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First
Time Fatherhood at a Medically Advanced Age
The
summer of 2003 was shaping up as a typical whirlwind summer.
I had spent the first part of June traveling to Australia
for work. A great
trip as I made several great friendships on past business trips.
I had flown home and was spending 5 days getting over jet
lag, saying hello to my wife, and desperately trying to find
some time on the practice range as I was leaving for an 11 day
golf trip with two close friends and one of my friend’s dad to
play golf in Scotland. Yes,
it is a blessed life that I am living.
Seeing the world and getting paid to do so, golfing in
Scotland for the second year in a row, and a wife that was
totally supportive of both.
I
came home on July 5th and was very excited to tell my
wife about the trip – shooting 74 at Turnberry – my best
round ever on one of the best known courses, birding the 18th
hole on the Old Course on the last round we would play there
that week, Fred’s dad shooting 84 on the Old Course at 79
years old, and of course I had a few gifts for my wife of 17
years. Mel, my wife,
picks me up at the airport, gives me a big hug, let’s me drive
home to get reacquainted with driving on the right side of the
road, and listens to all my stories on the 25 minute ride up the
highway. Little did
I know what was about to happen.
We
walk in the front door and as I reach for luggage to pull out
some gifts for Mel but she has another plan.
She tells me to sit on the couch.
I say OK – thinking not in the door 2 minutes and I’m
going to get lucky –
and then she opens the door to the entertainment center and
pulls out a wrapped box. I
protest – but honey I’m the one that’s been gone, I have
gifts, you need to open those first.
She just smiles and says – no, you go first.
So I do. I
tear open the paper and see baby booties.
Needless to say – I was speechless.
I looked at her and all I could do was ask – really?
And she simply nodded her head yes.
Wow – 17 years of marriage, had not used birth control
for over 10 years--we just figured God had other plans for us
– and now this. Mel
had found out for sure the 2nd day I was in Scotland,
but managed to avoid telling me.
I did wonder why she didn’t answer the phone much when
I called – now I knew.
Now
you know how I got the news that I was going to be a dad for the
first time at 42 years old and the due date was right around
Mel’s 43rd birthday.
I knew it was going to change my life, but I had no idea
how much. As Paul
Harvey would say – “here is the rest of the story”.
Fatherhood
for the first time at, as Mel’s OB/GYN would say, a medically
advanced age. The
doc always said that with a smile, but for those fathers reading
this I think you know what she meant.
How would I do? Will
I be a good dad? How will my selfish world of work, golf,
travel, and doing what I wanted to when I wanted to change?
Will everything be OK with the baby – after all, Mel is
42? How will I and
we handle it if everything isn’t OK?
Wow – the flood of emotion and thoughts and “what
ifs” was incredible. The
one thing I knew was that God changed his mind and we needed to
be parents.
Mel
had lost her dad about 6 months before this after a very short
battle with cancer. They
were very close and it was a major surprise for all of us.
After thinking about the news for a few minutes I looked
at Mel and said, I guess your dad needed a few months to do some
networking in heaven and convince God that we needed to be
parents. She laughed
and cried a little and agreed.
I guess God can change his mind.
January
17th, 2004 at about 8 PM Mel tells me that she is
having contractions and that I need to be ready to go to the
hospital. I make
sure our bags are ready and all we have to do is jump in the car
and go. At about
11:45 PM she talks to the doctor and we head out the door on a
cold, rainy evening. We
get into the hospital, get our room, and they tell us – you
can do whatever you want – walk around, sit in the room, watch
TV – because Mel has told them she wants to wait until the
last minute to get any kind an epidural or other medication –
little did she know that epidural would never happen.
So we walked the halls and every time Mel has a
contraction I hug her, hold her hand, and tell her it will be OK
- easy for me to say.
January 18th, 3:00 AM her water breaks.
I call the nurse, they get her in the delivery bed, I
call her uncle and wake him up to ask him to go pick up her mom
and head to the hospital – remember it was cold and rainy and
we didn’t want to worry about Mel’s mom driving.
January
18th, 8:20 AM after a lot work on Mel’s part, the
doctor tells me we have a baby girl.
I leave Mel to the care of a nurse, the doctor and her
mom and follow the other nurse into the part of the room where
they give my daughter a vitamin K shot – welcome to the world
--, weigh her, measure her, and wrap her in a blanket and hand
her to me. WOW
– I look into the blue eyes of my first child and know that in
that instant that I have never loved anything in this particular
way. My child, our
child, part me, part Mel, part my family, part her family, and
then it hits me all over again – all those questions, the fear
of not being a good father, of something happening to her.
It is unreal, surreal, and certainly one of the greatest
moments in my life.
I
walk over to Mel and her mom and give her to Mel.
I introduce Shelby Rae to her mamaw - giddy happiness,
tears of joy (that come to my eye as I write this), what a
special moment. Then
I’m asked to sit in the chair so the doctor can do her job
with Mel.
As
I look back at that day I know I was I right about one thing –
my life had changed and would never be exactly the same again.
Shelby
is now 4 years old and is growing up so quickly.
Looking back, I realized that I had to change how I got
balance in my life. Golf
with the buddies had to take a bit of a back seat.
I needed to see if I could shape my career so I’d be
home a little more. Mel
and I would have to find ways to keep connected while also being
attentive and loving parents.
Balance – tough to find in this overly connected,
overly visual, often excessively driven world we live in today.
Many
of you know that the first few years are at times so fast and at
times so slow. Will
they sleep through the night, when will they walk and talk, when
will they learn to use the potty, when will they realize that
falling in the lake can be deadly thing, – these things either
come very quickly or they come slowly.
I’m learning that I can influence many things, can
affect a few directly, and that some things just are going to
happen when the child is ready for them to happen.
That is a tough lesson for me as I’m the typical guy
– how can I just fix it. But
I’m learning there are times to push, prod, and cajole and
there are times to simply hug your child or your wife and that
is enough to move forward.
There
are many lessons that I’m taking in, but one that keeps coming
back to me is that if we did not have the church? We would be
missing out on a key element that brings balance.
Shelby is learning that you go to church for much more
than an hour each Sunday. You
go for education, you go for music, you go for fellowship, you
go because people share values that make you feel comfortable
your child is going to have friends that know there is more to
life than what they see, touch, hear, smell, and taste.
I have to say that the church is an absolute key place
for my family and I to find some balance, build lasting and deep
relationships, and get equipped with the tools we need to face
life’s daily challenges. Hopefully
Shelby is learning these things as well.
I’m
also learning there is a difference between being a father and
being a daddy. Both
roles are needed – be responsible, go to work everyday, be
serious about critical aspects of life is the role of the
father; the play and wrestle on the floor, go to the park, make
daddycakes (our version of pancakes) on a Saturday morning, ride
a rollercoaster, teach them how to fish, play in the ocean, play
in the pool, hug them when they are sick or hurt—that’s the
role of the daddy. The
challenge to me is knowing when to play what role.
I’m learning – but also have to make sure that I
don’t fall into the trap of spending more time as a father and
not enough as a daddy. I
think that is a real challenge for older first time dads as we
spent a lot of time focused on those “grownup” aspects of
life, so it is easy to miss those chances to be a daddy –even
if it is only for a few minutes – and when you miss those
chances you can’t get them back.
Balance between these constructs is something to think
and pray about because it won’t be too long before the chances
to be a daddy will be far and few between.
So
in four years I’ve learned some lessons, learned that I have
many more to experience and learn from, and know that fatherhood
and being a daddy – at whatever age – is a blessing.
I’m so thankful that God changed his mind and gave me
this opportunity. Oh
I still wonder if I will be a great father, if my daughter will
grow up learning to love life and God, and if we are instilling
values that will guide her to a long and happy life.
I get the feeling that will never change – whether she
is 4, 14, or 34. Those
blue eyes still look at me and I still get the feeling I got
about 8:30 AM on January 18th, 2004 – but now I
also see a sparkle in them when she runs to me when I walk in
from a business trip or even running a brief errand.
WOW – what could be better than that while I’m in my
earthly body?
My
final thoughts are – if you are a first time dad at an
advanced medical age – embrace it, love it, and always strive
to find the balance between being a father, a daddy, a husband,
and your career – it is essential.
Also not a bad idea to try to stay in shape – chasing
soccer balls, playing softball, and playing in the pool or ocean
do require energy.
Bill
Liebler
itcham@bellsouth.net.
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