In the baby zone, part four: The aftermath
Beth remained in the hospital a little longer than usual for a pregnancy simply because the doctors wanted to be sure that her blood pressure returned to normal (she had always had excellent blood pressure), and that there was no evidence that she had developed diabetes. We had lots of visitors over those few days. Everyone came to see Thalia, officially known in my family as the Thanksgiving Baby. They finally released Beth and Thalia, under the orders that Beth was to take it easy for a while so that her body could recover, and that a visiting nurse would monitor her at home for a few weeks. That meant that I would have most of the baby duty. It wasn’t a problem because I was out on family leave for eight weeks.
We had already been discussing pediatricians and had decided to choose one near home rather than traveling to Boston. I do not really remember how I found Dr. Paula Heimberg, I only know I’m glad I did. To this day,
she’s not only Thalia and Aaron’s pediatrician, we consider her a family friend. She works out of Garden City Pediatrics in Beverly. She’s the embodiment of how a doctor should be. I called her, and she scheduled an appointment with us before the baby was born. Because Beth was bedridden, I went alone and she spent an hour talking to me. We decided that she was the right choice for us, and were very happy to have her on board before the delivery.
Life with baby begins
Thalia’s room was all ready when we got home, and it was pretty cool. The room was bright and sunny, and the crib was decked out in colorful bedding. There were great mobiles hanging in her room. We had purchased a combination changing table/bureau and had moved a small pull out sofa into the room because Beth was going to breastfeed and I wanted her to have a comfortable spot. Of course, there was a small TV too since we’d be spending a significant amount of time there, particularly in the wee hours of the morning when Thalia Assuras was on.
Okay, I don’t want to say that Beth was OCD about Thalia, but she was. Thalia spent the first week in our room, but we were concerned about our two cats being able to jump into the bassinette so we moved her to her room because we had a cat tent over the crib. To say that they were curious was an understatement, but Ling Ling, our Maine Coon, was the most curious. She was only six months old when Thalia was born and had been the center of attention up to this point. In fact, Ling Ling took up residence at the very top of the cat tent so that she could see Thalia. We called her “watch kitty.” Oh, yeah, did I mention that there was a pretty amazing camera attached to Thalia’s crib? Still, that wasn’t enough for Bethie. No sir!
We moved into the room with Thalia, spending nights on her floor in our sleeping bags. This didn’t go on for just a couple of weeks. It went on for just about three months. Beth sometimes reads more than she should. This time around, she got herself all wound up over SIDS. Now, I don’t want you to think I’m cavalier about SIDS. I am not. It is a real problem for newborns, and it was a frightening prospect for me as well because nobody really knew why it happened. However, being shaken awake every three hours to check if Thalia was still breathing took a bit of a toll over three months!
We had also decided that Thalia would not go into daycare until she turned six months. There was no real deep reason for this; Beth simply wanted the opportunity to bond with Thalia. So did I. However, we were both big believers that socialization was important. (We checked out many daycare settings, but settled on The Children’s Workshop in Waltham because it was close to where I worked.) I had met several mothers who were dead set against daycare, but in my mind they didn’t have very good reasons for their attitude. Basically, these women didn’t want their children to pick up germs and get sick. I wasn’t worried about germs and illness. Unfortunately, they are facts of life with children. Sooner or later, Thalia was going to be going to school and it was going to happen. My attitude was that the earlier the children are exposed to them, the better their defenses down the road when they do get to school.
I returned to work at Millipore after eight weeks, leaving Beth and Thalia alone during the day. Because Millipore had ‘flex’ hours, I was able to change my hours so that I went in earlier than usual and returned home earlier than I normally would. This worked out really well. Thalia had lost interest in breast feeding after three or four months, and I took early morning feeding duty. I would sit in Thalia’s room on the sofa watching World News Now while I fed her. Then, she’d immediately fall back to sleep and I’d leave for work around 4:30 a.m. Beth would handle the days and I took over when I came home, giving Beth an opportunity to nap. Beth still seemed to be suffering fatigue from the pregnancy. One day during my first week back to work, I came home to a very wierd scene.
I walked in the door and heard what I thought were pots and pans banging together. I figured something was going on in the kitchen (even though Beth was never really the cook in the family), but I was surprised to hear the banging coming from up in Thalia’s room. I walked in the door to find Thalia laying on her back on the changing table while Beth banged two pans above her head. I had to ask. “What the fuck are you doing?” Beth picked her head up with an utter look of terror on her face. “I’m trying to see if she’s deaf, Deb. I think she’s deaf.” I looked at her in amazement. “Beth, if she wasn’t deaf before you started this, she could very well be now!” I knew I had my work cut out for me. Bringing up baby was going to be a challenge.
Plenty of clouds on the horizon
I had promised Beth that she could return to school when Thalia was a few months old. She wanted to update her science degrees, so she enrolled in a cell biology class at the Harvard School of Public Health. It was an evening
class, so I was on baby duty anyway. I remember those nights. Thalia and I would lay together on the bed and I’d place her on my stomach to sleep while I watched television. It was great. I’d talk to her and she’d smile like she knew what the hell I was saying. One day when I returned from work and Beth was getting ready for her class, she confessed that she had fallen down the three stairs to the landing while holding Thalia. She was fine and the baby was fine. Beth had managed to keep hold of Thalia even while falling. She had landed on her back with the baby perfectly positioned on her stomach. We made jokes about what klutz she was, but we would soon be in for a rude surprise.
A few weeks later, Beth came home from school and told me that she had difficulty completing her sentences in class because she seemed to run out of breath. She wasn’t feeling well and was still having problems with fatigue. Given her ill health during the pregnancy, I thought it would be prudent to check it out. We called her primary care doctor and made an appointment. We went in, she had an examination that included an EKG right in the office and things looked normal, at least from a cardiac perspective. We were relieved, and we returned to our lives.
However, the symptoms continued and Beth was feeling weaker and weaker. She didn’t even have the stamina to care for Thalia during the day anymore. So, we enrolled Thalia in daycare at The Children’s Workshop in Waltham two months earlier than we had originally planned. We remained insistent about Beth’s not feeling well and saw the doctor yet again. Nothing was resolved. According to her, Beth was fine and the exhaustion would eventually abate. Of course, part of the problem was the stigma of mental illness. Frankly, this particular primary care doctor had known Beth for many years. She knew of her past and her issues in the present. I could see what was happening: Because of these issues and because the illness is not immediately apparent, her doctor assumed the illness was “in her head.” The one thing I know for certain about Beth is that she is not a hypochondriac. She knows when her body is telling her something, and she absolutely knows and admits when something is “in her head.” I became adamant about looking further. She had not been back to school because the smallest physical effort on her part was exhausting her. On the third visit, Beth’s doctor scheduled an echocardiogram at the Beth Israel Hospital. Of course, her doctor was confident this would prove she was just fine.
The other shoe drops
Within a few days, we got the call. Beth’s doctor was stunned. The result of the echocardiogram was not good, and she had scheduled an appointment
for us at Beth Israel with a Doctor Joe Cannon. She had given us some basic information, but I truly believe she knew she had blown it and she was just too upset to tell us how serious it was. Dr. Cannon, on the other hand, had no problem doing that. While he didn’t have much in the way of bedside manner, he told us straight out that Beth appeared to have viral cardiomyopathy and congestive heart failure (CHF). Her ejection fraction was at 15 (normal is in the 55-65 range), accounting for her fatigue and shortness of breath. The prognosis was not good, and Dr. Cannon offered her the heart transplant list.
This news was devastating. We had a baby at home that was less than six months old, and now we had a very uncertain future ahead of us. I was going to have to balance taking care of Thalia with taking care of Beth. I admit I had no fucking idea how I was going to get through it. I only knew that Beth was emotionally falling apart over it, and that I had to let that happen as hard as it was for me to watch. I would have been the same way had it been me. The one thing in Beth’s favor is that she’s a fighter. That’s how she managed to survive her ugly and violent home life. After the appropriate amount of grieving, and after deciding that Beth and Dr. Cannon were not a good fit (mostly because he was a pompous asshole), we decided to get a second opinion.

