to find out what it was going to be.*
Some people like to save this knowledge to be revealed as a surprise the moment the baby is born. Personally, I can’t stand the idea of someone possessing information about me to which I am not privy. Though it does give me the opportunity to use the word privy, it generally feels to me like the first step of a blackmail plot. And while I’m certain that I could have kept the secret from the husband if he’d insisted on waiting, there’s no way I’d have been able to keep from taunting him mercilessly and holding that knowledge over his head, which I’m guessing is probably not the optimal environment in which to bring a child into the world.
Fortunately, he felt the same way I did; neither of us could understand why anyone would need t
o save the surprise for the delivery room. Aren’t there enough surprises, between “Guess how much college is going to cost in eighteen years?” to “Whoa, Nelly! I think I just gave birth to a Conehead.” But, as I like to say, each to his own.*
After I lay down on the examination table, Dr. V. Jay lathered up my pooch-y tummy with KY Jelly and began peering through my guts.
Swooping the ultrasound paddle over my belly as though it were an air-hockey table—a flabby, bloated air-hockey table—the doc directed our attention to the monitor, on which he pointed out the baby’s head and facial features, the spine, and some tendrils that would apparently become arms and legs, all of which looked more like a thermal weather map than a human to me. Then, with all the drama of a game-show host, he said, “Let me ask you one more time: are you sure you want to know the sex of this baby?”
The husband and I looked at each other.
“Uh, yeah,” I said.
“So you do want me to tell you,” said the doctor.
“Yes,” I said.
“You’re sure about that?” he asked again.
“Yes!” I said, feeling agitated and certain that my fear of blackmail plots was about to be validated; either that or we were about to win the Showcase Showdown.
The doctor pointed to the low-pressure front on the ultrasound screen and said, “There’s one lip, and there’s the other lip. It’s a girl!” My husband looked at me, confused, and asked, “He can tell that from her face”? To which I responded quietly, “I don’t think he’s talking about the lips up top.”*
Once we’d both taken a moment to get past the doctor’s strangely porn-y choice of words, the husband pumped a fist in the air and shouted, “YES!”
Me, not so much.
The husband was confused by my lukewarm, less-than-overjoyed response to the news that we were having a girl.
Certainly, a big chunk of my disappointment was the loss of possibility. I’ve always loved those life moments of infinite potential—like when you get something in the mail from the gas company and your first thought is “Maybe there’s a check for five thousand dollars in there!” followed by the next thought, “Or maybe it’s awkward nude photos of me taken from inside our bathroom heating vent.” It’s why it takes me forever to choose from a list of thirty-nine flavors and why I die just a little after saying, “I’ll have the chocolate.” There’s something so delicious about that sweet spot of unlimited possibility. And learning that we were having a girl meant closing the door on a lifetime of unique, mom-to-a-boy experiences that I wouldn’t get to savor, like being my son’s first “special lady” and the privilege of making life for every subsequent “special lady” in my son’s life a living hell.
I’d assumed we were having a boy, for a number of very good reasons. There aren’t many females in our lineages; I have two brothers, and my husband has one brother. Also, my friend Pete (who also has a brother) had dangled his wife’s wedding ring over my belly during a backyard kegger, and when the ring swung back and forth in a straight line, Pete had drunkenly proclaimed it a boy.
Between all that hard science, I was certain there was a tiny penis up in there.
Of course, I’d been spewing that old hairy chestnut, “It doesn’t matter what it is, as long as it’s healthy,” right up until the moment that we heard it was indeed going to be a lip-tastic girl. But the deep truth is that I wasn’t just assuming it was a boy; I’d been hoping for one.
Certainly, there are things about little boys that I’ve never quite understood—like the way they mindlessly yank on their penises as though they’re made of Silly Putty. Still, despite my own lip-having status, I’ve always related to boys better than girls,* and the fact is, I didn’t know much about the care, feeding, and raising of a girl. Maybe it has something to do with my upbringing,* maybe not.
Regardless, once we learned that there would be no tiny penis-tugging in our immediate futures, my feelings about raising a girl human progressed fairly quickly, from confusion to ambivalence to fear to sleepiness to a powerful sense of duty, which is where it stuck. If I couldn’t raise a boy who would grow to appreciate a nontraditional Manly Lady like myself—then, by golly, I would do the next best thing and raise a Manly Lady-Girl.
So while other mothers-to-be (and at least one particular father-to-be) cry in delight at the prospect of their precious, dainty little girls-to-be, I went in, shall we say, a different direction. Not so far as that Canadian couple who named their baby “Envelope” and attempted to raise her/him entirely gender-free . . . but probably further than most, when I established “Operation Fight the Pink.”
(Although I did not keep a formal record of the events that ensued, what follows is a reasonable facsimile, using old e-mails, text messages, conversations with my husband, and random bits of paper stuck at the bottom of my purse.)
OPERATION FIGHT THE PINK
Be it resolved that on this, the day of our daughter’s birth, I am putting my gnarled foot down, and, with all due respect to the husband (who is, let the record show, shaking his head right now), I hereby decree the following feminist goals for my child.
1.My daughter will not be “defined” by the color pink. (This is in reference to clothing, toys, and accessories, less so to naturally occurring food items and her own body parts. Those are permitted to remain pink.) If I’ve learned one thing in all those women’s studies classes—well, that one I took in my first year of college—it is that pink is the color of oppression and tyranny. And Mary Kay cosmetics.
2.She will be exposed to gender-neutral activities (soccer, karate, electric guitar lessons, WWE wrestling) over female-oriented activities (ballet, needlepoint, harpsichord lessons, So You Think You Can Dance).
3.She will never, under any circumstances, be allowed to dress up like a princess (Disney trademarked or otherwise). Ever. Possible exception: Princess Leia. (Exception to the exception: space bikini. That will not fly here.)
4.My child will be a survivor—I don’t just mean metaphorically; she must be able to handle herself in an apocalypse (zombie or otherwise). This means that when fully grown, she must be strong enough to carry me (anywhere between 130–200 pounds; I will do my best to keep it on the low end, but you know . . . metabolism) and demonstrate a basic understanding of electricity, chemistry, several martial arts, weapons handling, and some emergency medical training. She must also know how to use a chain saw.
I feel confident that, in adhering to these guidelines, our daughter will not follow in the dainty footsteps of countless girls before her who have mindlessly welcomed the pink shackles of lady-hood, but instead will be her own person—a self-sufficient, self-respecting, powerful member of society. With zombie-ass-kicking abilities.
EIGHT MONTHS IN
Operation Fight the Pink is fully under way, though it has not been without its challenges.
It has been difficult to enforce the “no pink” rule. Throughout the year we received many gifts for the baby, and while I am grateful for the generosity of our friends and family, 85 percent of the gifts fell somewhere on the pink spectrum from “light cherry blossom” to “neon hot ’n slutty.” It seems we are stuck with said gifts, as attempting to return them seems impractical and time-consuming; also, the husband got very pissed when I even suggested this (that sappy bastard).
Regarding gender-biased activities, it may be too soon to tell, but based on her affinity for the Jolly Jumper, I think she may have a talent for basketball (coed).
On the subject of princessification—we may have some work ahead of us; while at a birthday party she reached for a princess tiara with flashing lights. I intercepted said tiara and handed her a building block instead. When the child became agitated I attempted to demonstrate how much fun a rectangular piece of wood can be. A screaming tantrum ensued. So as not to ruin the party, I allowed a compromise: I let the child wear the block on her head. Success (?).
TWO YEARS–ISH
OFTP is not going so well.
&nb
sp; Pink continues to dominate the color palette in our home. I tried to remove all the pink crayons from her crayon box, only to find that the child had been hoarding—and eating—them. (Her diapers have been a daily reminder of my failure in this regard.)
Took child to the park to watch a peewee baseball game. She was eager, but quickly lost interest after consuming one hot dog, a bucket of popcorn, and two ice cream bars. We lost more ground when she was invited to run the bases after the game—which she declined in favor of chasing a butterfly into the outfield.
If she absolutely has to be interested in princesses—and it appears by her unwavering tiara obsession that she does—I am praying that they at least be the tougher, less pansy-assed ones, like Mulan. Just please, not Cinderella, the lamest of the princesses, who waits helplessly for some fancy-britches-wearing prince who uses far too much hair gel and who “saves” her by identifying her tiny shoe size, which I’m guessing is simply evidence that her feet had been bound.
In addition to the foregoing, a troubling development has arisen.
While at the grocery store the other day, an elderly man stopped to tell me that my daughter was “very pretty.” I said, “Okay,” and continued sniffing a piece of raw chicken. The man went on, “Really. She is so cute!” “Okay then,” I said and started to walk away. The man continued, “Really . . . ,” to the point that I nearly shoved the old geezer into the frozen shrimp section.
The fact is: sure, she’s “cute.” She’s got that blonde-haired, blue-eyed, leggy thing going on that our society seems to like so much. And as humans go, yes, her features are organized in a symmetrical configuration that one might call attractive. Me, I call it disastrous. It’s not that I’m jealous (though it is a fact that the highest compliment I was ever paid as a child was, “You would have made a really good-looking boy”). What irks me is that, just by virtue of being a girl, she will face constant evaluation on the basis of her looks.* I was really counting on her being homely—but things are not looking good, as it appears she may, in fact, be good-looking. Fingers crossed that I’m wrong.
How Not to Calm a Child on a Plane Page 6