6th Aprm

Armistice Day

Filed under: 4th Month — admin @ 9:51 am

November 5

Not sick! I even swallowed a pill and nothing happened.

November 7

Felt the funniest bump in my stomach. Like a bubble that popped out and popped back. What goes?

November 8

I’m constantly starved these days. An amazing gnawing goes on and on in the pit of my stomach. Spaghetti will douse it temporarily, and I sneak out into the kitchen while

Mom is busy somewhere else and gulp down practically a whole can. We had spaghetti for lunch on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Mother is beginning to look at it askance.

I’ve loaded her down with wool, knitting needles, and a yarn book with instructions for sweaters, knitted kimonos, soakers, and blankets. I hope she has fun. Then by way of reward I bundled her off to Bedford Village to an auction sale. We had a lovely time watching the bargain hunters and eating homemade cake sold by the local church ladies. I talked Mom out of spending her money on an Oriental throw rug, and made her lend it to me instead for the cutest old cradle you ever saw.

Only twenty-two dollars, an antique, dull waxed pine, carefully carved and in excellent condition, considering its age. We put the lovely thing in the back of the car and Morn cherished it all the way home.

Later I called up Peggy, who used to be a kindergarten teacher, studied child psychology, and knows all about baby-raising. The things she said could happen to Jake if I rocked him in a cradle I had no idea! There are men in jails today because their mothers rocked them in cradles.

So now the cradle is wrapped in an old blanket in the garage. I’ve got to keep Jake out of jail.

November 11 Armistice Day

It’s amazing what a child can do. The war used to seem to me like a dirty deal concocted by Hitler and Hirohito to interfere with my pleasant peaceful life in the country. To Pat it seemed his opportunity to don a suit of armor with a little gold bar on his shoulder and ride off on a shining charger to his last fling . To both of us it was just a case of having fun until those very ponderous wheels in Washington got around to Pat.

To Jake it was just nothing at all, though I privately felt that he hoped the war would wait till he had a chance to meet his father.

But I wasn’t so sure he’d have the chance. Pat’s hopeful application for enlistment had gone ignored now for four months but that blissful state couldn’t go on forever. It was just a race between those papers and the local draft board, with Jake and me squarely in the middle no matter who wins.

It’s queer how a relatively little thing like having a baby months and months off can make a close-up of a war 5,000 miles away .

Pat and I had lived for more than a year in England. When Mom came to visit us she and I went to Germany less than a month before the war began. (Pat was finishing up some business affairs in England.) We had seen a whole nation thinking, talking, acting under ruled, carefully-nurtured hysteria. I know there’s no arguing with people like that. There’s only one thing to do and I guess I know America has to help in the doing of it. But up to now it’s been something you read about. Suddenly it’s close and very real.

And I’ve got a feeling that Jake will be just old enough to do it all over again.

I’m not sick just as the Doctor Promised

Filed under: 4th Month — admin @ 9:48 am

November 1

Free, at last, from the deceits of the roaring shower water. I can be sick in peace. Eliza even looks sympathetic.

I rushed down to meet Morn on the early train from New York and waited for four trains, but no mother. I wired: WHERE ARE YOU. At noon the answer carne: AT HOME SURPRISE WHERES THAT TICKET YOU WERE SENDING.

Pat was still asleep when I got home, but his rest carne to an abrupt end. He swore it had all been arranged, said he’d get affidavits to prove it. He put in a few calls to New York and let me listen to someone’s profuse apologies. I guess he wasn’t just being a son-in-law. Anyway, it’s all fixed now and she’ll be along on Monday. .

November 2

What is this? Today, the day before my Morn’s arrival with no one to say me nay, I could have been as ill as I pleased, and lo, - I’m not ill at all.

Yesterday I’m hearty and frequent and now I’m not sick, just as the doctor promised. What won’t they think up next?

November 3

Instead of six meals yesterday I had ten and the charm is still working. I woke up healthy. Oh, the joy of it! The amazing, stupendous, colossal joy of it! I may have run a month over schedule but what does it matter? I’m cured. I even considered taking a pill-but decided there was no point in pushing my luck too far.

I dressed carefully with my old stretched girdle under my slacks, and I swear when I hold my stomach in (a little something in the way of an effort) and let my jacket cover the gaping zipper fastening, you’d never know. So with a song on my lips and a tight rein on my stomach I headed for the station.

When I ran pell mell down the platform to meet her, I could see the words “Don’t run!” trembling on my mother’s lips but with a tremendous effort she controlled herself and said, “Hi ya!”

She had another struggle with herself when I hoisted her biggest case into the back of the car. I didn’t blame her but I was determined to be not a whit different from usual. Chatting briskly about nothing, I whisked us off to the joint.

It was marvelous to see her eyes pop when we entered the grounds, and when I stopped in front of the house she was quite speechless, which is something for my Mom. Bland as a button, I ushered her in, showed her the living-room, the dining-room with the world’s record table, the pink-and-burgundy bath, the quilted headboards, the gleaming, purring kitchen, the drunken rabbit and Uncle Joe. I could hardly wait for her to see the terrace with the sweep of sparkling swimming pool beyond but I saved it for the very last. Then, throwing wide the doors, I cried, “And this is the pay-off!”

It was! The cemetery benches, the wheeled chaises-even the water-had been put away for the winter. Only a gaping blue hole in the ground was left. “November I,” I had told the plumbers, “drain it,” and they had been true to their charge.

Later: Mom is really behaving beautifully. Not a bit of clucking, no advice, no cracks. And she seems to have no doubts about it being three months, instead of really four.

Again not sick, Allah be praised! I ate a specially big breakfast just to prove that “morning sickness” and I had separated. Took Muz and Peggy into New York, with the idea of lunching somewhere nice and ritzy. (I’ve got my second rent check!)

I wore my black “maternity” dress, but I put the coat on over it before I modeled the outfit for Mom, In the dressing process I got around to my neglected W.P.B. chart and entered the sad figures (Stomach, 36), then carefully hid the chart.

We cabbed all over town. First El Morocco, then the Versailles, but they were both closed for lunch. We ended up at the Algonquin with not a celebrity in sight. Mom enjoyed the matinee -but Peggy and I just sat and worried about our lost youth. She says she’s beginning to hate any one who has even a hint of slimness, and to see all those young things on the stage …

Met Pat afterwards for the ride home. I was so hungry I wanted to scream. Mother, seeing me mow down Eliza’s biscuits, merely said it was nice that I have an appetite instead of just picking at my food as of old.

Baby Shower for Peggy

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 8:13 pm

October 27

Letter from Mom. She gets here on the first. Dug out the long neglected W.P.B. chart and, taking my courage between my teeth, filled it in:

Waist, 28½ inches; Stomach, 35 inches; Hips, 39 inches; Bust, 35 inches; Weight, 120 pounds. But I can still wear the slacks if I let the zipper stop short. What with the long matching jacket you’d never suspect.

And still-despite all the things the girls, the books, the doctors, and the rules say-I’m sick every morning. But I have got over the 4pm upheaval.

My appetite is anything but voracious. I’m still interested mostly in tomato soup but that added weight must be coming from somewhere. Maybe it’s those midnight snacks. And there is a difference in my face. The mask of pregnancy has never appeared, but some of the wrinkles are disappearing just plain fattened ‘out. Others will soon take their place, though; Lucretia fixed that.

Drove Pat to his office in Bridgeport today and stopped off at the first agency in the ‘phone book.

All the girls in town are working in munitions factories for three times a maid’s wages. Not one would prefer a nice family in the country to big money.

I tried Norwalk once more before I headed for New York, and they actually found a girl for me to interview. “All I asks is no baby care, honey.”

October 28

Went all the way into New York and an efficient “personnel director” seated me in one of those tricky little cubicles that always scare me tongue-tied. She produced a fat, sullen-looking woman of about forty, who demanded suspiciously, “How many children?”

“Well, none really, but-”

She smoothed her coat over her broad hips. “No, Ma’am. I’ve had thirteen of my own and I don’t want no more.”

Next came a carbon copy of Lucretia, only smelling of “Floor d’amoor”, I brushed her off quick. The third and last was a thin little girl, racked with coughs. She was sweet, but I can’t have Jake catching things.

I bought a newsp2per and looked up “situations wanted”, while I syphoned off the tomato soup surplus. There were columns of them, all stipulating “no country”. Only a few wanted more money than Pat earns.

Back home again empty-handed, I cooked us a gourmet’s dream of tomato soup, creamed canned tuna fish on toast, canned peas and carrots, and the bakery’s gooiest cupcakes.

October 29

Pat said I ought to be looking for a maid instead of teaing and bridging a~ the baby shower for Peggy. It certainly shows how little a man knows, for I discovered today where I may be able to get a maid. She sounds wonderful and her name is Eliza.

Everyone at the shower was “expecting” except one girl who must have been quarantined. Nobody spoke to her because there was nothing to talk to her about. “Can you still fasten your shoes? Just wait! Bob says he’s got me where he wants me. I can’t get out of the house unless he ties the laces.” …”There I was reading a book in the lobby of the Waldorf, waiting for Jim to come along, and all of a sudden the book zooped right out of my hands, and was I embarrassed! Such a kick, in front of all those people.”… “I got an awful shock when I was walking down the street and tried to look in a store window. I bumped right into it, my stomach was so far ahead of my face!”… “My hands are so puffy I can’t get my wedding ring.”

My own hands are still slim and I hope they stay that way. If there’s ever a time a girl needs to wear a wedding ring this is it.

October 31

Eureka-Eliza! Brother, if she’s as good as she’s cracked up to be, we’re in. “Marvelous cook …wonderful servant …perfect with children.”

I met her in town. She was neat and clean, but what impressed me above and beyond all else was that she actually picked up her feet when she walked. I told her what we could afford to pay, but 1 promised her a raise with the advent of Jake.

Eliza grinned, showing two rows of gold teeth.

“I knows you can’t pay for what you ain’t got.”

Right away quick 1 bundled her into the car and drove to her Norwalk home to pick up her bags and her boy friend. He said he’d follow us out to Weston and learn the way. Eliza’s face grew longer with the miles. “So far out, I’m sorta scared,” she shivered. “Somebody might get me.” 1 assured her that wasn’t likely at all and told her about our regular house that’s two and a quarter miles nearer town. She looked slightly stunned when she saw the Reiner estate, but 1 explained we were only looking after it.

Eliza took over like a veteran, and what a dinner she served! Biscuits light as a feather-they’re really too fattening for us but I hate to spoil such a gesture. Pat simply glowed.

To celebrate our lonely Hallowe’en I had carved a pumpkin face, complete with ears, my most ambitious art project so far, and had bought’ doughnuts and cider for a witching midnight hour snack.

But after that dinner we both fell sound asleep before the fire and only woke up for long enough to climb the stairs to bed. Being parents certainly takes the old night-life spirit out of you.

I’m going to have a Baby Aren’t you Delighted

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 8:08 pm

October 23

Big weekend ahead. Bob and Mary Hutton are coming out. She and I don’t get along too well and I really want to pour it on. Hope I can make Lucretia cooperate and wear her shoes.

October 24

This is a fine thing! Some dopey Joe called up when Peggy and I were out riding and this morning Lucretia told me to the accompaniment of her giggling cackle: “Pretty funny! Guess what Mrs. Irwin said over the ‘phone-wanted to know how soon you was expectin’. I told her you and I didn’t know nothin’ ’bout it! Heh-heh!”

I thought it was so uproariously funny I dropped an entire tray of night-before cocktail glasses I was carrying. “While I’m breaking things, Lucretia,” I said, hiding my face among the pieces, “I might as well break the news. I’m going to have a baby. Aren’t you delighted?”

She was so delighted you’d think someone had just dropped a caterpillar down her neck. “No babies for me! Reg’lar family work is all right, but no babies. Besides, I don’t like this big house nohow. I’m givin’ notice.”

So I kept Jake on the agenda and scratched Lucretia off. In stony silence I drove her to town, boxes and packages and paper bags and “Cleopatra’s Love Dream”. Then I headed for the nearest employment agency.

No sign of life. Only the janitor, who informed me: “The lady says to me, she says, why stay open? Everybody has gone to work in Bridgeport where they make good money. I’m going in the Army myself next week.”

At the other agency a little man peeped out of “Western Stories” to chirp, “Maybe in a month or so- Corne back in a month.”

Sacrificing next week’s gas I drove to Norwalk, where a flustered female was busy with three ‘phones. “Hello,” she said: “Hello-no, not today… Sure, I can get you- Hello! …Yes, we’ve plenty of girls- Hello! …Yes, I can get you a cook …Right away- Hello! …Yes- You’ll have to meet the prices they’re paying in the defense plants…”

Anyway, I don’t have to worry about Lucretia leaving her shoes off when we have guests.

October 26

I’m my own maid now and the only time I took off was a few minutes to be ill in. Couldn’t miss that. The guests arrived before the breakfast dishes were done or the beds made, but I just closed the doors and off we tore for New Haven and football.

Dinner wasn’t so bad. We had steak, my one culinary accomplishment, with canned Frenchfried onions, canned string beans, canned Frenchfried potatoes, and canned corn, plus salad and Lucretia’s apple pie left over from Thursday. And Pat-Pat who shuns dish towels like vipers (Oh, welll ) was actually shamed into helping with the astonishing stack of dishes my cooking seems to accumulate. But this morning’s breakfast! Whipping up scrambled eggs does no good to my morning stomach.

The guests went home after dinner. I had never tried southern fried chicken before and my peach dumplings are not the kind Lucretia used to make.

Babies Wrapped in Their Individual Blankets

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 8:05 pm

October 18

A wire from Mother: “Have stopped pulling out grey hairs. Hold everything. Coming to see that swimming pool.”

October 21

A date with Pat and the Ruppels for the theater.

Also I have to visit a couple of new mothers in hospital. Also I must do something about this morning sickness before Mother arrives. So, in my red corduroy and my top coat, and a red corduroy hat that’s last year’s-Oh, but believe me, Hannah, it matches-I set out to kill birds. There was a whole slew of bulging women in the Doc’s waiting room but, with the assistance of my roomy top coat, I was able to prance by ‘em and even take my time standing and selecting reading matter, instead of sneaking in guiltily the way the others did as if they were coming into church in the middle of the sermon.

My reading matter for the day was this little piece I found proudly exhibited on the table:

“Census bureau officials say the United States is experiencing the greatest boom in baby production since 192 I. Latest statistics show that the stork is making a new delivery every fourteen seconds. At that rate he is moving faster than the undertaker, who calls every twenty-three seconds. Provisional estimates show that approximately 2,500,000 babies will be born this year. Both the World War and the present defense boom are partially responsible for the latest upswing in the birth rate, says Dr. Philip M. Hauser, the Census Bureau’s assistant chief statistician for population. He said: ‘The large crop of babies born after the boys got back from W orld War I have now become old enough to have babies of their own. And they are having them.’”

The doctor was brisk and businesslike. He certainly brushes you off, but I can’t say I blame him with business booming like this. I asked him if the boom made him worry about his income tax. J could see him quiver.

To my complaint of continued morning sickness, he said, “If you’d do as I tell you and eat more often it would help.”

Then he gave me the questionnaire. “Are you taking those calcium and vitamin pills yet? No? Well, you should be… Do you feel any movement, any life? Just wait! … How do you sleep? Oh, yes, you told me about those sleepless nights…

Again a professional poke or two to my stomach. This time, no comments from me about no bulge! And he wouldn’t say what he learned from his poking. Just, “A lot of things. You’d be surprised.”

Another complaint from me about my tendency to gain weight through the hips and stomach.

“Yes,” he said, “that’s normal. I suppose it is a shame if you want it in your thighs and legs. Nothing you can do about it, though… No, don’t diet. You should be eating sugars and starches now… See you in a month.”

From there I went to the White Plains hospital to visit Sue who had had a baby ten days before. I got the shock of my life. The last time I saw her, eight months ago, she looked young and girlish and slim. Now that was all gone. She was mature, “busty”, maternal, and she had only one thing to talk about.

“Look,” my mind was saying, as I went through the usual listening act, “you’re not going to look like that. Even if you do gain a little, you’ll never look that maternal.”

“How was it?” I felt bound to inquire. “Just wait,” she said, eying my stomach.
“Oh, but I heard you had no difficulty at all. Pat told me that Bill said he was the one who had all the agony. You just slept through it all.”

“Just wait!”

“Anyway, how do you feel now?”

“Sorta like I’ve been doing a lot of horseback riding.”

When I left I was just in time to see the babies, each wrapped from head to toe in their individual blankets like withered mummies. I took one look and my gloom deepened. Such ugly, drooling, puny, red-and-blue faced little squallers! Not one of them cute and plump and pink and white like the pictures in the condensed milk ads! And the horrible sickly-sweet milkish odor that hung around them! If that’s the reward for being seasick every morning-But Jake’s not going to be like that.

So to my second call. At Harkness Pavilion Tish had just had her fourth baby four days before, and Tish was my model, my paragon, my beacon of hope and glory. It was on her I had based my ideas of how simple it was to have a baby. She had had three, was perfectly delighted about the fourth, and furthermore she was good to look at, tall and slim with her very trim figure quite unimpaired. If she could, so could I.

But today they told me she was much too ill to be visited. Her baby had weighed almost ten pounds and it had been a breach birth… I left Harkness with a definite case of willies.

To round out my obstetrical day I went to buy gifts for the “little strangers”, and found a cute woolly bear for Peggy’s “Robespierre”. Then slightly weary and worn, I bought myself a martini, fixed my face, tweaked my red hat, bought me a red carnation for my lapel, and went to meet Pat and the Ruppels. Ruppel razzed me plenty, but with my coat on I could take it. We had colossal steaks and then went to the theatre.

Faced with the closer-to-home thought of having a baby, the War has up to now seemed fairly remote. But “The Eve of St. Mark” dropped it into our laps. I was ready to end the day then and there, but rather than face more razzing I agreed to a drink at Sardi’s. We found a corner table and sat down with Ruppel’s friend, Lenny Lyons of the Lyons Den, and I coerced him into naming all the celebrities that wandered into the place.

It was awfully warm, I was dead tired, and the two whiskeys and sodas I had didn’t help. But it was Marge Ruppel who did the fainting when we finally fought our way to the open air. I was the one who held her up until someone brought a chair!

When I finally fell into bed in Connecticut I thought I’d never get out. My legs ached from unaccustomed high heels, my stomach ached from being held in, my eyes ached from being kept open, and my back ached just to be in the swim.

Wrote Mom again and told her to hurry up.

Told her we wanted to make the trip our present, and Pat will make arrangements and send her the ticket.

The blessed event will be in late April

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 8:00 pm

October 9

God bless the country! Birds and squirrels don’t gawk. Maybe it’s all my imagination but I’m certainly learning what it means to be the “cynosure of all eyes” . Yesterday a woman got up to give me her seat in a crowded restaurant. I thanked her politely and to hell with the effort it cost me!

October 12

A pal of Pat’s–one, Ruppel-was here with his two boys for the weekend. I walked with them, skipped with them, even kicked a football around with them just to fool their dad.

After dinner we were sitting cosily with a scotch and soda, when Ruppel observed, “Friend of mine saw you in Lane Bryant’s yesterday-congratulations!”

Face, throat, even my ears were crimson. I’ve never been so furious…

October 14

Those dear little dresses arrived today and maybe it’s just as well, for even the Reiners’ scale-conservatively set six minutes slow - admits 117. I hate to think what the doctor’s scale would reveal. I also got around to those long-avoided measure,ments. How times have changed! Waist, 27 inches; Stomach, 34 inches; Hips, 40 inches; Bust, 34¼ inches.

October 15

Braved New York again this nice cool day to buy some baby’s things. Peggy gave me a list of necessities for the “little stranger”, as the baby department clerks insist on calling him, and I added others from my volume on “Infant Care”. My idea was to go about the whole business very eB1J ciently, list in hand and clerk at the other elbow. But it didn’t work that way at all. What is this unaccustomed shyness that confounds me at odd moments? I got to the store all right and started picking out the “little things” (everything in blue, of course); but when a clerk arrived I meekly handed her the things and said: “Wrap them as a gift, please, and send them.” And I gave my own name and address.

So instead of buying everything in one store, I ended buying “gifts” in ten. I wonder if they thought it queer my buying three dozen diapers “wrapped as a gift”.

October 17

Businesslike, that’s me. This morning’s second breakfast put the idea in my head, and when I got on the bathroom scale, when I caught a glimpse of myself in those full length mirrors, when I looked at the W.P.B. chart-that settled it. Besides, I’m only gypping myself. Look at the price of hand-knit sweaters! And blankets! And everything! It’s time my family began to share the joys of motherhood.

So I wrote:

“Dear Muz: Sorry I haven’t written, but I’ve been so busy rushing around I just haven’t had the time. Look-Connecticut is at its best in the Fall so I’ve decided not to come to Chicago. Instead, you come here and see the lovely golden trees and our beauteous swimming pool. Anyway, the rest will be good for you. You’ll need it, for, Snooks, get out the knitting needles-you’re going to be a grandmother.”

Then I added a whopping lie: “The blessed event will be in late April.” That will keep them from fussing and worrying around the first, and I won’t let anyone tell them until I call from the hospital and break the news myself.

About the Third Month

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 10:19 pm

October 7

Into New York, just Pat and me, for a blowout.

We had dinner at Louis and Armand’s; then to the Ballet Russe. We stayed at the Ambassador-far too much money, of course, but it was our first big night in town in quite a spell. This morning a beautiful luscious breakfast in bed, and all wasted!

Pat went on to an important conference with the president of the advertising agency and I went on to an important conference on maternity clothes. I started out with the proceeds of the first rent check from my tenants and rushed off to pay a charge account at Saks. Little did I know that when Pat cashed the check for me he had appropriated ten dollars! I blithely paid the whole bill, thought I had ten dollars left, and wandered into the maternity section to tryon something chic.

A hot sticky day, just to make a liar out of the calendar, and the horrid sack-like wool numbers I pulled on and off made me sicker than the heat. The professional appraisals of the clerks and their sugary, “About three months, aren’t you, dear?” almost finished me-or so I thought until I saw the dresses. Then it really was touch and go. I’d as soon wear sandwich boards that proclaimed “Pregnant” in neon lights.

There seem to be four kinds of maternity advertising: (I) Bunched in front, with eleven yards of extra goods on stout elastic, for future frontage; (2) Bunched all around on a ribbon drawstringbeating the little mother to it by providing plenty of spread here and now; (3) Bunched again, and enormously bloused on top (”This gives you balance, dearie, when you pop below”); (4) Dresses and jackets, combining all the worst features of (I), (2), and (3)’

I wondered idly what the “pop” business was, but dismissed it. I wouldn’t wear such if I popped all over, and, anyway, I really don’t think I’ll get very much higher.

At that point I needed fresh air and a bowl or two of tomato soup, so I opened my purse to freshen up-and, 10, I had one nickel between me and starvation.

I rushed into a sizzling ‘phone booth and called the advertising agency. Patrick was in the president’s office and the conference couldn’t be disturbed. Tearfully I begged the operator to have him call me at the ‘phone booth. “It’s practically a matter of life and death,” I pleaded. That scared her, so she called the holy of holies and Pat called me right back. I could tell from the stilted conversation that he was talking right from the center of things, but I wept until he promised to come and rescue me.

He tried to be nice, remembering my delicate condition, but by the time he found me in the middle of the maternity section with the stares of the clerks centered on him, the strain was beginning to tell. He gave me the money he had gypped me out of and rushed off. “Good thing some of us aren’t pregnant,” I heard him mutter.

Refreshed and heartened by my beloved soup, I began a tour of every store in the city. Not anyvhere could I find a dress that wasn’t planned for the whole nine months’ spread, and that on a practically gargantuan scale. “Why?” I begged in vain, “why can’t you make some dresses that really do conceal-even if they could only be worn for the first few months? Nearly every woman buys two or three maternity dresses. She could wear one at first that’s designed to conceal and later on buy another that just plain stretches. Why start off looking like the blessed event was on the brink? The heck with a dress that will ‘give’ later on-l want to look smart now!”

I’ve never seen such awful stuff. Jackets, jabots, fluffy, ruflly collars.

Something ought to be done, too, about the calculating looks of those damn clerks and their fiendish, “About the third month, isn’t it, dearie?”

1 ended up the day with a red corduroy dress that is the only decent maternity dress in town. I don’t even mind the elastic or the extra yards in the middle of the front, for all the rest is a simple tailored shirtwaist type. I also bought a black wool that I despise, but it was the simplest black dress I could find. I cheerfully paid an extra fee for some three yards of extra material to be removed.

Bulge I see Before Me

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 10:17 pm

October 4

Dinner at the Boss’ with Leopold Stokowski as guest of honor.

Stokowski, all pink and white, can be the most charming man in the world if he puts his mind to it, and he sure put his mind to it tonight. I sat at his right at dinner and basked in his special smiles. Charm oozed out of him like toothpaste out of a tube. Instant and unfailing as a lighter of my cigarettes he even agreed with me on a minor musical matter. I had to fight an urge to interrupt with, “Look, buddy, I’m the gal you had kicked off a train. Remember?”

Back in my Hearst reporting days Stokowski had the Santa Fe Chief stopped at a whistle-station in Iowa just to have me forcibly ejected. I had boarded the train, per instructions, to try and get the harassed maestro to comment on his reported engagement to Garbo. I guess I was a bloody nuisance.

October J Exactly six months to go. I’m beginning to avoid full length mirrors.

Is it a bulge I see before me? Did this arrive overnight, or have I been letting the zipper of my slacks slip down a half inch or so a day? Now, at any rate, it’s two and a half inches from closing. This makes the trousers pull up in front, so that the legs are short and show my socks, hill-billy fashion. Guess I’d better buy some maternity clothes. Then I can continue to fool-only who is there left to fool? Only my family and I keep getting letters that say, “When are you coming home, snooks? Everyone has been calling, and I’ve told them we expect you any day ….

Doctor’s Office Waiting-room Scene

Filed under: 3rd Month — admin @ 10:16 pm

October 1

Went back to the doctor, as ordered, now that the critical “period” is over. Besides, I had to find out what effect no pills and much tomato soup was going to have on Jake.

Wore my slacks, for an unmatronly touch. How many days has it been now that I haven’t been able to get the top button closed? Can’t seem to remember when that started.

Again the waiting-room scene. The same girl with the smart suit was there and she and I fell into a very gay and sophisticated chit-chat about the places we were going and the things we were doing-a conversation that put us another plane or two above the heads of the gals around us. We both knew we were being nasty and we knew we were lying like mad, but we couldn’t stop once we’d started. We got sort of drunk on it. We covered every fashionable night spot in town, dashing from luncheons to fittings to hairdressers. We dreamed up games of golf, and Smart Suit went so far as to describe a new evening gown she was thinking of buying.

The doctor was his usual nonchalant little self.

He tossed off my worry about lack of appetite with another “Just wait.”

I slipped in a careless reference to tomato soup and how was it going to affect Jake’s development. It didn’t seem to worry him, but he did urge me to eat sugars and starches often, if in minute quantities.

I weighed in at 117. The scales at home must have lied.

“No bulge yet,” I said smugly. “Just wait,” said he smugly.

Can’t say that I’ve spent any sleepless nights worrying about the pains of childbirth, but come April, I want nembutal and all the etceteras hours before anyone else gets ‘em. I have a campaign mapped out to convince the doctor that I need special care. “Doctor,” I said, “I haven’t been sleeping. I wake up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, dreaming of the horrors of having a baby. I just can’t stand the thought of pain!”

“Probably not a cold sweat.” He was back in the swivel chair position. “You’re probably too warm at mg t. on t use so many covers.

“But I dream horrible dreams. I wake up screaming! I never could stand pain.”

“What do you eat before going to bed?” “Nothing,” I said. “Just a little tomato soup. But it takes me hours to get to sleep. During the day it isn’t so bad. Then I can forget. But at night I see visions of me screaming in agony. And it’s all your fault.”

The swivel chair came to attention. “My fault!

What do you mean?”

“Well,” I said, “this ‘comfortable as possible’ business. Why don’t you put our poor souls at rest and say that there is absolutely no pain? If in the end there is some-a little, I mean-at least we’ve enjoyed nine months of blissful ignorance. If you’ll forgive my saying so,” with my sweetest smile, “you ought to be more psychological.”

“And have women gunning for me if they feel a pain or two? No thank you!” He buttoned up his professional manner. “We do have some wonderful results with modern methods. In many cases women have been completely out during Iaborthe later period of hard labor, that is. They’ve had a very easy time. In any case it works to some extent during hard labor and, of course, you know nothing about the actual delivery. Then you are completely anaesthetized.”

“But you mean in some cases this dope doesn’t work?”

“Well, that has happened.”

“Look, why don’t you try it on me now? Then I’ll know whether it works or not and I’ll not have to spend any more sleepless, dream-filled nights. The very thought of pain, Doctor-”

“I could give you the stuff,” he admitted, “but I have no way of duplicating the pain. You see it’s the force of the pain that returns you to consciousness through the nembutal.”

That was when I began to wish I had never brought up the subject.

“At least,” I said in a small voice, “I won’t know anything about the actual process of having a baby.”

“That’s right. Now, if you’ll just step into the other room.”

Again he poked my stomach, took my blood pressure, and made a note or two in blue on form 678B 37-41.

Cleopatra’s Love Dream

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:29 am

September 28

The fruits of my telephoning poured in all afternoon and with pretty nonchalance and a “nothing at all, really”, showed them to the shower rooms (on the ground floor of the studio wing), and waved them into the swimming pool. We even, after a good deal of experimenting with the lineup of gimmicks and gadgets in the cellar, got the pool fountain turned on. Then we lounged on the terrace and smirked at our frolicking friends. It was nice to give the hoi polloi a break but of course we had to put up with the comments: “What, no butler!”

“What gives-the ladders aren’t even gold?” … “What this place needs is a few rubber animals- You ain’t got the Hollywood touch!”

September 29

Today’s doings must come under the heading of “vacation”, I guess. I haven’t seen any sign of the real one! Pat got home at 4 P.M. and we took inventory of our twenty-seven acres. Pat, Mike and me, we catalogued the nine flower beds, one large vegetable garden (full of cabbage, which we don’t eat), two waterfalls, one rushing river, and the world’s most perfect skating pond. I’d be happier if I had never known about that.

I may worry about cigarette ashes on the rug, Pat may stew about the scalloped dining room table that’s too low for his knees, Lucretia may grumble about the size of the place, but Mickey with twenty-seven acres of trees is content beyond his wildest dreams. This is his idea of the perfect way to spend seventy thousand dollars.
Golly, I wish my mother could see this place!

What a tale would go back to the aunts and uncles, the cousins first, second, and third, and the sorority Sisters.

I wish I could have her come, and just say nothing about being “in the family way” as our nearest neighbor calls it; but my mother is inclined to be intelligent. I fear even Lucretia is about to graduate to the “stomach look”. Some days Pat cajoles Lucretia into bringing my breakfast up, but the sight of her sullen and suspicious face is even more nauseating than breakfast, so it doesn’t do any good. Some days I shanghai my spouse. “Pat, look! You insist it’s all mental. All right, get going. Talk about the weather, talk about the war, talk about anything. So I’m feeling fine! Just dandy!”

From his bathroom Pat keeps up a running commentary at the top of his lungs. He’d make a ducky announcer for those damn breakfast programs and their grisly cheer. But it doesn’t, work. Mother would certainly wonder what’s corne over Pat, who, as a rule, before his breakfast coffee- Oh, well, who am I to talk!
September 30 Sick, in my little pink and wine bathroom.

But it doesn’t matter-this is the end of that “careful period” the doctor mentioned, and praise be, everything is Jake. Can’t say I’ve been especially careful, either. I have avoided lifting things, but I would not care to have the doctor see the way I throw that garage door up and down. And I have dissuaded Michael from jumping up and butting me square in the stomach. Otherwise I’ve gone my merry way. I must admit it tires me. I never took an afternoon nap in my whole life, but corne 4 P.M. these days I can’t resist.

It hasn’t escaped Lucretia. I can tell. She bangs more dishes with more noise, and sings louder but dolefuller.

Worst of all, even if she doesn’t give a less subtle notice, the time has definitely come for us to do something about her. For she’s developed into that one “hate” the books say I am allowed-nay, required-to enjoy. All day long I flit from room to room trying to avoid her and those penetrating whiffs of “Cleopatra’s Love Dream”. Even Chane! NO.5 wouldn’t sit well with me these days, but as for “Cleopatra’s Love Dream”- Pat will have to give up those pancakes, that fried chicken, and those peach dumplings. Soup is all I want.

Scales show only a Fraction Over 113

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:27 am

September 24

The house is rented. From now until March first but at only half our regular rent. Still, they have the house for such a short period and through its most uncomfortable months. And, anyway, it’s that much clear profit to me.

All I have to do now is learn how to build an igloo, for that February-March stretch.

September 25

Moved!

Only meant to take a few things of the utmost importance like silver, a few clothes, the records we like, my W.P.B. chart, and the last few volumes of Casanova. We ended up with six carloads of stuff. Lucretia was the first. She observed the swimming pool and terrace, the house that would look at home in a platinum setting, and the kitchen right out of “House Beautiful”, and summed it all up. “Well, anyway, I don’t gotta fix no hot-water furnace.”

When, come nightfall, I fell exhausted into bed -beautiful, great, huge, luscious, pink-painted double beds-it was only to discover that the mattresses (Pat’s too) have dips in the middle like a fresh-dug quarry. Always a worm in the apple, but not every worm eats as deep as this.

September 26 Maybe it’s the excitement, or maybe it’s the effect of this pale pink and wine-red bathroom, but I was dam sick this A.M. I certainly am making a liar out of “Prenatal Care”, which insists that all this ends at twelve weeks.

What I ought to do, of course, is eat. Six meals a day, the book says. But I’m not hungry, like the book says I ought to be, except late at night, when the book says I ought not to be. Wonder if it really knows. We can’t both be right, and it’s me that’s having the baby.

There’s one advantage of no appetite, though, that neither the book nor the doctor mentions. I can still look a full length mirror in its full length.

In the other house, when I wanted to see if my slip showed, I had to climb on the dressing table stool, but this place is lousy with mirrors and bathroom scales. When I get up in the morning, when I climb out of my little pink tub there am I facing myself full length. Anywhere I go I can gloat over my beautiful “no bulge”. The scales show only a fraction over 113. The W.P.B. chart shows the measurements are just the same, except the bust, which is now 33 inches and that pleases me mightily. If my appetite were what the book says it ought to be, I’d probably have another tale to tell.

Later

Spent the day discovering how millionaires live.

The quantity of light switches in this house would baffle Edison himself. There’s a coast-to-coast network of servants’ buzzers-I can imagine Lucretia answering any of ‘em! And, there’s a telephone extension system that will certainly inflate our hitherto modest bills out of all recognition. Well, something has to bulge.

The living room is a story and a half high. It has a pale gold oriental rug, gold drapes at the casement windows, and hoary old Italian antiques all covered with patinas.

I just hope to the lord Harry that among usPat and me and Mickey and Lucretia-we don’t break any of the fragile lamps or scratch the silver grey floors and silver grey woodwork. And personally I hope I don’t get too weary of the mural over the fireplace~a scene out of a child’s fairy tale with a prancing horse, a racing Irish setter, a softeyed doe, grinning elves popping out from behind trees, and a drunken rabbit who glares at me every time I come in the room. I hope too that no one drops a cigarette on that enormous grand piano. In many ways I’m going to welcome the Spring.

And the dining room! On my left, as I dine in solitary splendor (on a bowl of tomato soup and crackers), two miles of French doors that open out on the terrace and swimming pool. On my right, two miles of plain but costly wall. In front, a mile and a half of polished table, at one end of which is me. Uncle Joe is way, way down at the other end.
Uncle Joe is the handsome ole boy in the frame.

He wears eighteenth century toggery and has a knowing look in his big blue eyes. I’ve definitely adopted him for the duration.

F or tea I chose the one thing I wanted-more tomato soup. And to fool Lucretia I prepared it myself. But, just as I was ready to sneak off with it, out popped Lucretia. “Why for you wants more soup?”

Hanging my head in shame, I took my stolen sweet and headed for the terrace, twelve steps above the blue-bottomed swimming pool. Sat me down on a cemetery bench of whitewashed wrought iron and gulped soup the while I gazed smugly over my estate. It looked pretty nice.

And then the brilliant idea struck me and I rushed to the ‘phone and called everyone we ever knew, sprinkled slightly with everyone I ever hated.

Developed that Stomach Look at a Glance

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:21 am

September 19

It’s sort of fun meeting all the “Just wait” women in town. They never look you in the eye. They’ve all developed that “stomach” look-a glance that starts at your feet and slides up to the middle of your anatomy, begins again at your head, slides down to the same spot and hangs there like a leech. I wish I had a belt buckle that would suddenly pop open and wave a flag and yell “Bingo!” I’m rather enjoying being such an important person. I don’t doubt that I’m pointed out along with the spot where the British landed, for after all I’m the first of the “there’s-not-much-to-do-in-the-winter-anyway” crop of expectant mothers.

September 2 1

All in all, life is good. The Ruppcls came out this weekend. I wore my slacks, went swimming in the river, walked as many miles as they did, stayed up just as late, and laughed off without a blush their usual razzing about what year was it that I was going to have that long-heralded-child.

Took them down to the Reiner estate, andafter watching their complete eye-popping admiration-told the Reiners yes, we’d love to live in their house!

We move next week.

Right away quick I called all the real estate people in town about the chances of renting our house while we live the life of Reiner at Rambleside. They all assure me that that will be “duck soup”provided we are willing to rent until March I. There’s the fly in the soup. The Reiners want to come back in February, so between some time in February and the first of March, we’ll have to choose between a hollow stump and a Bridgeport hotel. By that time maybe I won’t be able to get into a hollow stump. I won’t admire being a free floor show for the lobby sitters in the hotel either.

Oh well, who am I to fight with fate?

I have just completed a little deal with Patrick.

We must, of course, continue to pay rent on our house even though we don’t live in it. “Now,” said I, in a rubbing-my-hands-together voice, “I’m going to do all the work of renting the house, so can I have anythmg I can rent it for for myself? After all, the budget’s all worked out with that much rent deducted each month. You don’t want to upset all that bookkeeping you did SO beautifully, dear? Let’s just continue to figure that rent money as out, and anything I can make I keep.”

He fell for it. Maybe he was just showing off his generosity to the guests, but he fell for it. All I have to do now is rent the place and collect the money.

September 22

Started my business career. I’ve been showing people through our house all day long. Haven’t approved of any of them as yet, and can’t say I’ve done too well convincing them that the two and a half story living-room really heats beautifully all winter long, or that the separate coal-burning hotwater heater is just no trouble at all and never goes out. (After two years of struggle with the eternal flame Pat’s best record is eleven days without relighting.)

Limp Shapelessness is one of the Most Terrifying Aspects of Pregnancy

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:16 am

September 15

Out to dinner and Pat away on business, but my hostess said to corne anyway. I sure should have eaten before I left horne. Dinner was scheduled for 7:30. Came 8:30 and still no dinner, and by that time I had eaten so many hors-d’ oeuvres that the maid (a pal of Lucretia’s, too) began to look at me just like Lucretia does. Askance, I think it’s called. Hope they don’t compare notes!

September 17

Back to the doctor’s at last, this time to his White Plains office instead of all the way into New York. I was supposed to go the first day I was up bur, just as I told him, I’ve been busy. Now I begin to see some of the things I’m paying for. He sure is efficient. Keeps all the latest magazines in his office-current issues of Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Mademoiselle. Bur it’s bad promotion. Even I, to say nothing of the bulging women around me, could have nothing but hatred in my heart for a man who flaunts pictures of heavenly clothes I can’t possibly wear.

There was utter desolation in the face of one little girl who was peering at a Vogue number in sequins. She had about as much shape as a slightly warmish jelly mould. This state of limp shapelessness is one of the most terrifying aspects of pregnancy. Even your best friends won’t jell.

Of course, I’m a good deal better off than those poor souls sitting around in smock-dresses, coyly holding their share of the magazine supply over their fronts and trying desperately to be nonchalant in the face of such as I. Sucking in my stomach (still no job at all) I paraded in front of them, sat down and crossed my legs with telling effect and, from my superior position, surveyed them. There was another flat-tummied girl, in a very smart Fall suit-last year’s though-and she and I exchanged meaning looks over the heads of our farther “gone” sisters. A guilty looking crew, if ever I saw one.

It was a sad spectacle to see the women haul themselves to their feet when the call came from the inner room, and then, after the check-up, go scurrying out into the world as fast as their rolling sailor’s gait would allow.

The prettiest, trimmest, slimmest, little nurse came out for the next patient. That doctor certainly needs a promotion manager. If Pat were doing the job he’d have a fat, ugly, dowdy misshapen nurse so that the more misshapen wretches in the waiting room wouldn’t be reminded of their plight. But it doesn’t bother me; my stomach’s flat.
Finally ushered into the presence, but no excitement at all about my threatened miscarriage. How that man can keep calm! His questions didn’t seem very interesting and he scarcely waited for my answers.

“How is elimination? Good. How do you sleep?

Good. How do you eat? Force yourself to eat often, not a lot but often, and take the pills as soon as you feel you are able to. Very necessary, you know. And take special care those usual five days and don’t do unusual things. After the next period you may be more active. Then the danger of a miscarriage will be negligible.”

He waved me into the examining room, but this time it was all pretty cursory, blood pressure and a few coldly professional pokes at my stomach.

“Flat, isn’t it?” I said. “Just wait,” he said.

“How about me going to Chicago?”

And I was really delighted when he gave an emphatic “no” until after the first of next month, anyway. That postpones that little problem.

Still, that “just wait” of his gives me to ponder.

I don’t think I could fool my Mom if there’s a bulge, no matter how slight.

Kitchen Dive - Pint of Milk, Four Sandwiches of Left-over Chicken

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:13 am

September 11

I think the doctor is getting sorrier and sorrier that I ever happened into his office. This morning my still restless conscience urged the necessity of another laxative, so I took some of myoid standby -a nice tasting, sparkling, morning one. Got an awful pain in the middle of my stomach and in terror called the doctor. It seems that when he said mineral oil he meant mineral oil.

It isn’t that I mean to do all the wrong things.

After all I started out with the idea that this baby was to be the most scientific, the most accordingto-the-law child that was ever born. And here I haven’t taken but two or three pills in all this time, I’ve never gotten down to the dentist’s like I so firmly meant to. I washed instead of twaddled, I took the wrong dope, and I don’t even think pleasant thoughts.

Poor Jake seems to be taking it on the chin.

September 12

Unsick! Matter of note.

Matter of greater note: Pat swears we’re going to take a vacation before he goes to war. I’ll believe it when I see it.

September 13

Went out for the evening in formal finery. I know I was overdressed, even for a long-dress dinner, but I might as well pour it on while I can.

Felt marvelous and had me a whiskey and soda despite Patrick’s scowls (haven’t been able to convince him that the doctor really said an occasional drink or two was perfectly legitimate). A big night! We gathered around the dining room table for poker at a penny a chip just like Monte Carlo. I was going great guns. It was terrific. Well, I was seventy-eight cents ahead at 12: 30, and I was darned if I was going to quit with a winning streak sitting on me-but there came a great and gnawing hunger.

I wanted food. Even a cracker would have helped, but what I really needed was a big gory steak-I hope they don’t ration that along with the gas. Along with the hunger came the old familiar ache in my empty stomach. But I wouldn’t quit and I wouldn’t ask for food in front of all those people. It wasn’t until about I: 30 that I began to lose, so right away quick I said, “Oh, so weary,” and we left-practically booted out by knowing looks from all the women.

I rushed Pop home at a great pace and dived for the kitchen-where I quietly settled down to a pint of milk, four sandwiches of left-over chicken, and the last two peach dumplings. Pat said he felt a little pregnant himself and joined me in the feast, which put him in such good humor I broached the subject of vacation again. Not possible just now, it seems, but in a couple of weeks…

The Books say Morning Sickness Lingers for Twelve Weeks

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:07 am

September 4

There is a bright side, after all-two bright sides in fact.

  1. Maybe it’s just lying here quiet that does it, but I haven’t been ill at all. The books say “morning sickness” lingers for twelve weeks, but my strong-as-a-horse stomach is gaining. 
  2. The effect on Paw Pat is wonderful to behold. The original clucking hen, he’s been reading up and has decided that I oughta have a burning desire for pickles, or something; so, anything to oblige, I’ve been hankering like mad. Each eve I greet him with a brand-new crave.

Now it happens that he has been trying to get back his football figger for the glory of the Army, and that means losing some twenty pounds, so our diet these past months has been minus proteins and sweets. The doctor (to my unending awe at the analytical wonders of science) informed me that my system is lacking in carbohydrates and sugars, and that I must therefore eat lots of candy. All I have to do now is hanker and Patrick brings home a candy bar or a chocolate sundae.

At heart I’m a little disappointed. I wouldn’t mind a real craving-anything for a concrete sign of this pregnancy I’m beginning to doubt all over again. There’s Blanche, who had an insatiable desire for “chow-chow”. And Gladdie, who consumed bananas by the stalk. Even Peggy, who, except for an ever-enlarging stomach, has no symptoms at all, admits there was a week or two when she wanted spaghetti for breakfast. Why can’t I even want a pickle?

I can’t work up a good “hate” either-that’s another of those pregnancy signboards that is supposed to face every woman who is two months “gone”.

If only something would happen. I almost wish I’d be sick again in the mornings. The only difficulty these days is an occasional good old-fashioned ache in my stomach, and a feeling that a good oldfashioned bar-room burp would make me very, very happy. But I can’t find any book that says that means you’re pregnant!

September 8

I finally got sick of winning every game of solitaire, so I asked Lucretia to bring up some light reading from the bookshelf downstairs. She dragged up all eleven volumes of “The Life and Loves of Casanova” . (You never can tell about people, even when you live in the same house-but Lucretia!)

September 9

I never thought I’d see the day when I’d be going down to breakfast. I heard Lucretia mutter, “About time, if anybody should ask me.” Well, it’s the old routine again-breakfast, a dash upstairs, roaring shower water, and down again for more breakfast.

No doubt about it now. This is what they put in the books.

September 10

Just when I’m pleased at being sick in the morning, I wake up healthy. I wouldn’t have been sick at all today if it wasn’t for that busybody conscience of mine. It insisted and insisted that I take a dose of the prescribed mineral oil.

Labor Day and Morning Sickness Gone

Filed under: 2nd Month — admin @ 10:04 am

September 1

Labor Day, so they tell me, but my “morning sickness” seems to have vanished and I woke full of vim, vigor, and vitamins. Pat had to work and, I decided, so did 1. So I called Gladdie, down the road, and borrowed the use of her washing machine. She gave me the usual business about not “overdoing”, but I felt so strong and healthy I’d have none of it. And, anyway, with a child in the offing and the Army around the corner, I’ve got to begin saving money, so why not start with the laundry bill? I swore Gladdie to secrecy and tore down to her house with two mattress pads and a beach robe.

I did the washing with great aplomb, yanked out the washing machine, brushed away Gladdie’s aid, and wrung out and hung up the pads and then sat back to watch my handiwork dry in the sun. By the time I got home I felt rather weary and decided to rest a mite before picking up Patrick at Jones’ Corners, where one of the men in his car pool drops him.
At 6 P.M. I got up to powder my nose and lo-a danger signal!

Lordy, thought I, I am a fool. I just miscalculated and I’m not going to have a baby at all. Even the doctor said he couldn’t be sure. That’s why 1 haven’t been sick in the morning and why my stomach looks just the same. Pat’s right! Being sick was all mental and now the whole damn town will roar with laughter!

I grabbed “Prenatal Care” and discovered that if, on the other hand, it was the sign of a threatened miscarriage I ought to go to bed fast.

But there was Pat waiting at a roadside five miles from home, so I backed the car gingerly out of the garage and drove at a snail’s pace for the meeting place. I greeted him in a flood of tears. “It’s not true! Jake’s only mental. I mean he ain’t, and he was such a cute redhead!”

Pat, who takes to an emergency like Michael to a bone, rushed me home and tucked me in bed. Despite his urging and warning and cajoling, however, I wouldn’t call the doctor that night. I didn’t want him laughing at me.

September 2

This morning there was another flag of warning and Doc growled over the phone, “What have you been doing? Washing! Well, what did you expect?”
“Nothing particular,” I said.

“Get in bed and stay there for at least five days,” he ordered. “You’re probably just off schedule and these are those five days I told you to watch particularly. Now-get to bed!”

September 3

In bed, and if there’s anything to prenatal influence Jake will grow up to be a card shark. From dawn till dark I’ve been cheating myself at solitaire.
But, between hands-what am I going to do about Lucretia? I’ve been feigning a cold, but my rasping coughs up here are duelling with Lucretia’s muttering down in the kitchen. Every now and then, between the shuffling sounds I know so well, I can hear her voice: “Sornethin’ funny goin’ on ’round here …. Somethin’ funny goin’ on.” The noises fascinate me. Shuffle-shuffle, mutter-mutter. “Don’t mind reg’lar family work, but this here traipsin’ up an’ down them stairs …. Nothin’ wrong with her as I can see. . . . In bed, an’ me traipsin’ up them stairs… ”

And what the devil am I going to do about moving? That gorgeous house sitting there and how, I’d like to know, am I going to get moved into it if this is what happens every time I do more than twiddle a finger? And how can I risk a trip back to Chicago if I end up in bed after every little thing? Children certainly do add to one’s difficulties.

My Stomach in a Great Burst of Generosity

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:53 am

August 30

My stomach, in a great burst of generosity, gave up its morning exercise and I woke up feeling wonderful. Not ill, not pregnant. And what a day! The end of summer and the whole world singing, the river burbling down below the house, a nice warm breeze trickling down the back of my neck, and a simply gorgeous breakfast of hot cakes on the terrace overlooking the river. And much gay laughter with our week-end guests. They are old friends and among the very, very few left who know nothing of my spilled secret. (They live in Washington, D. c., and, with all the secrets there, why should they worry about mine?)

Some other dear friends-more than dear friends since they chartered a forty-foot yacht for the season-called us right after breakfast and invited us for a cruise. They don’t know about the little mother to be, either; they’ve been living at sea. I wore my most fetching shorts, and I’m sure no one suspected as I held my breath and my stomach in and stood poised at the prow, the wind blowing back my hair just like in the movies. Guest AI, who considers himself quite a sailor, and Captain Bill, and Pat, who early perfected a neat system of doing darn little while appearing to do much, got us out.

Once free from the marker buoys in the harbor channel, AI, the old salt, with a nonchalant “I’ll take over, Skipper,” headed our good ship across the Sound. With a fine wind we were running smoothly, I and my stomach at peace with the world.

Suddenly there was a terrifying scraping and crunching underneath us and we lurched drunkenly to port.

“We’ve hit something!” I said, clearing up the case neatly.

The ship had stopped dead, still lurched, and the boys got the sails down. AI, very red and silent, climbed out into Long Island Sound. We were miles from shore but there was AI, walking about in an ocean that only came up to his waist. Man overboard! It seems we had run aground on a pile of rocks. They were marked plainly enough on the chart but Al is more accustomed to road maps and the State Highway Department hadn’t got around to putting up a “Dangerous Grade” sign.

Our crew tried a “sea anchor” (correct me if I’m wrong) but that didn’t do any good. They would have tried the motor and backed up, if the reverse gear had been working that weekend. The tide was falling fast, and the more it fell the more the ship lurched, and the less I liked the idea of Jake and me swimming back home to dear old Connecticut.

The day got later, and the crew got hungrier and hungrier. So did the passengers, including Jake.

“Oh, well,” said AI, making the best of it, “the tide will turn about six and if we don’t capsize by then, it’ll float us off.”

Came four o’clock and that familiar emptiness, that well-known galloping stomach feeling,’ but there was nothing to drown the horrid sounds. Water, water everywhere, but not a shower in sight! Glamorous shorts and all, over I went and swam out into the chilly distance. Then, far, far away, treading water like mad, I preserved my secret.

Came six o’clock, and everything got black and I was sprawled out like a starfish with tons of sea water cascading over my head. A real “faint” at last …. Oh, well, who cares about a secret, anyway?

At II P.M. the tide had risen sufficiently to float us. With Captain Bill at the helm we made for shore, all of us hanging over the prow searching with flashlights for the channel buoys. The boat and I were slightly the worse for wear, but the hamburgers at the diner were manna from heaven.

Morning Sickness

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:50 am

August 18

I guess I must have laid it on too thick, for Patrick, feeling the responsibilities of fatherhood resting heavily upon him, called the doctor today and got a first-hand report. It’s guffaws now, I get, instead of concern.

August 21

Sick!

This can’t be me, it must be two other people.

Anyway, two. people.

Sick. Sea-sick, air-sick, car-sick. Sick morning, afternoon and night. My stomach, the same that I used to boast about, seems to be on a see-saw. The slightest little thing-and the slightest little thing is the sight of one of these darn pills. Just to hold it in one hand and a glass of water in the other is enough. Pat says it’s all mental. Could be! So I decided to fool it, sneak up on it in fact.

August 25

Sick. And I took no pill at all.

It seems that early in the morning when my stomach is empty, I’m going to be sick no matter what I do. At the toothbrush stage of dressing (whether it’s 7 or I I) along comes a feeling of my strong-as-a-horse stomach galloping down the stretch. I can feel it flying through the air. I can feel it distinctly! It finally settles behind an ear and nothing I can do will send it back where it belongs. But this is not the kind of morning sickness the books tell about. My stomach seems to suffer from perpetual frustration. It struggles for self-expression but never gets beyond the stage of wishful thinking. It produces a horrid symphony of queer gurgles, choking coughs, and retching gags (which I hide from Lucretia by turning the shower on at full speed). But that’s all. Having exhausted itself in the effort to accomplish something notable it tires of the whole thing and goes back where it belongs. Just another weak character.

I read how a dry cracker before rising would do away with all this. ‘Tain’t true! Breakfast in bed, with puffing Lucretia glaring over the tray and looking mighty suspicious, doesn’t do the least bit of good. Nor does rushing down to a hearty breakfast with the inevitable gay morning music reeling out of the radio.

Lucretia looks suspiciouser and suspiciouser with me bustling down to a breakfast of orange juice, cereal, tea and toast, dashing upstairs again to play the shower, and then reappearing with a coy request for more orange juice, cereal, tea and toast. Up to date she hasn’t said anything and now that my stomach has resumed its original, or near original size, I have hopes of fooling her a while longer. But now there’s the business of the kitchen. The books say I should eat six times a day, but every time I sneak out in the kitchen, quiet as a mouse, and slide open the cupboard door-Lucretia catches me. At this rate she won’t be long for our life. I’ve got to get away from it all. Maybe Pat will take me somewhere.

August 27

Lucretia, my lorgnette! Dr. Reiner really meant what he said that day in the middle of my swan dive. He wants us to live in his house while he conducts the Pittsburgh orchestra this winter. Me in that colossal Normandy castle, with its Olympicsize swimming pool, twenty-seven landscaped acres, two streams, two waterfalls and half a mile of drive-way! Half a mile, half a mile- Too bad it’s not a mile, but I suppose we can’t have everything. It’ll be a break for Pat, though, with only half a mile of driveway to shovel snow off. And I can see the expressions of some of my friends as they pull up to our “little place in the country”. They won’t need to know we’re living rent free. (Dr. Reiner doesn’t like to have the house empty while he’s away and he seems to think the Government can go on doing without Pat, but I dunno.) And Michael, our little wandering Michael, who has recently graduated to the stage of taking an interest in blondes and has had to be tied up. In that twenty-seven-acre park he could run his head off and still be far from temptation. But, Michael or no Michael, I won’t turn landed gentry unless we can rent our barns. So why not be a landlord and collect some rent?

Visions of life as millionaires darn near make me forget I’m still being sick. It’s getting to be such a routine that I don’t seem to mind much any more. I’ve discovered it’s simpler to let my stomach have its exercise before breakfast than to battle against it, and then really live up to the scheduled pregnancy symptoms after breakfast.

As for W.P.B., nothing new has been added.

Just drifting along.

I’m I Pregnant

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:49 am

August 17

Today was the day.

The books all say that most people wait a nice safe eight weeks before seeking out a physician. But, with a stomach that looks at least three months “gone” (as the women of the town put it) and a heck of a stomach-ache to boot, who am I to stand on tradition?

And about this wonder-working specialist I wanted, this maternity magician, this prestidigitator of the delivery rooms who would bring Jake into the world hale and hearty while I slept in peace, whose customers were all movie stars, yet whose charges were all reasonable, and who had never lost a m~ther’s figure-there I had a gem of an idea. No long labored search for me, no Stanley and Livingstone business through the trackless wastes of Physicians’ Buildings. No relying, either, on the advice of gals with only one birth to their experience, or on the advice of friends with only one doctor to theirs. I’m going to the biggest and shiniest hospital in New York City, and ask the advice of the Superintendent who knows all about hundreds of doctors and thousands of babies.

Later

The hospital didn’t look like a hospital; it didn’t even smell like a hospital. It was more like a hotel with a convention meeting in the lobby. “Visiting hours” I noted, so I’m just another visitor.

The brave hotel face the hospital was putting on slipped a little, however, when a new mother came by followed by a beaming new father, a “bellboy” with bags, mountains of flowers, stuffed pink animals, baby blankets, and a miniature pink potty, and a nurse gingerly carrying a roll of pink blankets.

The desk clerk beamed after them-a very hushed little man practically hidden behind a colossal counter that was equipped with all the paraphernalia of hotels, including register and a pigeonholed mail backdrop.

The hushed little man repeated “Hospital superintendent?” after me and said: “He’s a very busy man, Miss, what do you want of him?”

I mumbled something about advice on selecting an obstetrician.

Then, suddenly breaking his whispering vows, the little man bellowed: “Obstetrician? Why didn’t you say so? He’s over there.”

It was like a public address system and it must have penetrated the furthest recesses of the most hushed and distant visitor. I was blown across the walnut-paneled lobby to a business-like desk with a business-like girl behind it. She was the girl who recommended doctors to girls who had brilliant ideas like mine.

“Sure, we do it every day!” she told me. “Thousands of women ask our advice about choosing their doctor.” She picked a name out of a hat. “Now, how about -”

I was going to give her an argument but there was that pain, and that bulge, and that long ride back to my little house on the river. So I meekly followed her through tiled corridors, waited in paneled waiting rooms, gave my name and my “disease” to very bored clerks, and was finally ushered into an office that must have been shipped in one lot from Hollywood. There, at a huge desk that was all glistening white and glittering chromium, sat a red-faced young man in an austere white gown and a bedside manner that was a nice blend of disinterest and commiseration.

So this was the end of the trail. “Dr. Kildare, I presume,” I murmured inaudibly and my quarry turned on me a smile as bright as his desk.

“Sit down, won’t you?” He picked up Form No. 20-786 ByZ 47, unclipped a fountain pen from a breast pocket filled with a neat row of pens, pencils, thermometers, and stethoscope ends, and swung upright in his swivel chair. “First, your name, please.”

He seemed a little young to me. “Look,” I said, edging toward the door, “are you married?”

The swivel chair rocked upright. “Well, uh - yes!”

“Do you have any children?”

“Yes.” His bedside manner was coming undone. “Now that’s what 1 was getting at.” 1 mentally rubbed my hands together. “Who was your wife’s doctor, Doctor?”

“I was my wife’s doctor’s wife’s doctor.”

Maybe he wasn’t so young. 1 advanced gingerly and sat down on the edge of the chair. Thinning hair, I noted. Maybe that ruddy, just-off-the-rowing-team face had misled me.

“How old are you?”

“Thirty-six.” He refastened his bedside manner.

“How old are you?”

“Twenty-four,” 1 said mechanically but when 1 saw him enter the figures on that magnificent form I thought I’d better be careful. “I’m really twenty •. six,” I corrected. “Look, have you a lot of experience? Do you have any movie stars among your patients-I mean do you guarantee that 1 get my figure back?”

The doctor was getting his second wind. “That’s rather up to you.”

“My skin isn’t as clear as it was two weeks ago.

It looks bumpy.”

“Yes, that sometimes happens to brunettes.”

Here was a man of aplomb, fearless, unhurried, without nerves. “Occasionally,” he amplified, “dark blotches appear over the nose or under the eyes. It’s called the mask of pregnancy.”

“Let’s get back to you,” I said. “Are you modern?”

The chair teetered slightly.

“What I mean is,” I rushed on, “are you painless like the stories I’ve read? Do I just go to sleep and, bingo, there’s Jake-or are you one of those doctors who believe in the old-fashioned business of pain and suffering?”

He unclipped another fountain pen and wrote at great length in red ink. My question must have tipped him off to something pretty significant. When he was through with the red ink, he said, “We’ll make you as comfortable as possible.” But it was only routine; his heart wasn’t in it.

This didn’t sound so promising. But it occurred to me that having a baby isn’t something you can change your mind about, and, anyway, there was that bulge and that ache. So I let the doctor have his innings and told all about my great-aunt’s diabetes; the history of my tonsillectomy; how much Pat weighed when he was born; whether my mother had had a difficult time when I arrived. I couldn’t answer that one, but there was something else to be settled before I got in any deeper.

“Just a moment, Doctor,” I interrupted. “How much does it cost to have a baby?”

He gave me a subtly polite once-over, swiveled to upright, red fountain pen poised and asked:

“What is your husband’s income?”

I hastily divided Pat’s salary by three and he instantly multiplied the result by six and told me what Jake was going to cost.

At that it wasn’t so bad. The hospital I had picked was one of the most expensive in New York, and yet I could squeeze the baby into the budget-for everything, including the doctor’s fee and fifteen days in the hospital. Of course that was the very peak of the budget, but it would do.

“One more thing, Doctor! I have a pain and a bulge. It’s serious. It hurts.”

“Yes, that often happens.” He wasn’t going to let my stomach worry him. “Just a gas pain. Digestion is somewhat disturbed, you know.”

“But it hurts!”

“I’ll give you something for after meals. It’ll relieve the pain in a few days.”

“Yes, but it hurts now!”

“It will. And now if you’ll just step into the other room…”

I had been dreading this; but to the nurse, bored with a parade of bulging women, it was nothing at all. She led me into a small room where I stripped to my slip, shoes and stockings. I weighed in officially for the nine-round bout at 113.

She gestured me to a formidable leather couch table, and I climbed up and stretched out on it. First she produced a giant pair of steel ice tongs, an ominous weapon if I ever saw one. Then she delicately draped the upper half of me with sheeting and-you’ll never believe this, but it’s true, so help me-why would I lie about it?-she stood up a little screen upon my chest. I could hear the doctor washing his hands on the far side that he was sharing with the other half of me, but I couldn’t see him so I gathered the screen must have something to do with womanly modesty. A weird manifestation in sooth!

I was going to say a few words about this, but the nurse was too quick for me. She jabbed my arm with a long needle and drained most of the blood out while I yelled blue murder. I still couldn’t see the doctor for the “modesty-screen”, but now I heard him remark conversationally, “I certainly like a good patient, don’t you?”

Peering around the corner I discovered him waving the ice tongs over my abdomen. It seemed they were a measuring device, so I popped my head over the screen to say, “I know I have narrow hips, Doctor, do you think a Caesarean will be necessary? I’ve heard they don’t hurt a bit.”

There was no reply, but I heard him murmur to the nurse, who was jotting figures down in a notebook, “Good pelvic formation. Plenty roomy.”

It was a thorough examination, all right-eyes, ears, nose, throat, thyroid, heart, lungs, kidneys, blood pressure. Much thumping of my chest and back, too, and my last few drops of blood drained out-from the little finger this time.

When it was all over, I asked, “Am I pregnant?”

Fingertips on nose, he allowed cautiously, “I’d say so … yes … but it’s practically impossible to be sure this early. However, take these calcium and vitamin pills, eat a balanced diet, drink a lot of milk, and don’t overdo. Don’t do anything you’re not used to doing …. And don’t do much riding in a car:”

Damn! That’ll please Pat and the Ration Board. “Oh, yes! Call me if you’re very nauseated.” “Don’t worry about that,” I said. “I’ve never

been ill in my life that way. My stomach is as strong as a horse.”

I pranced out and bought me a very chic bunny-lined topcoat. Nice and roomy, I noted practically, and a darned cute coat to boot. I also made an appointment with the dentist. The books all say to have your teeth checked over and I’m following the law to its last letter.

Then back to Connecticut to tell the tale of the day to a clucking Patrick, who astounds me by fussing like a mother hen. I laid it on thick, though. Somebody’s got to appreciate my sufferings, by golly!