Read The Upside of Down Online
Authors: Susan Biggar
Praise for
The Upside of Down
âA rare combination of laugh-out-loud humour and an intensely honest exploration of difficult issues ⦠It's like
Eat, Pray, Love
but with children, a husband and health issues along for the ride! Anyone who has ever experienced illness in their family or considered an expatriate life will want to read this book.'
âAndrea J. Miller, Shares in Life Foundation, NZ
âSusan Biggar's firsthand account ⦠gets to the heart of the patient-centered care movement that is rapidly spreading across the globe.'âDr Susan Frampton, PhD, President, Planetree (US)
âSusan Biggar's writing will draw you in from the first page and have you laughing, crying and thinking deeply. This vital book will inspire both health professionals and patients to think differently and envision a world where we work in partnership for the best possible healthcare.'âDr Catherine Crock, Executive Director, Australian Institute for Patient and Family Centred Care
âI finished the last half of this book in one sittingâcouldn't put it down. This is an engaging and compelling story of facing chronic illness and making tough choices with courage, hope and heart.
âCarroll Jenkins, Former CEO, Cystic Fibrosis Research Inc (US)
âCystic fibrosis is the most common inherited disease affecting children in many countries, including the United States, Britain and Australia. Susan Biggar writes with style and verve, and this book will win a wide audience amongst the thousands of people affected by CF as well as the healthcare professionals working in the field.'
âDr Bob Williamson, Professor of Medical Genetics, University of Melbourne and Emeritus Professor of Molecular Genetics, Imperial College London
To Mom and Dad
For a lifetime of boundlessâoften long distanceâlove and belief
And in memory of Raewyn Biggar
(1941-2014)
A true friend and perfect mother-in-law
SUSAN BIGGAR
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA
www.transitlounge.com.au
Copyright © Susan Biggar 2014
First Published 2014
Transit Lounge Publishing
This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission. Inquiries should be made to the publisher.
Front cover image: Lauren Marek/Getty Images
Cover and book design: Peter Lo
Printed in Australia by McPherson's Printing Group
A cataloguing-in-publication entry is available from the
National Library of Australia:
http://catalogue.nla.gov.au
ISBN: 978-1-921924-75-0
1
SURPRISES
âAre you sure you're in labour?' Darryl asks suspiciously. His eyelids flicker in the torch-lit room, but remain closed.
âNo ⦠I don't know ⦠I can't say for sure.'
âMaybe it's just another one of those false alarms. We could wait a little longer and see what happens.'
Before I have time to respond, I hear a gentle whistling followed by a slow and steady exhalation. He's obviously planning on snoozing through this delivery. Sleeping is more than just a hobby for my husband, he's so accomplishedâable to sleep anywhere and anytimeâhe could add it to his CV.
âDarryl, wake up! Do you want to have a baby here at the gliding club? The midwife told me false labour wouldn't be painful. This is beginning to feel a lot like pain.'
âIt probably just feels more painful because you're tired â¦'
Tired seems to be all he can think about right now.
âOh, come on. Are you saying childbirth isn't painful for women who get enough sleep?'
It's January 1996 and I'm seven months pregnant with my first baby. As a Californian, I ought to be nestled away safely under my duvet in some leafy San Francisco suburb, awaiting a smooth transition into the maternal life. Many of my more organised friends seemed to casually slip motherhood into their lives over a long weekend, without even changing a dress size.
But, oh no, not me. Instead, it's three o'clock in the morning and I appear to be in premature labour, lying in my sleeping bag next to my Kiwi husband on the peeling linoleum floor of a gliding club in the rural Wairarapa region of the North Island. We had intended to go gliding that day but the weather ruined the plan. Thank God, as my mother and mother-in-law would never have forgotten it or forgiven me. Especially given that my mom recently suggested that I âstart acting pregnant'. I didn't know just what she meant at the time, but I doubt if flying in an engineless aircraft using only the currents of rising air to stay airborne would constitute pregnant behaviour in her view.
Leaving our sleeping bags and gear behind, we climb in our old Toyota Corolla and drive down a dusty and bumpy road to the nearest town to find a phone. As I wait in the front seat, fidgeting nervously with the gearstick, Darryl disappears into the booth to call the local country hospital just fifteen minutes up the road. He emerges with a report.
âUm, I called Masterton Hospital. They said our baby would be too small to be born there.'
âWhat? Do they have a size limit on babies? How can they turn us away?'
My eyes glance down to my undersized stomach which, up until now, had seemed like an unexpected benefit. In fact, my tummy's so flat that a number of acquaintances don't yet know I'm pregnant.
âShe said we need to be at a bigger hospital with a baby this premature.'
This news is like shooting adrenaline into my womb, the contractions speeding up and my half-contained anxiety streaming to the surface.
âCall the midwife, please!' I say through the open car window, panting with fear, trying to resist the creep of self-pity.
Darryl slips obediently back into the booth but pops his head out almost immediately.
âSorry, but the phone card just ran out of money. And, unfortunately, this phone doesn't take coins. Do you have a card, Sue?'
âThat one was mine, remember? Don't you have one?' Tipping the contents of his wallet on the bonnet of the car, searching, he shakes his head. A few minutes later, after negotiating some complex terms of payment with the telephone operator, Darryl's in touch with the midwife.
âMy contractions are every five minutes now,' I call out to no one in particular, baring my teeth in an unattractive, snarling dog way.
A moment later he hangs up the phone, steps out of the booth and then stops to carefully place all of the cards back in his wallet before slowly getting in the car.
âOkay, the midwife says we should drive to Wellington,' he explains while tuning the radio station, as if passing on a message about overdue library books. âIf the pain worsens or the contractions become more frequent we need to call an ambulance.'
âDoesn't she realise we have to drive over the Rimutaka mountains to get there? That will be ninety minutes and we would never find a phone booth on this road.'
âGood point,' he says, nodding. âI guess we had better get moving.'
The Rimutaka road is remote, narrow and winding. It's a route we might choose on a sunny Sunday afternoon to enjoy the spectacular views back over the Wairarapa valley and its magnificent vineyards. But only with a sturdy stomach. On this particular night, light rain splatters on the windows and a low-hanging fog surrounds the car, closing in around us, thick and palpable. Like fear. I begin to pray in short sentences, slurring my words, drunk with worry.
Please, please, please
.
I then start repeating soothing mantras in my head.
Everything's going to be fine. I'm okay. The baby will be okay. Everything's going to be fine. I'm okay. The baby will be okay. Everything's
â¦
It's nearly five o'clock in the morning by the time we arrive in Wellington, a capital city which can look slightly sleepy even on a bustling day. Before dawn on this morning in January, the height of summer when much of the nation is still away lounging at the beach, we don't see a single person on the street. It takes a few minutes of knocking at the door of the delivery ward before we're admitted. Even after living out of the US for half a dozen years, I'm still grateful for New Zealand's excellent public health system which means we're not asked for either proof of insurance or a credit card prior to entry.
We're quickly led into a small single room where I'm hooked up to a monitor. Our midwife, Karen, arrives at the hospital just after we do, with matted hair, a crumpled blouse and surprisingly tidy lipstick. I have seen her regularly throughout the pregnancy and I know she has been delivering babies for twenty years; her presence is a relief. A doctor arrives about the same time. Yes, he says matter-of-factly, the baby looks okay. And, yes, it is on its way. Today. Definitely.
I am tempted to grab him by the collarâour doctor with his wire-rimmed glasses and pimpled face who doesn't look old enough to drink a beer much less determine when babies are comingâpull his face close to mine and yell, âDo something about this, please. I'm not ready to have a baby!'
When the adolescent medic leaves the room, Darryl and I both dissolve into sobs. My tears aren't surprisingâI cry as well as he sleepsâbut his are unsettling, seen so rarely in our time together. He is generally a brick; calm and reasoned. But now he looks rattled with his tired blue eyes and unbrushed mess of hair. He's still wearing the faded black sweatpants and Stanford T-shirt he wore to bed last night. He rubs away the tears with the back of his hand. In a way it's oddly reassuring to see him crying; the responsibility is not mine alone to have this baby properly.
All I have with me is what I'm wearing: a grubby shirt, black biking shorts and thongs. What about the soothing Mozart and organic nibbles for energy in labour that I assumed I would have so much time to organise? We planned to get everything sorted in the final two months of the pregnancy, after this holiday with Darryl's family. We had hiked and camped around the tip of the rugged Coromandel Peninsula further up the North Island then sprawled lazily at Waihi Beach with the relatives at their cosy old beach house. After Waihi, Darryl and I had crammed our Toyota full of beach gear, windsurfers and his two brothers, Grant and Kevin. All four of us are over 6'2” tall. At our wedding in San Francisco five years earlier, Grant (6'7”) had quipped that Darryl was marrying me because I was the only woman to meet the family height requirement. Funny. Well, funny until you're trying to pack twenty-five feet of family into a compact car. After leaving Waihi we had driven south to the gentle Wairarapa, where Darryl and I had planned on a few days of gliding while the brothers continued on to Wellington.