I tend to think people get the
kids they deserve. Or, put another way,
I tend to think people get children specifically meant to teach them a needed
lesson or lessons about life. Based on
purely anecdotal evidence, it sure seems like children often provide challenges
which are oddly specific opportunities for their parents to grow. For example, a hyper-masculine dad ends up
with an effeminate son, or a mother who never takes medicine because she thinks
she’s invincible might have a daughter who suffers a severe childhood illness,
or maybe a dad who mocked people with disabilities ends up with a son with Cerebral
Palsy. Some parents learn the lessons their children can teach them and some don’t.
In my family, my mom was the smartest
person in every single room she entered prior to my birth; my brilliance is a
challenge to her intellectual superiority, which is a big source of pride for
my mom. My dad was an athlete to whom sports matter more than anything; my
relative ineptitude at sports and visual disability are challenges to his sense
of pride in his own physicality. Because of this theory, my biggest concern
upon learning my wife was pregnant was whether the baby would have albinism because
I had not really considered my albinism’s impact on my life.
I’d just finished the math,
figuring out we had the cash to both move and get married in the same weekend
when my wife handed me the pregnancy test she’d taken as a minor precaution, “There’s
no way I’m pregnant. It’ll relieve my
anxiety,” she said. The word YES was
bigger and clearer than anything I’ve ever seen in my life. The relief of our financial stability lasted
less than two seconds before my mind became plagued with uncertainty and fear. Based
on my relationship history and theories about the types of kids people get, I
was certain our first child would be a girl. Raising a daughter seemed like the
next logical step in completing my journey from misogynist to feminist. I was also willing to bet I’d have a child
with albinism. At one point, I caught some
of my wife’s anxiety and convinced myself we were having conjoined twin girls
with albinism. We’d know more after the sonogram, which I thought we were
getting immediately since 100% of my experience with sonograms comes from the television
show FRIENDS.
As it turned
out, we didn’t see anything at our first sonogram because our baby was the size
of a seed. We heard one loud, thundering
heartbeat though, banging like a drumroll, building anticipation for a moment
which was still eight months away. It wasn’t until 4 months in that we actually
saw The Happiest Accident in grainy shades of black and white. The doctors said
we were having a baby girl and she was developing perfectly. The geneticist
explained if my wife didn’t have the albinism gene, we would 100% not have a
daughter with albinism. However, if my
wife carried the albinism gene too, our daughter had a 50/50 chance of being
born with albinism. There is presently no test for the albinism gene, we had to
wait. Anticipation is jet fuel for anxiety, so I knew I needed a project.
As a DeWitt,
I’m predisposed to convert anxiety into work, so I set out to write this blog with the intention of figuring out how much of my identity is encompassed by myalbinism. It’s been as fun an illuminating as I’d hoped. As I continued
to write entries and think about my own battles with albinism and my upbringing
and the challenges it afforded, both related to my albinism and not, my fears
regarding my daughter’s pigmentation began to wane. The truth of the matter is
my experiences as a person with albinism aren’t that big of a deal, at least
not as an adult. I have limitations because of my vision, but everyone has
limitations because of their physicality. I know almost no one who can dunk a
basketball. My psychological issues come
not from an absence of pigment, but from my parents’ other genetic shortcomings
and predispositions and, to a small extent, from their responses to my
albinism, as well as their responses to the other challenges of
parenthood. That to say, were I born without
albinism, I’d still be plenty fucked up.
My spiritual issues stem from the human condition. If I had full vision and pigmentation, I’d
still have frustrations, limitations and I’d still be mocked at times because
these are basic human experiences which all of us share because sometimes
people are dicks. After writing this blog and hearing from so many of you, I’ve
come to understand my albinism doesn’t make me as unique as I always thought it
did. I’m not an individual snowflake, I’m not even particularly special. In
that regard, this blog has provided both humility and tremendous existential
relief.
As the due
date got closer, my wife’s pregnancy got more complicated. There were issues
with her blood sugar, there were issues with her blood pressure. We went to the hospital several times before
our due date because she was having contractions or her blood pressure was too
high. Her pregnancy became dangerous
enough we had to stop using the midwife model and go see an OB-GYN. It was a hard moment when one of the midwives
we’d never met before told us we could not come back to the group. It was like
breaking up with someone via a surrogate, which is a great business idea by the
way, a surrogate for dumping people. The OB practice was two men and two women
and they couldn’t tell us which doctor would deliver the baby. The women were
articulate, polished and sharp. Both men
were aloof, one never tied his left shoe and you could smell the other’s
cologne from thirty feet away. Anxieties mounted to the point writing a blog
could no longer calm them.
I went to
every appointment during my wife’s pregnancy except one on a Monday at which
she was supposed to be there 15 minutes for a routine blood pressure
check. Of course, it was the one
appointment I didn’t go to where things became urgent. I was on an elliptical trainer at the gym,
getting a cardio session in before heading to school to begin the first week of
Spring Quarter classes when my wife called and said her blood pressure was high
and the OB wouldn’t let her leave the hospital.
I had to grab all our things and meet her there. I got off the elliptical, came home,
showered, packed up and took my first ever Lyft to the hospital.
At the hospital,
my wife was in a gown but we had to wait for her to be admitted. The plan was to medically induce labor. The nurses said it would take at least a day
and probably two or three days, but that we’d be staying at the hospital the whole
time. I had to cancel my entire first week of classes. They moved us to our room, a lavish space
with all the medical equipment my wife would need and a roll away bed for me.
Honestly, the room our child was to be born in was much nicer than the room in
the bed and breakfast in Northern Michigan in which she was conceived. The doctors gave my wife the induction drug
and we waited. Neither of us slept. We listened to FRIENDS episodes on our phone
and I went to get us Au Bon Pain because the small eatery I hadn’t seen since I
lived in Boston 17 years ago was the only non-hospital food near the hospital. At
about 3am, they gave her another course of drugs. At 9am, they started talking about
administering an epidural because things were getting close. The epidural lady, some relic of the
byzantine era, administered it and there were immediately complications. My wife felt half her body go cold and numb
and she started bleeding. She stood up and there were huge chunks of blood and
tissue under her. Another nurse couldn’t find the fetal heart rate but didn’t
want to announce it and make everyone panic, but she struggled to hide her
anxiety at not being able to find a pulse. Based on the amount of blood and
tissue my wife lost, the decision was made to do an emergency C-section. Within a minute, Dr. Cologne rushed my wife
out of our room and into the OR, leaving me behind. I tried to follow and was told I couldn’t go
in without scrubs. “Then get me some
fucking scrubs,” I hissed, calmly letting the staff know my wardrobe
requirements.
Once I was
scrubbed in, I still couldn’t enter the OR because things were too hectic. I paced in the hall, crying, listening,
trying to remember to breathe. In a room
next to ours, a nurse stuck her head out and said, “I need someone to catch.”
For a moment, because of my scrubs and glasses, she looked at me incredulously
like ‘doc, get the hell in here!’ Most of the nurses and medical staff on the
floor were in with my wife. If this were
a movie, I’d have gone over and helped deliver someone else’s baby. I thought about it for a moment. But this isn’t a movie and I was too concerned
with my wife and her emergency surgery to bother trying to be someone else’s
hero. Other nurses rushed to help.
When they
finally let me into the OR there were probably a dozen people in the small room
and there was so much blood on the floor I almost passed out. I saw a baby being wiped down by nurses,
screaming, a tuft of dark hair on her head. I immediately turned to my wife,
who had four different people probing around her abdomen. She was vomiting and sweaty, but she was
breathing. I squeezed her hand and told her she was doing great and that the
baby was healthy. We both cried. The
doctors didn’t have time to do an instrument count before surgery, so after
sewing my wife up, they had to do an X Ray to make sure they didn’t leave
anything like forceps or a scalpel inside her body. The doctors gave me our
baby but they wouldn’t let me leave the OR because there was too much blood on
the floor and they thought I’d slip and fall. Eventually they mopped up and let
me take the baby out of the room and she immediately crapped on my arm. She had
hairy shoulders so I knew she was mine.
Shortly, my
wife was wheeled in to join us. She was
cold from the blood loss so they packed her with blankets. It would be a full
two weeks before anyone acknowledged there are very few genuine emergencies in
obstetrics, and my wife had just survived one. My wife’s placenta had ruptured-
that’s what all the bloody tissue was from.
All told, it was seven minutes from the administering of the epidural to
the removal of the baby, who is perfect.
My wife was recovering well. And
I wasn’t scared of being a dad anymore.
In fact, I wasn’t scared of anything.
It was like shock treatment. Nothing will ever be scarier than being in
that hallway, not knowing what was happening with my wife and daughter. I made
it through that, I can make it through anything.
We still had
no idea how dangerous my wife’s experience had been when they moved us to recovery
and the itch to go home started to grow.
Recovery was a nightmare because all day long nurses and other medical
staff kept popping into the room because they needed different things from mom
or baby. One nurse who weighed the baby
wanted to touch my white hair. I
remember thinking it was a good thing we were in a hospital because I was gonna
rip this dummy’s head clean off. But I
just smiled and stooped down so she could touch it. Another nurse had to take
blood from our baby’s feet. She poked
her with a needle and dabbed blood on a piece of paper while our baby screamed
bloody murder. I glared at the nurse and
she assured me “it’s for a state form,” which was the wrong argument to make to
a former libertarian and a guy who still thinks the state can go fuck itself in
its present form. I fantasized about cutting
the nurse into pieces and hiding her in the bio-medical waste bag in the
recovery room bathroom but before I could club her and drag her back there, she
finished taking my baby’s blood for the government and generously let me
assuage my screaming, two-day-old daughter. After the bloodletting they allowed
us to leave. Don’t tell the hospital but my wife drove herself home. See, her car has too many blind spots for me
to drive it safely. We’d later learn her
blood pressure issue, preeclampsia, meant she was at risk for seizures. She wasn’t supposed to drive for six
weeks. Oops. My wife is a badass, that’s a big part of why
she’s my wife.
When we
brought our baby into our apartment, the shift in my identity was almost
instantaneous. If my identity were a pie chart, it’d be 100% Dad. Nothing else
mattered. There was no room for my albinism. For a moment, there was no other
me. In the 15 weeks I’ve been a Dad,
parts of me have returned because I quickly recognized the need for an identity
which has facets. I’m a husband, I’m a father, I’m a writer, I’m a professor, I’m
a labor leader, I’m a jogger, I’m a wise-ass, I’m a lover and a fighter, and
yeah, I’m a person with albinism. But my albinism is a small sliver of the pie
chart of my identity, and it grows smaller every day Beatrix Fiona DeWitt gets
bigger. She’s the BFD, my albinism isn’t.