One Good Egg: An Illustrated Memoir (3 page)

This is when I met Karen, the ex with the beagle and belongings who just left me. We’re almost at the end here, Mary.

On our first date, I told Karen I wanted to have kids. She told me she had no interest in being pregnant, but her friends all said she’d make a really good dad. Well, three months later, she flip-flopped—no kids, not hers, not mine, no way, no how—only by then we were in love.

Here’s the un-universal curveball part: Six months post-Karen’s flip-flop, I had a grand mal seizure and I ended up being diagnosed with a mass on my brain which required brain surgery, and that unexpectedly led to some temporary loss of my abilities to speak, read, or write. I was on antiseizure medication and in speech therapy and had to back-burner my next book project. I remember stammering something to a neuropsychiatrist about being afraid I couldn’t do it, meaning write the next book, and she said, so casually, “Have a baby? Let’s not rule it out just yet.” “Let’s,” you know, like maybe she and I were going to have the baby, and “yet,” like . . . never mind.

By the next spring, that was last spring, I was starting to feel more like myself. One afternoon, I went back to my car to feed the meter and I found a rosebud-patterned baby dress laid out on the navy-blue hood. I don’t know if you believe in Signs from the Universe, Mary, but this was my third in three months. The first was a pristine white lace baby’s bonnet sitting on a post at the head of a trail I hiked during mud season. And the second: a baby bib tied to the tree at the end of my driveway. Anyway, I put the baby decision back on the table. I went to a seminar on artificial insemination.

I bought a basal body thermometer.

I convinced Karen to go to a support group for couples considering parenting, even though she never really was considering parenting. I was the one; I was supposed to decide so we could both get on with our lives.

It’s awfully hard to pit an imaginary baby against a real live relationship, Mary. Paralyzing, in fact. But then I had an epiphany.

Wanting to have a baby had always meant not wanting to be with Karen. But when I separated the baby and Karen, when I made them into two decisions— SNIP! Do you want to be with Karen? Yes! Do you want to have a baby? Yes!

I could make them.

Karen mistakenly opened an old e-mail from my friend in Melbourne before I ever got to make use of my epiphany.

 

From:
Steve
Subject:
A New Channel
Date:
November 17, 2000

 

Dear Suzy,
Thanks for your letter. This is strange-- I’m not used to typing or e-mailing anything to you. I’ll keep this short; my aim is to open up a new channel. So, where to start? Baby, I guess. I can see a whole heap of practical issues, yet I have this innate trust in you. I told my friend Diane it’s kind of a puzzle, not one that provokes anxiety, but one that is a bit exciting. I think you’re telling me you want to be a father, she puts it to me, and I tell her, yes, I think it could be nice.
Love, Steve XOXO

 

Karen concluded I was trying to have a baby behind her back, packed up, and left me the night before last.

So there it is, Mary. How I got to be thirty-eight and childless.

This conversation has been so helpful, thank you. I have always wanted to have a baby.

I’m still a little afraid, but I’m done letting my fears stand in my way. I know what you think, Mary. I really hope it’s not too late. All I can do is try.

 

Step Two

Other books

Lilac Mines by Cheryl Klein
By Sun and Candlelight by Susan Sizemore
Heat of Night by Whittington, Harry
The Ghost of Ernie P. by Betty Ren Wright
THE POWER OF THREE by Mosiman, Billie Sue
Six Minutes To Freedom by Gilstrap, John, Muse, Kurt
Wilde Velvet by Longford , Deila
Genesis by McCarthy, Michael
Clara and Mr. Tiffany by Susan Vreeland