First Appointment*

*not counting Duke Fertility, which was kind of a shitty experience

1. I only cry twice (once bc Feelings, and once when they draw blood for the infectious disease screening).

2. The nurse takes my height and weight by saying, “How tall are you, and how much do you weigh?” That’s cool.

3. Then she says, “You’re here alone?” I reply in the affirmative, and as if to explain the question, she says, “OK, sometimes the husband is coming in from another direction.” (ahem—hetero-normative!!, and also, See #1.)

4. A 38-year-old woman’s chance of conception, when trying, is 12%. With drugs, it can go up to 20%.

5. My insurance covers blood tests but maybe-probably not ultrasounds, insemination, and such because I’m using donor sperm. It would, definitely, cover all of that for 3 cycles if I were using a husband’s. (Read: discrimination.) The financial person says she’ll call BlueCross/BlueShield and let me know what she finds out.

6. The doc says he’d guess I’ve been exposed to CMV (a virus that can cause birth defects) because I hang around germ-monsters for a living, but the blood test results will be back on Friday. If, by some random chance, I’m CMV-negative, I’ll have to choose another donor because Mr. Happy Pants is CMV-positive. Guess I’ll wait to set up the new blog because I don’t want to jinx it by registering babyhappypants.com.

7. As of today, a real thing I’ve uttered to another person: “I’ve been told I have a tiny cervix.”

8. I could already pass for 4 months pregnant any day of the fucking week.

#nofilter #hahahajk #allthefilters
#nofilter #hahahajk #allthefilters

[Edit: After a commenter told me to “stop it”, I realized that it sounds like I’m putting myself down here. I’m not. I think I look pregnant, but it’s kind of cute, no?]

9. My iPhone app tells me I’ll ovulate on Valentine’s Day, which I think is a really sweet gesture on my ovaries’ part. But turns out the druggy drugs they’ll give me will make me ovulate whenever we say Go. So.

1,700 Miles with Dad

Dad and I drove to Massachusetts and back for Christmas. You’re welcome.

Dad: (apropos of I don’t know what) I am one clever son of a bitch.

**********

Dad: (recalling an acquaintance) What was her name? Siduri? No, that was the barmaid from Gilgamesh.

**********

munchies-cheese-fix
Dad: Stuff is fuckin delicious.

**********

Dad: (on the trip north) My ass hurts. Not the ass. The muscles underneath the ass. The ass muscles.

**********

Dad: Hard to know who to root for. I guess I’m rooting for the Buddhists.

**********

Dad: You and I could start a dog farm!

**********

Dad: (digging in his coat pocket, where he has stowed a few, loose) Care for a ginger snap?

**********

Dad: I pressed the button for water and instead the machine gave me something disgusting, like root beer. Who drinks root beer? You like root beer?
Me: Sure.
Dad: Well, de gustibus no est disputandum. That means “Carthage must be destroyed”. No, just kidding.

**********

My 4-year-old niece: An M&M is a dead gumdrop.
Dad: That’s poetic. Metaphor.

**********

Dad: (after the waitress set my steak in front of me and headed back to the kitchen) What’d she say?
Me: Your liver’s coming out.
Dad: That sounds serious.

**********

Dad: (at Starbucks) Large black coffee. None of their hippie concoctions.

**********

Dad: (on the trip south) My ass hurts. Not the ass. The bones and joints underneath the ass.

**********

Dad: I don’t go to Mummy’s dentist. I don’t like Mummy’s dentist. She’s all smiley and nice.

**********

Dad: I’m glad I showered and shaved before we ran into your friend. That way she didn’t go around saying, “I saw Amy Scott with her derelict father.”

30 Days

I’ve been attempting to focus on the abundance in my life, rather than participating my usual Trance of Scarcity. The meditation (see Day 25) definitely helps, but I also thought I’d tweet one of those annoying 30 Days of Thankfulness things, except try to make it not-annoying.

The most difficult part was not coming up with things for which I felt grateful—I got plenty. The most difficult part was staying within 140 characters. You know how I like to babble on. The teacher of a writing workshop I took last year said, “You’ve got 25-30% too much fat.”

I was like, “DON’T I KNOW IT. Wait, you mean my writing?” He was right. I need to trim it down…

Arg! If I wanted to go on a word diet, I would’ve been a poet!

But I did it for thirty days. (NB: The following is not poetry. It’s just skinny prose.)

That 4-year-old, man. She’s dramatic and sassy, she wants what she wants, and she’s in the 8th percentile for height. In other words, she’s me. Hahaha. No, she’s not. She’s her. She’s her own person. But kind of me. I yub her.

This girl. She does something to my heart.
This girl. She does something to my heart.

This goes for both my parents. My parents showed the fuck up.

I’m still bad at crying (i.e., I need to do more of it and less eating/checking Facebook/self-flagellation/etc.), but I have good role models (namely, Cat, EJ, and Melissa).

(Typo: That was supposed to be Day 13.)

When the doc actually felt it, she goes—I shit you not, “Yeah, you got a lot of lumps and bumps, and this one doesn’t feel any different from the other ones.” :/

Also, if they do hate me as a result, that’s their own goddamn problem.

It’s a good job. I just wish I got paid more and didn’t have to deal with so much bullshit. I guess that’s everybody, right? Except I really should get paid more.

Every so often I consider it, dry-heave, and un-consider it.

I’m hosting the StorySLAM on December 11, folks! Come on out!

So, in today’s ironic news, when I need to unplug, I use an iPhone app. It’s called Get Some Headspace, and I highly recommend it. The dude who leads the meditation is a former Buddhist monk, and he sounds a tiny bit like the Geico Gecko so everybody wins.

Terrified of jinxing it, but there’s an amazing woman who has created a passion project, and we met, and it was awesome, and she’s invited me to be part of her team, and I hope I can keep up.

I watched 5 episodes of Game of Thrones in the middle of the day yesterday, true story.

As you can see, I’m thankful for a lot of things, including those of you who’re reading. Happy rest-of-your-holidays!

Signed,

Lumpytits

*Catchy Title*

January.

That’s the plan.

January 2014 is baby-making time. I’m gonna order some of Mr. Happy Pants‘ seed, put my legs up a wall, and think of England.

Or maybe I’ll go out on New Year’s Eve, get wasted, find some rando who seems to have a fair-to-middling IQ, have unprotected sex, and cross my fingers.

(JK, MOM. Condoms r gr8! I <3 protected sex!)

(JK, DAD. I’m a virgin!)

It occurs to me that, if I’m going to blog about this process, and of course I’m going to blog about it, the series should have a name.

Something catchy like:

Single Gal Makes a Baby

or

And Baby Makes Two

(Never mind—just Googled that one, and there are two novels, a documentary, a feature film, episodes of both ER and Three’s Company, and a smug column in the Wall Street Journal with that title.)

Maybe instead:

Fool’s Errand

(What am I doing?!)

Whoever comes up with the best title for the series wins a prize. A really good prize, like brunch or something.

Girls Only Want Sperm Committee Members Who Have Great Skills

The applications are flooding—flooding—in for the Baby Bruxist Spooj-Selection Committee. Shiv told me I have a very vigorous screening process, which I do! I have to! Listen to some of the great skills of the applicants:

  • dodgeball winning;
  • untying knots;
  • Humpty Dancing;
  • joining things (like clubs and causes, not like dovetailing wood); and
  • poignantly crying.

Also, one guy says he has an in with an anesthesiologist, so he can probably get me some Class C drugs for the delivery. That baby’ll slither out, and I won’t even know it happened!

My sister nominated herself as committee chair, and I seconded the motion. All in favor? Aye. All opposed? <crickets> SHUT UP, CRICKETS—NOBODY ASKED YOU. YOUR VOTE DOESN’T COUNT.

Motion passes.

Crowdsourcing my pregnancy is probably the greatest decision I ever made.

If you haven’t gotten your application in yet, there’s still time, but act fast—I can feel my ovaries withering inside me.

(Note for Mom & Dad: This is a song lyric. I've never had sex in the WC of a fast food restaurant.)
(Note for Mom & Dad: This is a song lyric. I’ve never had sex in the WC of a fast food restaurant.)

 

Motion to Disqualify the Iggy Pop Look-Alike Whose Paternal Grandmother Had Polydactylism

When I told my friend Meg about the challenge of choosing sperm without a partner, she said, “Why don’t you get a group of your friends together to help you?”

“Like a committee?!” I said.

“…Sure, like a committee.”

**********

APPLICATION FOR BABY BRUXIST SPOOJ-SELECTION COMMITTEE

1. Legal name, or roller derby name, or Carlos Danger name, or whatever:

2. Qualifications:

3. Special skills [do not need to be jizz-related—I’m just curious]:

4. Have you ever been convicted of a crime? [Answering Y will not count against you. This application is also a pre-screen for the Labor Committee, and I’m gonna need people with good stories in the delivery room.] Y/N

If Y, please provide details in bullet point format.

5. In 500 words or fewer, or more, whatever, explain why would you like to be on the committee to choose the other half of Baby Bruxist’s DNA:

__________________________________________________

Compensation for participation:

Gwyneth Paltrow sperm necklace
This diamond sperm necklace* worn by Gwyneth Paltrow.

*Or maybe a hug and a beer.

The Trip Back Nearly Broke Him

Dad, discussing where we should stop for a bathroom break: There’s a Wal-mart up here, but Wal-mart’s shittoirs are always jammed with people.

**********

Dad: …That story evoked no mirth from you whatsoever.

[No, but that phrase did.]

**********

Dad: (battling with the seat belt) GODDAMMIT.
Me: No, don’t yank on it, Dad. You’re making it do the opposite of what you want it to do.
Dad: (in a sing-song tone) But I get very angry.

**********

It’s 81 degrees and sunny.

Dad: Fucking winter again.
Me: It’s fall!
Dad: But it’s coming.
Me: Not right now. It’s Indian summer. Gorgeous. Enjoy it!
Dad: Yeah, my ass hurts.

**********

Dad: Oh my ass.
Me: I’m trying to find a gas station on this side of the road so we can get out and stretch.
Dad: That’s nice. I’m not complaining. I’m just saying, “Oh my ass.”

**********

Dad, when we stopped at a truck stop in southern Virginia that he’d never been to: Discovery! I feel like Vasco de Gama!

**********

Dad: (to Violet, in the other room) I don’t even need food right now… I need purpose.

**********

Dad: Wait a minute. I need to take my Prilosec. Yoohoooooooooo, Prilosec!

**********

Dad, on our walk: The best thing I could do would be to lie down. In the back of an ambulance.

Adventures in Eldercare

Day 1

It’s not clear my 94-year-old great uncle knows who I am.

Mom’s backstage, as she will be singing with the choir, so I accompany Russell into the symphony hall.

I’m not going to pretend I know anything about classical music, but the program tells me the Piano Concerto No. 3 by Rachmaninoff is the fear of all concert pianists. That seems about right. It’s very complex. Gorgeous, and well-executed. I am rapt.

But during the first quiet moment, I hear it.

Thok
Thik
Tik
Thak
Tak

Russell is sucking on his dentures, which he doesn’t bother to glue in. The sound is frequent but arrhythmic, and if anyone within a five-seat radius has misophonia, he/she will surely set him/herself on fire before intermission.

I sigh with relief at the forte parts of the piece, which drown out the thoking. During the piano segments, my shoulder blades beat a steady march up into my head.

At one point, the thiking stops, and I glance over to find Russell has dozed off. This is the best possible scenario. Unfortunately, he wakes up after a few minutes and recommences thaking for the remainder of the program.

Day 2

Mom offers me some tricks-of-the-trade for what she calls Adventures in Eldercare.

  • Put a few cookies per day in the jar; if you fill it up, he’ll eat them all because he can’t remember having any.
  • Same goes with the fruit bowl.
  • Make foods that are soft—rice, potatoes; he can only sort of chew.
  • He’ll wash the dishes, but he doesn’t use soap, so view anything in the strainer as suspect.
  • He loves going to the post office, Stop & Shop, and Aubuchon Hardware.
  • Give him specific yard work tasks to do; if it’s too complicated a process, he’ll give up.
  • No such thing as too much cribbage.

My folks leave. Russell breaks out the cribbage board. There’s nothing he enjoys more than shit-talking. “Well, I did all the pegging that hand. You pegged no points ha ha ha!”

I skunk him in the first game. He is chagrinned.

His pompousness returns full force when he ekes out a win in the second game.

*****

He spends a lot of time shuffling around, farting, vocalizing.

Just repeating words he sees on signs. “Mini… golf. Mini-golf. Mini-golf.”

In the Cape Cod Times. “Pedestrian… struck, killed in Dennis. Pedestrian struck, killed in Dennis. Pedestrian struck, killed in Dennis.”

On tabloid covers splashed with Kardashians in the grocery line. “Divorce… gets ugly. Divorce gets ugly. Divorce gets ugly.”

And pointing out things he notices/is entertained by. “That car looks very short ha ha ha.” (It’s an SUV…?)

*****

“Do the dogs have a lead?” he says.

Yes, I tell him, and we walk around his 9/10 of an acre. He points out the property line of this plot he bought in the late ’50s, the moon gate he built, the bamboo grove he planted.

Day 3

We’re crouched around the cribbage board.

“What’s that jacket you’re wearing?” he says.

“It’s a hoodie. Cuttyhunk Ferry Company,” I say, pointing at the lettering on the lapel.

We play several hands.

“What’s this jacket you have on?” he says.

“It’s a sweatshirt. I got it from the M/V. You’ve ridden that ferry,” I say.

Another half a game goes by.

“What is this jacket?” he says, jutting his chin at me.

I stand up to show him the logo on the back.

He reaches out. “I like this bottom ha ha ha,” he says, flapping three fingers against my left butt cheek. (Only three fingers because he cut off his pinkie four decades ago with a table saw or a chipper-shredder or something.)

“Don’t do that,” I say and sit back down.

He’s gotten in trouble once before for getting fresh with a substitute home-help person. And this summer, he had remarked, “There goes a pair of legs,” as a 20-year-old in short shorts walked by. When I grimaced, my mom had said, “That’s the World War II generation for you,” shaking her head.

Now I feel uncomfortable and grossed out (grosser on a geriatric level or a blood-relative level?). I also feel tricked, like his inquiring about my “jacket” was part of a plan.

We finish the game without further incident. I text my siblings. My big brother is ready to helivac me out of there. I convince him there’s nothing to be worried about. It was after his nightly scotch, I say. He still doesn’t recognize who I am, I say. I won’t wear spandex anymore. I’ll stay out of his reach.

As I’m speaking, I realize that I’m making excuses for him and victim-blaming myself.

He had no right to do that. And I have every right to be angry, which I am. Realizing my anger is justified, and the fact that I could take the old man down with one hand, makes me feel better. And I’ll wear fucking spandex if I’m going to the fucking gym.

And not to minimize it but he wasn’t a grab-ass kind of guy in his pre-dementia days. It probably really is a function of the Alzheimer’s.

Nonetheless, I make wide arcs around him for the next day and a half until it’s clear he’s more or less figured out who I am and he’ll keep his hands to himself.

Day 4

A cake is delivered to the door.

IMG_6735

“It seems we have a cake here,” he says.

“Yes, it’s my birthday,” I say.

“Happy anniversary,” he says and gives me a chaste peck on the cheek.

Half an hour later, he walks into the kitchen and peers inside the box on the counter. “It seems we have a cake here.”

*****

“Now, do the dogs have a lead?” he says.

Yes, I tell him again, and we tour the property again. He points out the property line, the moon gate, the bamboo grove.

Day 5

I’m attempting to nap. He barges into my room, shoe in hand.

“I can’t seem to find my other shoe,” he says.

This is the pair he’s been wearing all day. I look for it in the living room, in his bedroom, in the kitchen. Finally, I go down to the garage and check the car. It’s sitting in the footwell of the passenger’s side. The disturbing part is that we haven’t been in the car since the morning errands. He has walked around for three hours, and neither of us noticed he was missing a shoe.

Day 6

He loves Violet and Redford. Blackie and Oliver, he calls them. (Oliver was his cat who was killed by a coyote a couple years ago.)

“Here are the dogs!” he says whenever they enter the room.

*****

I put on a DVD of Downton Abbey. “Picture but no sound,” he says, and I realize his hearing aid batteries are dead. I take the battery out of one of his hearing aids, but I can’t find where my mom keeps the new ones. I tell him we’ll buy more batteries tomorrow.

Fifteen minutes later, he points at the TV and says, “No sound. Can’t you put the sound up?”

Day 7

He’s lost his hearing aids. I look everywhere. Eventually, I find one in his ear. I can’t find the other.

*****

“Now, do the dogs have a lead?” he says. Yes. We walk. Property line, moon gate, bamboo.

The hardest part is not the forgetting and the repeating. The hardest part is when he says, “Losing my grip. I can definitely tell I’m losing my grip. I can’t remember what I’m supposed to do and when I’m supposed to do it.” He doesn’t laugh when he says this.

The hardest part is when I’m sitting at the computer and he peeks around the door jam down the hallway looking for me, for anyone. When he’s lonely.

Day 8

The good news, I guess, is he can’t hear me farting either.

*****

It’s not terrible—this taking care of an old person—but I imagine it’s something like parenthood. Just a low-grade, constant worry that he’ll accidentally kill himself or burn down the house. Not like parenthood, though, because there’s no guiding him toward eventual self-sufficiency. Just management of his decline.

And, while he’s family, he didn’t spring from our loins, so there’s no mama-bear instinct, no fierceness to our love.

Day 9

My parents’ flight will get in at 5:00pm. That means they’ll be home by 7:00 maybe. In the morning, my brother texts: Not much farther, little smurf.

Thank god.

My mom is a saint. I’ve done this for nine days. She’s done it for nine years.

I was ugly when I was born, sort of notoriously so. The family lore goes that my father said, “Oh good, a homely one to take care of us in our old age.” I like to think I grew out of some of the homeliness, but I’ll absolutely, positively take care of my mom in her old age. Her karma cup is brimming.

Plus I know she won’t grab my ass.

From the Man Who Needs No Introduction

Dad is lying on the chaise, eyes closed.

Me: Leave him alone, dogs.
Dad: What?
Me: I was telling the dogs to leave you alone.
Dad: That’s probably a good idea… But your dogs have privileges that other dogs don’t have. We’re friends. It’s really hard to get mad at your dogs. (Violet noses at his elbow.) Hey! I’m getting mad at you.

**********

Dad: Redford is such an intelligent dog.

(12 hours later) Come here, Violet… Not you, Redford, you BONEHEAD.

**********

During a two-block walk I forced him to go on, Dad: (seriously) Oh this was a great idea!… If I live through it.

**********

Dad: (referring to the scenery somewhere north of Hillsborough, NC) People are missing out on this gorgeous countryside! (gesturing to a sign for a local business) Full of fascinating rednecks!

**********

Dad: (in Virginia) 3.09! They’re givin away gasoline!

**********

Dad: (reading a sign for an unfortunately named town in Virginia) Hurt, 2 miles. (mumbling) Masochists welcome.

**********

Dad: I’ve always been resistant to change. Starting with Camp Miller. Lutheran camp my parents sent me to for two horrific weeks. Felt like two years. Terrible place where they taught you to make lariats and things like that.

**********

Dad: Boy I’ll be glad to get out of this car. Not that I haven’t enjoyed talking at you.

[Note he didn’t say to me.]

**********

Dad: I used to have a pocketknife like that. No idea what happened to it.
Me: Probably got confiscated when you went through airport security at some point.
Dad: Probably. You noticed?—the TSA has gotten conspicuously lax in their screenings lately. I got half a pat-down last time. It’s like an edict was sent out, Perfunctory Pat-Downs for Old People. I mean, I’m not looking for thrills or anything, but seriously, the guy did one leg.

**********

Dad: (futzing around in the morning at our favorite Red Roof Inn) Verily I say unto you, I’m getting my ass in gear.

**********

Dad: (patting my hand like he pats the dogs’ heads) Pat pat pat pat pat.

**********

Dad: Just the concept of Connecticut bores me.

(a little later) Imagine you’re alive. And you have to live the rest of your fucking life in Hartford, Connecticut.

(still in Hartford) I need a cigarette. This place makes me want to take up smoking again.

[My father hasn’t smoked in over 50 years.]

**********

Dad: I’m nothing if not… Nothing if not…
Me: You’re nothing if not what?
Dad: ORGANIZED.

(20 minutes later) It’s great to have a junk bag or a junk box you can just throw things in.

**********

Dad: (after an hour and a half of nonstop complaints, 100% sincere) I’m so happy. ‘Cause I’m with you.

**********

Dad: OH MY ACHIN ASS.

On the Depilation of Felines

I’m the baby of the family and pretty much acted like one for a long time. (Still do, kinda?, maybe?) But when I was 22, my older sister asked if I would babysit her cat while she went on a trip. She didn’t have any kids—Willie was her baby—and I wanted to prove that I was growing up, that I was responsible, so I agreed.

Wa lived in Boston, I in New York. She brought the cat down to me, told me how to feed him and clean the litter box, and left on her trip.

I tried to snuggle him posthaste—that’s something you’re supposed to do when you’re taking care of a thing, right?—but Willie was a real scaredy-cat. He wouldn’t let me get close to him at all. So that first day, I did what I could: carefully measured his food, put out fresh water, like, five times, scooped every turd practically as soon as it hit the litter. After I while, I gave up on trying to lurve on him. I showered, waxed my legs, and got my fancy black pants on, and I went out with my friends for the night, leaving him in the apartment by himself.

I ended up staying out all night, because that’s something I did when I was 22, and when I stumbled back into the apartment the next morning, I couldn’t find Willie anywhere. He wasn’t in my room, he wasn’t in the living room, he was nowhere, and I was like, OHHHH EFFFFFFFFF.

I LOST MY SISTER’S CAT.

THE FIRST DAY.

I was panicked. I checked every closet, everywhere, and I was about to call my sister and tell her I was the worst, most irresponsible person ever, but something made me get down on my hands and knees and looked under the bed. Back in the very corner, I saw two gleaming eyes, and I was awash with relief.

I hadn’t killed or lost the cat, and—the best part—no one was the wiser. No one had to know I was the most irresponsible person ever.

Problem is, he wouldn’t come out. I tried everything. I called him. I made a trail of treats. I ignored him. He would not come out. So finally I got the broom, and I was like, this little bastard’s gonna come out and I’ma snuggle him.

I swept back with the broom, and sure enough—he shot out from under the bed. Immediately I saw that something was wrong, that he was walking funny. Like, step-step-step-shake, step-step-step-shake.

Every time I got close to him, though, he ran away so I couldn’t figure out why he jitterbugging. Eventually I trapped him in my tiny bathroom, and when I did, I saw that he must’ve jumped up onto my dresser, where in my preparations for going out, I had left one of the wax strips I was using for my legs. And now, one of those was strips was stuck to his back leg. His whole back leg.

Now, how do you get a wax strip off a cat’s leg? It occurred to me to pull it off like I pulled them off my own legs, until I realized that I would probably pull his leg at least out of the socket, if not completely off his body. That would be hard to explain to Wa.

Next, I thought about some sort of solvent but figured anything strong enough to get the wax off would probably dissolve his hair. And maybe his skin?

So I ran to the kitchen and got a pair of scissors, then sprinted back into the bathroom. Willie was trying to be everywhere but near me, but there wasn’t a whole lot of room to roam, so I managed to catch him and pin him down, squirming and caterwauling. I picked up a corner of the wax strip very gently and snipped the hair underneath, then I pulled back a tiny bit more and snipped again. And working this way for six years, or maybe it was eight minutes, whatever—Willie’s catatonic at this point—I managed to get the wax strip all the way off. I opened the bathroom door, and he bolted out.

WHEW, no harm, no foul—maybe I still didn’t even have to tell my sister what happened.

Then I looked down at my pants, which were no longer black.

They were orange. I was wearing orange cat fur pants. Willie had completely molted, except of course for the leg that I had trimmed the wax strip off, which looked like it had been groomed with an old lawn mower.

There was no way I could get around telling my sister what happened.

BUT! I must’ve done something right between then and now because I’m in my sister’s will as the guardian of her three kids, should something happen to her and her husband.

And god forbid it did, but now at least I know to keep the wax strips away from the children.

See? I’m responsible.