Caring for a newborn takes gargantuan effort, patience and sheer physical strength. Before I had my daughter, I had no idea how much of myself I would have to give, and give, and give. There was no room left for anything, no me time, no us time, no time, period.
The baby nursed all night. Her yet-to-be-diagnosed lip and tongue tie caused loud clicking sounds. My postpartum snoring added to the din. For five months, my husband tried to stay the course. But the sleepless nights were too much for him. He had important meetings to lead, projects to finish, products to launch.
We were co-parents living under the same roof. The former hand-holding, affectionate, gregarious couple a distant memory. Conversations were few and far between. When we talked, it was about the baby. By the time she was a year old, we had stopped talking to each other directly. It was through her that we communicated: “Ask Daddy if he wants to go out for dinner.” “Tell Mom I don’t want anything from Whole Foods.”
At 14 months, our toddler started saying her first phrases. She was so used to facilitating, when I asked him a question directly, she shrieked, “Me ask Daddy. Not Ma!” This was not her normal. Her infuriated, high-pitched voice shook me out of my trance. I was a shell of my former exuberant self. A lonesome artifact in the name of a wife. A friendless vestige. A single parent. I had become all of those, and I was only a mom. Just a mom.
Now, I noticed his tired face, his slumped shoulders, his defeated energy-less stance as he looked at our daughter, stupefied. He had aged rapidly, and I had been too consumed by motherhood to notice. I didn’t even know his current co-workers or newest challenges. I had no idea what, or even if, he ate lunch. We hadn’t had sex since—I didn’t remember.
How was I to change our new normal? How would I broach the subject? We had been together for 14 years. Silence had never caused us awkwardness. But this was different. This wasn’t the lull of a comfortable love. This was a relationship on permanent mute.
He texted me an hour after the incident, after our daughter had shown us we were no longer husband and wife, we were just her parents. He was in the guest room; I was nursing her upstairs.
“I can’t do this anymore.”
I read, re-read and re-re-read the message. What does he mean he can’t do this anymore? I’m the one sacrificing everything. I’m the one putting everything on hold so we can raise the child he wanted! I’m the one. . . .
I closed my eyes. His lifeless face came alive. With tears in my eyes I ran downstairs, kiddo in tow.
“I need you,” I cried as I tried to hug him.
“I don’t think we can be together anymore,” he said calmly.
When, at age 21 we decided to spend the rest of our lives together, there was no doubt that “death would do us part.” When we lived apart for two years because of work commitments, we burned a lot of cash flying across the country every other weekend, because we were going to make it work. When our parents tried to interfere in our child-free marriage for 12 years, we defended each other.
Divorce happened to other people. To loveless relationships. To partners who had grown apart. To those with nothing in common. To those who cheated. To anyone but us.
From “you don’t really mean it” to “do you have any idea what it takes?” to “you only think about yourself” our exchange took many forms: pleading, finger-pointing, shouting, sobbing.
Unfortunately, our daughter witnessed the hysteria, the tears, and the bitterness in our voices. Fortunately she won’t remember much, if anything.
Three hours of emotional outpouring later, we calmed down. Lying on the floor of our family room, hugging, with him repeating, “We are family. We are in this together.”
It took a week of sustained conversations to reopen the clogged communication channels.
Here is what I learned
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He wanted to be a hands-on dad. But I hadn’t allowed that to happen.
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He wished to help with the feedings, the baths, and the diaper changes but I was so much faster and better that he felt he was stepping on my toes.
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He wanted to take her to the park, do grocery runs with her, chase bubbles, but thought this fell under a stay-at-home-mom’s purview.
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He wanted to be the one to wipe her tears. But the more I spent time with her, the more she sought me exclusively for comforting, and the more alienated he felt.
I had been blind, completely oblivious to his feelings, his desires, and his efforts. If this marriage were to survive my parenting, I had to take a step back. I had to let him be a father. I had to trust him to take care of her. I had to trust her to be OK with him. I had to trust myself to be a wife again. A friend again.
It hasn’t been easy but we are committed. We try to spend more time together as a couple. Our almost-two-year-old finds ways to keep herself entertained. We still sleep in different rooms, and likely will until she weans, but I slip away from her some nights to spend an hour with him before lights out. They run errands together on weekends while I enjoy a leisurely bath. And, she waits for him to come home from the office, so they can play, father and daughter.
Evenings are full of laughter, squeals, and the usual dinner time battles. Sex has made a comeback. Our marriage isn’t the same as it was pre-child. Nor is it the same as it was six months ago. But it’s alive. We have dusted off the cobwebs, dressed it anew, and kept it front and center. It is cemented in partnership, nurtured with love, and I have vowed to never take it for granted again.
Published first at Good Men Project.
Vedavati M., a.k.a. The Cultural Misfit, is a stay-at-home-mom who revels in her various avatars (chef, mentor, friend, playmate, arts and crafts buddy, puppeteer, milk machine, comforter, and more) for her toddler. Her secondary pursuits include writing and exploring new experiences. Somewhere in the mix, she remembers to be a wife. You can follow her travails at http://www.theculturalmisfit.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/misfitcultural
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This is what most dads want. We want to be parents. Give space to dads to learn and parent in their way. Learn from each other. Neither parent is automatically the expert. Nobody knows what they are doing at the start and confidence comes with experience.
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