"Things that interfere with writing well: Earning a living, especially by teaching."

-William H. Gass

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

No, Actually, It Did Not Go Well





Welcome to the third and apparently nowhere near final entry regarding my quest for permanent baby-proofing. This promises to be the most frustrated entry yet, so bear with my ranting.




[to self: Deep breath. Settle into a calming, excessively wordy description, and go from there...]




The Women's Health Center is on the same floor, down the hall, from Dr. H's office. I approach it with great excitement, as I have waited two months for this appointment. (Actually, that is only the length of time between appointments. I first asked a doctor for tubal ligation at age 18, making my wait time just under ten years.) This visit to my gynecologist seems like a step toward the light at the end of a really, really long tunnel (if you are thinking that this is an intentional invocation of female anatomy you are correct, and I'm enjoying the hell out of it).




The Women's Health Center is a reproduction (pun totally intended) of the Medical Specialties Office. Same muted colors for the upholstery, television in the same corner, different magazines. I go through the check-in rigamaroll and sit. And wait. The television bestows upon we waiters the slings and arrows of televised small claims court. In this particular episode, a woman is suing her landlord for her security deposit and he is simultaneously suing her right back for damages. Plaintiffs and defendants both, they glare at each other beneath ill-combed mullets. This world provides daily reminders as to why reproducing humans is an act engaged in far too often.




My appointment time comes and goes. Cases are settled. The suers and the sued offer post-trial commentary beneath rolling credits. I wait and wait.




Finally, the receptionist comes around from behind the desk and calls me over. She points me down the back hallway, where a nurse is waving a clipboard. She tells the receptionist thank you, sending her back out front. The nurse explains to me, "I didn't want to go get you myself, because there's an angry lady out there who says she's waited too long and I wasn't gonna deal with that."




We go through the motions. Weight. Blood pressure. Doctor will be right with you.




She pops back in.




What was the last day of your last period.



I have no idea. We look at the calendar, thinking that will jog my memory. I literally have no idea. Do people keep track of this shit?




To get rid of her, I tell a complete lie. I say, "Ohhhh yeah. The sixteenth." She happily marks it down, thanks me, and leaves for real. I have lied to a nurse.



Two minutes later the doctor is in. She is a healthy sort, in her late forties I'd wager, and looks like she rides horses or something else that requires physical exertion and wealth. Tennis. No make up, no jewelry. Whether she remembers me or not, she acts as if she does. I mean, I do have a rather memorable...um...face.



"Hellloooo, good to see you again."



"Hi, it's good to see you."



"You look great."



"Thanks."



"So." Clipped, but not curt. "What can I do for you today?"



"Well I think Dr. H told you that I am requesting tubal ligation."



"He did. Tell me, Kelly, have you hooked yourself into some counseling yet?"



As you may remember, as a teacher I am the Apotheosis of Patience, and this is no different. I make no gestures to reveal how vile I find the idea that one must seek counseling before a simple medical procedure.



"No, I haven't."

"Frankly, even if you had, I'm just not comfortable performing this surgery on women under thirty. However, I do want you encourage you to get a therapist or psychiatrist or other mental health professional involved before you continue with this. I think anyone potentially performing the surgery would want you to have sorted that all out."




Stop time, Zack Morris style. You won't do it at all? And you knew what this appointment was about? Um, that might have been appropriate information to offer BEFORE the $25 copay, ass hole. Or BEFORE I took the day off of work. Or BEFORE I got my little child hating hopes up.



Dr. Gynopussy, as she will heretofore be known, senses that I am frustrated (might have had something to do with heavy sighing and eyeball movements...she's very perceptive) and says, "I'm sorry to make you come all the way over here. And I hope you don't feel like I'm abandoning you."



No, actually, I don't feel abandoned at all. Here is the list of things that I feel:



1. Fucking irritated

2. Patronized

3. Belittled

4. Judged

5. Did I mention fucking irritated??



So then she launches into this defensive speech about regret rates, and her oath to "do no harm" and blah blah freaking blah. I say, "Would it be easier for someone to get a vasectomy?"



She says she isn't sure, but that she would certainly be interested in knowing. Then she says, "Are you in a relationship with someone who does not want children?"



I first mention that one's relationship status shouldn't really have any bearing on medical decisions. I then tell her, in an attempt to escape what had just become an awkward moment, that dating someone who wanted kids would be like dating a Republican. Someone who wants children disagrees with me on something pretty darned fundamental to my identity, something that is non-negotiable. Then I go ahead and make it awkward again with this: "I find it incredibly frustrating to have the entire medical profession, not to mention 98% of everyone else I know, consistently calling that part of me into question, as if there is some part of me that is unknowable, or that I need to be protected from decisions I MIGHT make later."



So then she says, "I understand completely," and IN THE SAME BREATH, asks if my boyfriend would seek a vasectomy.



What?!



Despite whatever antiquated world-view Gynopussy is operating within, I thought she might see how I would find that offensive. Regardless of who I am dating, my reproductive decisions are my own.



Folded into her suggestion is the assumption that obtaining a vasectomy for a young unmarried male presents fewer obstacles than obtaining tubal ligation for a young unmarried female. If this is true, me and the nice folks at Cambridge Hospital are going to be in our own little courtroom drama. I left the office with her repeated urging to seek counseling echoing in my brain.



I make an appointment at the desk with another gynecologist in the building. He represents one of three more "shots" within Cambridge Hospital. I have to wait another month. I have to pay another fee.



On my walk to the car, my mouth excreted foul language unlike any I've ever spoken. I ran out of swears. Now, I come from a long line of laborers and drunks. Running out of swears is not a small thing, people.



Then I do what I always do when I am about to for serious freak out. Like any grown up who can make her own damn decisions, I call my dad. He says a number of unhelpful things like:



"Given the likelihood that your offspring will resemble me, it's kind of your duty to the world to have at least one."



and



"General anestesia sounds like just what you need right now, actually, I'm surprised she wouldn't give it to you."



and, his only serious comment:



"Well, all she's recommending is that you explore a really important decision with an impartial person before going through with it."



To which I say:





Do people who want to have children have to seek counseling?

Do people who are having trouble conceiving have to go see a psychiatrist before receiving fertility treatment?

Do people seeking fertility treatment get a speech about how the process of having kids is non-reversible?




NO! Why is the seriousness of choosing NOT to have children GREATER than choosing TO have children?



There. Aren't. Enough. Swears.

4 comments:

Melinda said...

That's just ridiculous! It angers me to no end that one of the first things she said was that you needed a therapist. When will the world realize that not wanting to have children is a perfectly acceptable lifestyle and not some sort of psychiatric illness? GRRRR...

annie said...

a) i love your dad...so witty.
b) it is quite surprising you ran out of swears. maybe you should see a therapist to disuss this breakdown in brain to mouth reproduction process.
c) i lie to nurses all the time, what's the big deal???

Rev Sully said...

I'm just sorry I'm apparently in the 99% who's responded to your solicited opinion...^_~

Here's a Republican idea...have you thought about "abstinence"? WAH!!! ^_~ I'm a recovering Republican...I still have this Mighty White Voiceover interrupting my Internal Monologue.

I loved the "Zack Morris Moment" though. Wow...I'm sorry for your frustration and I'm sure I could call the doctor tomorrow and be lined up for a vastecomy before I could get Red Sox tickets. Would therapy be part of my rigmarole in order to be Baby Proofed?

It's odd...that a grown woman sure of herself gets such a queer reaction from a professional. Do WHO no harm...Kelly H or the imaginary, invisible, never-gonna exist potential people your ovaries have the next 12+ years change to produce? It's saner to drug a woman's body into thinking it's continually pregnant with the hopes of someday she will help the GNP with another babyseat and Montessori tuition?

I told Kelly once the world needs more people like herself and the only way to insure that is to grow your own...I'm a selfish brat, what can I say? But I do support Kelly 110% be able to do whatever the heck she wants. Dig?

'Nuff Said.

dot eedeeyou said...

I assure you, Rev Sully, that I AM making sure there is a whole tribe of Kellys running around. Hellooooo, why do you think I'm a teacher?! Ummm...so I can brainwash young adults into acting and thinking exactly like me!! I just get to avoid buying them anything or, god forbid, having to endure stretching and stitches in my precious tunnel of love.

I think it'd be good if they gave out vasectomies AT red sox games. But, oh man, would the beer line move slooowwwly and carefully. :)