That one time when Z got out of bed in the middle of the night to pour L a bottle of pasta sauce: a tribute to medical dads

In anticipation of Fathers’ Day, I bring you a tale of fatherhood.

It was The Bad Summer. July or August of 2014 – I don’t remember now, and at the time I was in such a haze that I might not have been able to tell you. L was just over a year old and was line-free, so things were GREAT, RIGHT? RIGHT. EVERYTHING WAS FINE. L was line-free and things were good and I would not unclench the teeth through which I insisted everything was fine or release my death grip on my triple-strength coffee long enough to step back and take a good hard look at how quickly he was plummeting, let alone admit it to the world.

Our days were fine, more or less, if you put aside the frequent puke eruptions and the increasing resistance to eating and the rather alarming weight loss. Which I did, of course, because we were line-free! So things were fine.

Our nights, though – we hadn’t slept in weeks. L wouldn’t sleep unless one of us was holding him, and he wouldn’t allow us to hold him unless we were sitting up, so in between cleaning up middle-of-the-night vomit and poopsplosions (which were actually more like poopocalypses) and trying to calm his nighttime screaming, we tag-teamed sitting in the glider holding him while he slept. All night. Every night.

It was on one of those nights that I asked Z to bring me a bottle of milk. L was particularly inconsolable that night, and while we had to be cautious about the volume of his intake, drinking something often helped.

Now, Z is not exactly good at functioning on very little sleep. But, devoted father and husband that he is, he was putting up a valiant effort that summer. So after the third or fourth time that I yelled at him over the monitor in increasingly impatient sleep-deprived irritation asked patiently and politely if he would please grab a bottle of milk from the fridge, my words finally broke through his sleep fog and he dragged himself out of bed, sleep-walked down the stairs and into the kitchen, and brought me the bottle of the insta-baby-calm I had requested.

Only this time, something was off. Usually L would calm right down and drink his milk, but on that night, he started to suck for a split second then grew increasingly hysterical each time I tried to push the nipple back into his mouth.

Then – I smelled something. I sniffed again. It wasn’t poop – it was….oregano?!

Not many things made complete sense in the exhausted haze of that summer, but through the swirling vortex of never-ending middle-of-the-night I tried to sort out whether L had developed some new and alarming condition that was causing his toots to smell like basil. Herborrhoids, perhaps? Fennel Fissures? Dillverticulitis?

Then I felt something drip off the bottle onto my finger. So I did what any reasonable, self-respecting mother of a child who constantly poops everywhere would do in the middle of the night in the dark: I licked it.

It wasn’t milk.

It was marinara.  

Now, let me pause here to detail exactly what bringing me that bottle of pasta sauce entailed. It was not just sauce from a jar that Z had sleep-grabbed and poured instead of milk. No, the only pasta sauce we had in the house was some homemade marinara my mom had brought us. It was stored in a 2-quart square vat without a pour spout. So in order to bring me this bottle of sauce, Z had to pry off a large green square lid, heft a heavy square vat with both hands, and aim the sauce into a bottle with a mouth that’s maybe an inch and a half wide, tops. He then neatly screwed a nipple on top, replaced the green lid, put the vat of sauce back in the fridge, brought the bottle to me, and fell back into bed – then was thoroughly put out when I yelled for him to bring me a second bottle that was actually milk, because he had just brought me one, goshdarnit!

As you can imagine, we descended into quite a scene once daylight broke – sauce on the counters, sauce on the floors, sauce tracked up the stairs, sauce on the glider, sauce on our sheets. I believe Z still had sauce on his feet when he awoke. To this day, neither of us can fathom what possessed him to pour marinara instead of milk. And to this day, L will not eat pasta with red sauce.

*****

IMG_3182

There are an awful lot of patronizing stories out there about bumbling dads who try very hard but despite their best efforts just can’t figure out which end of the baby the diaper goes on. The stories we hear about dads, and even the very language we use to talk about parenting, all too often assumes well-intentioned incompetence.

This is not one of those stories. This is the story of a dad who is more capable than he ever ought to have to be; who for awhile could change a mean ostomy bag and who spends his evenings prIMG_0659epping a sterile field and assembling TPN, and who is the best at tossing L onto the bed upside down from much further away than he really ought to, and who also occasionally gets fed up and needs a break and wishes this would all go away and yes, sometimes, when he’s overworked and overstressed and overtired, pours marinara instead of milk.

None of these things are because he’s a dad – they’re because he’s a parent, and because he’s human.   

Here’s to all the medical dads out there who have been plunged into a role they never could have imagined, and have risen to the occasion with only occasional middle of the night marinara incidents; who often go unseen or unrecognized in a world that loves to focus on adorable babies and their mothers.To the dads who spend long hours at work while their hearts are at home or in the hospital; to the dads who often bear the brunt of their trauma silently, so their partners can have room to be weak; to the dads who have cried at diagnoses, who have learned skilled nursing alongside nursery rhymes, who have had their expectations for fatherhood shattered and have learned that nothing can shatter the bond between father and child; to Z – happy Fathers’ Day.

IMG_0347

Follow @ThisGutsyLife on Twitter