The story of my birth is one that I have heard over and over again. It was the subject of company-for-dinner conversation from as early as I can remember and was dutifully trotted out in ENF's sermons once he became ordained. He hailed it as proof of a divine miracle. I recall the legend being told over and over again, growing in length and hair-raising detail over the years. I can't count how many times I sat through the torturous explanations of what had happened to bring me into the world, they were so many.
I do remember thinking that it was weird, how eager ENF and NM were to share this story with anyone and everyone who would listen, but I was a little girl and couldn't quite put my finger on what exactly was strange about it. We do grow accustomed, after all, to believing that our childhood homes are the norm and that our parents are just like every other parent, at least in early childhood. We've no experience with the rest of the world until we begin to spend time in it. A child's home really is his or her entire universe in those first few years. I only began the painful process of seeing that my 'family' was very different from other real families after many, many interactions with those other more 'normal' families many years later. Sufficient was the pain of these revelations - and the then-certain knowledge that my being aware of the differences would only cause me greater pain as I couldn't change the situation - that I shoved the revelations so deeply into my psyche that it would years of digging to get them back out in the light.
In a nutshell, the story goes, I almost died being born and my mother almost died in the process. At full term, the lining of the placenta detached from the wall of NM's uterus. This is dangerous and happens fairly frequently, but it's often manageable. Adding to the danger in my/our case, though, the placenta tore away from the uterus at the point where the umbilcal cord was seated in the uterine wall. Effectively, this cut off my lifeline and caused massive hemoraging for my mother. ENF rushed us to the hospital, which was a large one with one of the first neo-natal care units in the country. Through emergency C-section, NM and baby were saved. End scene.
It's a good story and one that bears re-telling, I think. It's dramatic and some would say miraculous and there's a good ending to it. I have to say that I'm awfully glad it didn't turn out differently. So, hearing about it in one context is pretty regular, I think. If I'd gone through something like this in delivering my daughters, I'm sure it's a story I would share.
I've been reflecting on the ways that I heard this story told throughout my childhood and young adult life, and wondering why it keeps popping up for me as a recurring memory. Why do I keep randomly thinking of the story of my birth? Today I had a mini-epiphany: in the hundreds of times that I heard this story of my birth, it was never referred to as the story of my birth. And this is where it gets weird.
This was usually presented by ENF as the story of how his wife almost died giving birth to Vanci. When he was busily slinging the story about from the pulpit, he told this as the story of the event that made him re-dedicate his life to god. When he told this story casually, he told it as the heroic tale of how fast he drove to get his wife to the hospital, or of his Datsun car that never ran again or the story of the police escort he was given due to the amount of blood in the car.
When he told it, the story of my birth was about him and what he almost lost, how heroic he was, what my near-death and that of his wife did for him spiritually and - of all things - what happened to his car because of this incident.
When NM told this story, she talked about her certain knowledge when she stood up thinking that her water had broken and saw blood instead that her baby was dead. She talked about how it was so lucky that OS was already with grandmother and that ENF had filled up the gas tank of the car. She talked about her monstrous scar and how she almost died from blood loss on the operating table and how she almost died again from the general anesthesia. She talked about how they gave her so much anesthesia that she was out for a long time (this part is hazy for me as I've heard different versions - two days, three days, all the way up to a week,) and then has gone on to express how awful it was for her to not be able to see her baby right away after birth.
When she told it, the story of my birth was about her and what she almost lost, where my sister was at the time, how heroic ENF was, how much she suffered and how hard it was for her to cope with the after-effects of anesthesia.
I've never, in all those re-tellings, heard either of my parents express how heavy their hearts were with grief as I lay almost-dead in an incubator for a week. The closest they've ever come within my earshot was to express how upsetting the information they received from the doctors was because they couldn't seem to make up their minds as to whether I'd die, be braindamaged or some other awful fate. They've said that lack of oxygen was a concern and that I'd lost sixty percent of my blood at delivery. That I was small and didn't seem to thrive. That it was a miracle that I survived and that ENF prayed while NM was in surgery and promised his god that he (ENF) would rededicate his life to god if god would just save NM and the baby.
I'm pretty sure that they think that god saved me because of ENF's prayers. Maybe he did, who the hell am I to know? But I'm getting the distinct impression as I re-visit the re-tellings that there were a few common themes to all of the stories:
1. NM almost died several times laboring to bring me into the world; the implication being that I almost killed her.
2. ENF saved her, whether through proper maintenance of a vehicle or through god, depending on the audience.
3. Even before I had a name, I caused them pain.
I'm pretty sure that I was a scapegoat before I was even born. How sad. How very, very sad. What a heavy burden to lay on a child.
In reading back through what I've written here, I can see that words are failing me. From an exterior view, this could just be the story of a child who was almost lost in childbirth. But, taken as a whole and with what would then become future proof of my faults as told by my Nparents, it becomes clear that this story was only the beginning of my scapegoat status.
As a child and a young adult, I also heard the stories of how sickly I was as a toddler. Apparently I suffered from ear infections and was, to quote NM "so very difficult, you just didn't ever seem to feel good." I didn't speak until I was three, I've heard, and then just began speaking in full sentences: my first words in order of appearance were 'mama,' 'daddy,' and 'I want a sailboat.' NM liked to haul this out as proof of my obvious intelligence. I can't help wondering what I knew and had already learned not to say.
As these memories have appeared more and more frequently to me lately, I've been trying to puzzle together why this story, of all the stories I have from childhood, seems to signify. Why does it keep popping up to resonate with me?
I've turned to my own experience as a mother, as I often do for clarity and understanding, and I know what I have thought and felt and said when my DD's have asked me about their births. There's some push inside me to minimize the telling of the amount of pain I went through while in labor with them. I tend to tell them more about what I did while I was in labor - colored in Scooby Doo coloring books, hey, it helped - than to expound upon the many ways that I hurt or suffered or labored to bring them to the planet.
There's something there, I think, that my psyche's trying to push to the surface. I think it must have to do with intention. I wonder if the Nparents intention in telling, telling and re-telling the story of my delivery was to lay the foundation that I would so firmly beat myself with later in life: that I OWED THEM.
What do you think? I can't quite put my finger on it...
Love,
Vanci
"I only began the painful process of seeing that my 'family' was very different from other real families after many, many interactions with those other more 'normal' families many years later."
ReplyDeleteYes! My 1st, short-lived, counselor couldn't understand why I didn't see my family as dysfunctional when I was growing up. The answer is really pretty simple, it was all I knew. This was re-enforced because "sleepover" was a foreign word until I had my own child!
I was an unwanted, "accident" who also managed to screw up by being the wrong sex. By the time I was 13, I even knew the intimate details of how the "accident" occurred, something every teenager wants to hear!
Our stories are different in detail but similar in result: We owed them and spent our lives struggling to pay back our debt. What kind of sick mind holds a child responsible for the circumstances of her birth then spends a lifetime making her pay?
Ns will use anything to suit their purposes. But to me it just sounds like this story--and its many versions and re-tellings--is just another means for them to get attention. The reason they leave you out of it is because they don't want their audience to worry about baby you; listeners would naturally be concerned about a helpless, struggling infant. Your parents tell that story because they want attention and sympathy for themselves. If they included your struggles, they wouldn't be the central characters in the story anymore.
ReplyDeleteIf you are perceiving that your parents blame you for their near-death experience, or expect you to live in eternal gratitude to them for bringing you into the world despite all the pain you caused them, you're probably not wrong. N's can't imagine a world that doesn't revolve around them.
mulderfan - Exactly! What kind of sick mind? When I run up against their N actions, I find myself baffled.
ReplyDeleteAnd then I remember to be grateful for my bafflement, because I think that if I were the type of person who could assimilate and understand their actions, I'd be too much like them for comfort!
Thanks for reading and commenting.
Love,
Vanci
Katie L. -
ReplyDeleteYou said, "N's can't imagine a world that doesn't revolve around them."
How very true. Thank you for your thoughtful comment and insights!
Love,
Vanci
Vanci, I suspect your observations on "OWING them" and the repetitious nature of this event, although couched in "spiritual" or "heroic" etc. overtones had that latent intent that we all know so very well. It may appear an innocuous and/or somewhat disturbing "story" to others but we know better. We've learned to read between the lines to discern the real intent. You will forever be indebted to your parents, the vehicle, the police etc. and the "bill" will never be "paid in full" no matter what you do.
ReplyDeleteThe real miracle, IMO is not your birth or the circumstances surrounding it: Your ability to move beyond the foo dynamics, share your journey and help so many by doing so is the REAL miracle.
Thank you for your generosity, integrity and honesty. You have certainly touched my life, FWIW in so many positive ways. :)
Anon,
ReplyDeleteI'm so pleased that my story can help anyone! :) Thank you for the compliment of reading!
It does often seem to come down to intention, doesn't it, and I think that's one of the dividing lines between Narcs and Normies. Normies hurt people, too, and make other people feel small sometimes, but I doubt that their intention is malignant like it is with the narcs.
My life is a miracle, too, you're so right! I am happy, healthy and free of fear despite the narc's efforts to make it not so. Yay for me! :)
Love,
Vanci
*** AAAAAHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!! I hate it when I misuse words... malicious, not malignant. Sorry!
ReplyDelete:)
Love,
Vanci
ma·lig·nant [muh-lig-nuhnt] Show IPA
ReplyDeleteadjective
1.
disposed to cause harm, suffering, or distress deliberately; feeling or showing ill will or hatred.
2.
very dangerous or harmful in influence or effect.
3.
Pathology.
a.
tending to produce death, as bubonic plague.
b.
(of a tumor) characterized by uncontrolled growth; cancerous, invasive, or metastatic.
Ummnnn...sounds like the right word to me (well, maybe not the bubonic plague part ;)
CassandraSquared,
ReplyDeleteClose enough, LOL!
If only it could be the bubonic plague and could be solved by better hygiene and diet.
Thanks for commenting and for being the dictionary!
Love,
Vanci
"I can't help wondering what I knew and had already learned not to say. "
ReplyDeleteWow, what an amazing comment.
And me too. (I promise I am not trying to piggyback on your story. I hope you don't mind that I feel like I am connecting to your posts. I worry about becoming like my mom where however I feel, she is MORE SO.
I also have wondered often about why my parents repeat the same weird-ass stories ad nauseam, including how I "chose" to be born: a) nearly a month late, b) at 3 in the morning and c) during the worst weather of that year. I often wondered if it was because they so few other memories of me besides those reruns, but I also couldn't understand why they made me feel so off.
I'm probably never going to forget your comment about what you had already learned not to say at a far-to-young age.
vicariousrising,
ReplyDeleteYou said, "I promise I am not trying to piggyback on your story. I hope you don't mind that I feel like I am connecting to your posts. I worry about becoming like my mom where however I feel, she is MORE SO."
Darling, hop on. Piggyback, tagalong, walk with me, join in however you can/need/want. I'm putting my story out here because I recognize that there are a lot of traits/abuses that narcs share and I believe that there is safety in truth spoken out loud.
Please ALWAYS feel free to come here to say exactly what you need to say.
Love,
Vanci