More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
JD Roberto

GET UPDATES FROM JD Roberto

What's the Appropriate Response to Finding Out You're Pregnant

Posted: 07/08/11 04:00 PM ET

I remember being in my 20s when my mother told me that, while she wasn't comfortable calling me an "accident," she does have first hand proof that contraceptive foam isn't 100% effective. By the time I came along, Mom already had grave doubts about the viability of her marriage. I suspect that I am the product of apathy sex -- the kind a woman has with her husband because refusing means an argument and there's at least a chance he'll fall asleep afterward and give her an hour of peace.

I wonder, sometimes, what went through her mind when she realized she was going to have her third child. Before she was obliged to gush about it to her parents and her friends, did she -- maybe just once -- secretly pray for a miscarriage? I never asked. I suspect that shortly after I post this I'll get a phone call from my Mom telling me what a blessing I am (thanks, in advance, Mom). But this isn't about how we feel down the road, this is about that first split second when we realize that everything we know is about to change for good.

If you believe those EPT commercials, the woman is supposed to come bounding out of the bathroom with a giddy smile on her face and leap into her husband's arms. Instinctively, you know these commercials are a lie when you realize this woman is fully clothed. She's just been urinating on a stick and she looks like she's on her way to an H&M photo shoot. In a realistic ad, she would come stumbling into the bedroom with her pants at her ankles wearing only one shoe. On a side note, why is the guy waiting in the living room? One of the many benefits of marriage is built-in permission to sit and talk with your spouse while they take a dump.

In my case, I was on the counter watching Karen try not to pee all over her hand. It was one of those rare moments in my life where I was possessed of absolute clarity. I was entirely and completely there in the moment with one, singular thought going through my mind: "If it comes out positive, you absolutely cannot look horrified."

About 30 seconds after the tell-tale-tinkle stopped, Karen looked up and showed me those two, unmistakable vertical lines. Before I could even check my look in the mirror, she burst into a hot mess of projectile tears. In the TV commercial, these are delicate tears of joy about the miracle of life. In my bathroom, not so much. More like an uncontrolled emotional outburst, the fine print of which was "What have we done?" We spent the next hour lying on our bed, assuring each other that everything was going to be all right.

In retrospect, this seems like a terribly inappropriate response for a couple that was actually trying to get pregnant. We weren't exactly having buyer's remorse or dreading the idea of bringing a child into the world -- we genuinely wanted this to happen. But, at the same time, we knew that our old life had just run out of gas at the railroad crossing and a freight train was on the way through. (I can't read that last sentence without seeing Evil Diesel bearing down on Bertie the Bus as Thomas and Percy race to save him... my metaphoric vocabulary has been forever hijacked by cartoons).

In the unlikely event that my son should one day read this, I'm sure I'll fall all over myself to reassure him that being his father has been the one of the most amazing and defining events of my life (I have to say "one of the most amazing events" in case my daughter eventually reads this.) But I'd be lying if I didn't admit that there was a painful trade involved in bringing him into the world.

It's not that I didn't eventually have my Hallmark moment, but it came later -- the first time I felt my son turnover in Karen's belly. But, for me, the genuine first moment was melancholy and conflicted and I am inclined to think that's a good thing, a necessary thing. In the end, all we have to offer our kids is the life we had before they came into the world; our accumulated experiences, wisdom and beliefs. Missing your old life means you had a life worth missing. As I lay on that bed and told my newly pregnant wife that it was all going to be alright, I like to think I was paying my respects to everything that I knew I was giving up. I was, in my own way, mourning my old life.

Sometimes I still do.

 

Follow JD Roberto on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jdroberto

 
 
  • Comments
  • 204
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
02:51 PM on 08/30/2011
Recently when my brother came by to visit with his gf he told me about a convo he had with our mom (who lives in the same bldg) He said our mom had made a reference to one of her kids being an accident. He said, "Who was an accident?" and she said, "Pfff! Not YOU!" When he asked her to expand on that she told him we could read her journal when she was dead. When I think about it, Im just glad to be alive accident or not, but the more I think about it, the more confused, hurt and disturbed by the way she came out with it. I know I should just go confront her about it...but Im not sure I can handle her way of expressing herself. It just seems cold and hurtful. I havent had a real convo with her in weeks.
03:19 PM on 07/13/2011
There is no "appropriate" response. My husband and I had to use fertility drugs to have our first son, and still had periods of doubt and angst when we finally got pregnant. 12 years later, we got our "surprise" baby. I found out about 12 hours before I told my husband. Burst into tears when I did. I like to tell people he "prayed" when I told him. His exact words were: "Jesus Christ!" My youngest is now 7 and I wouldn't trade him for anything, but at the time, we were just beginning to feel that our oldest was getting independent, we could go out more by ourselves, and have some moments where we were just a couple again. Now, I'm a widow (my hubby passed away from cancer that was diagnosed a week after we found out I was pregnant), and that "surprise" is the joy of my life. It'll be all too soon before he's "all growed up 'n gone." But, my initial reaction was nothing like the commercials say it should be.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eryn Morris
02:27 PM on 07/12/2011
I loved reading this. Its definitely nice to know that I'm not the only one that wasn't all laughter, hugs, and gag-worthy Hallmark music when my piss-stick came out positive.

I believe my reaction was, "SHIT!" It was in the wee, vampiric hours of the morning and I had a spare test lying around after a previous pregnancy scare. I took it on a whim, convinced that it would be negative. It obviously wasn't, and when I walked in the room in a daze and awakened my then-fiance-now-husband, his response was a nearly identical, "SHIT!"

I very nearly had an abortion on more than one occasion. I love my daughter, but she wasn't planned and I was having a very hard time handling being pregnant. She's wanted now, but wasn't necessarily wanted then. If anything, the whole experience made me staunchly pro-choice; I'd hate to think there will ever be a woman out there forced to keep a pregnancy she doesn't feel completely comfortable with. I occasionally feel like a defective woman, like I should be some gushing, glowing, giggling mommy that can't wait to breed again because OMG TEH BAAAYYYBEEZ ARE SO AWESOME. No. Absolutely not. I love my kid but it ends there. Despite its concurrent rewards, my pregnancy and my daughter's infancy were some of the most taxing, torturous times of my life and I don't have the patience or the sanity to deal with it. Never. Again.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissFrijole
My bite is worse than my bark.
03:15 PM on 07/12/2011
Wow...this sounds like what is going through my head and I'm not even pregnant yet! I thought I was the only person who is horrified by the thought of having kids and feels inconvenienced by having one, at least to some degree.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
annetteandover
06:08 AM on 07/12/2011
Wow! Is he speaking the truth! I did the same thing when I found out I was pregnant. As much as my husband wanted children, that was something I was not sure I was ready for or ever wanted. It was something I only thought about vaguely, never seriously. Sometimes wish I'd never had the two I have, and other times I'm glad I did. It's still vague in my mind. I do have to say it was an experience, one I very well could have lived without, but it happened and I made the most of it, and sometimes am even glad I did it. Wouldn't recommend it to someone sitting on the fence, either you are in it for the long haul or you are not. If you are at all indecisive about it, it can be a real shock to your system. Your whole life changes forever, and you are only left to wonder,"what if."
05:52 AM on 07/12/2011
Mistakes??????Accidents???????or just a surprise?
04:26 AM on 07/12/2011
This is exactly how I feel right now :-) 16 weeks pregnant.
03:41 AM on 07/12/2011
Love this article!!! x10! You are a great writer, you know how to grab the audiences attention
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
msfaye
03:02 AM on 07/12/2011
both my kids were mistakes. they know it but i always told my children they did not ask to be here i decided i wanted them because lets face it abortion is legal and because i wanted them i had to suffer. i didn't get to go to the clubs i had to be there for them. when i yelled at them i didn't tell them it was because i loved them, it was because they were making me sick and tired of them. i did some horrible things and said some horrible things and i told them that was mean and nasty that it was wrong and then i'd tell them the right way so they could never say no ever told them the right way. i told them they stunk and their breath stinks how can you expect to get a girlfriend or boyfriend if you stink. i told them to clean up after themselves cause when i sent them to their husband or wife i didn't want that person to send them back. now that is being okay with a mistake and i don't think they think they were ever a mistake to me. glad i have them no people are more a captive audience when i start telling them my stories. i think they love the stories, they turn the t.v. down so they can hear. best mistake i ever made if i say so myself.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MFM008
I have a headache.
02:16 AM on 07/12/2011
I used one of those old tests back in 1983 where you had to be a chemist.
Mix it, let it sit undesturbed for 1 hour and if there was a circle at the bottom you were preggers, if not free and clear.
Well mine was a circle. . My reaction was--- this thing doesnt work right.
That 'circle' is gonna be 28 in September
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nohopepope2187
Honest † Impartial † Enlightening † Centrist
01:55 AM on 07/12/2011
The decision in family planning is the difference in realism and idealism.
01:46 AM on 07/12/2011
The right response is -- Is it mine. lol
05:15 AM on 07/12/2011
trust me...that is the wrong response.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
juliana1217
01:43 AM on 07/12/2011
most pregnancies are unplanned. But, the birth control doesn't work when it's in the drawer
01:30 AM on 07/12/2011
Don't get me wrong, I think this is a pretty good article, but i have to set one thing straight. Who are YOU to tell a women how to react to her own body? Now, I think it's VERY true that no child should be told that they were a mistake,even if the woman didn't plan it, God had a plan, for the baby and it's life. But honestly, you can't expect a woman to NOT burst into tears when she sees the result of the pregnancy test. Wether its tears of joy or not, i mean, what the hell do u expect from us?? The guy who wrote this is a man, and will never know what it's like to be pregnant. Yes having a baby is a wonderful thing, but it is also terrifying. just think how scared you would be to know that a living person is inside you, and your very own skin and organs is the only thing that's protecting it. that if something hurts you, you might be hurting the baby. imagine having that on your shoulders! it is a very huge thing and i imagine it must be pretty damn frightening when u first find out that you will soon be pushing a 7 poind living being with hands and feet out of your ass, how would YOU feel? women are the ones that have to give birth, so you can't say what is the proper way to react to their body
02:25 AM on 07/12/2011
If you're referring to the part of the article where the author wrote, "If it comes out positive, you absolutely cannot look horrified," you should know he was talking to himself, not his wife. That's why he said "...with one, singular thought going through my mind." He absolutely didn't want to look horrified and worry his wife.
05:28 AM on 07/12/2011
I see this article as a more light-hearted article (the reference to Thomas the Tank Engine assisted me in deciding this). Don't take it so seriously!
01:10 AM on 07/12/2011
I cannot speak for my husband but I didn't have this reaction..Maybe it was because we were older when I first got pregnant..me 29, him 32..Had done alot of the stuff that I wanted to, clubbing and hanging out was getting old and boring (LOL- Funny as I have reached that age bracket where we can do that again, kids are now 17 and 22 ). I was ready to enter the next phase of my life. I was thrilled when I found out I was pregnant, surprised but thrilled..I don't believe anyone is actually ready for the first new baby, as it is life altering but you just go with it..That is if you want to have children..To each their own!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bones Rhodes
01:00 AM on 07/12/2011
"One of the many benefits of marriage is built-in permission to sit and talk with your spouse while they take a dump."

Uh, no, it is not unless you and your spouse are both in the military and share the same barracks.
01:55 AM on 07/12/2011
All of the solidly married couples that I (personally) know do that, myself and hubby included. None of them, nor myself, are in the military...sooo I have to agree with the OP.
03:04 AM on 07/12/2011
I must agree, why would anyone want to be present while their spouse or husband takes a dumb, I like my privacy when I take a dump, I enjoy the time to think, I'd feel like I was robbed of my solitude not to mention how inappropriate it would feel to have my wife chew the fate with me while I push poo out of my butt, only with my closest guy friends would something like that happen, and it'd be in a public bathroom, in separate stalls, i mean no offense to people who do that but I don't see anything wrong in having some boundaries.