I wimped out during childbirth. I have no problems admitting this as I was 20 years old and freaked out by the thought of squeezing a human being through my delicate and once virginal cooter.
By wimped out I mean I had a full fledged panic attack. I cried, I whined, I hyperventilated. Besides the blissful and relaxing feeling of being torn in half by contractions (such an understated word. It should be something more like Anaconda Death Grip of birth), the back pain alone felt like Jason was stabbing me in the back with a rusty butter knife.
(Nevermind the burning ring of fire which makes one feel like someone shoved a flaming torch up one’s crotch.)
I was out of my element and fearing each natural progressive step in the stages of labour and childbirth. Just when I seemed to acclimate to one subset of pain, the bar was raised and my threshold was pushed past it’s admittedly puny limitations. I was the ultimate birthing wimp.
It was the like my very own perfect storm, the trifecta of terror for a young woman who had never gave birth before, who had only had sex a few times in her life and was about ready to become a mother as she was to start dancing on table tops, stripping for money right that very moment.
Yes, I was a big, enormous wimp. So when a maternity nurse casually suggested (and by this I mean grabbed my head between her clammy man-hands and yelled at me to breathe and shut the hell up for a second) I get an epidural, I jumped on that chance like a homeless person does on a lottery ticket.
Sure, have someone I have never met before jam a huge long needle straight into my spine and pump drugs into my body. Sounds a helluva lot more fun than this childbirthing gig. Sign me up.
I pussed out. Emotionally and physically. After a few hours of painful contractions and the mental image of a ten pound watermelon being squeezed through a ten centimeter hole, the choice wasn’t all that difficult to me.
Screw natural childbirth and pass me the drugs, please and thank you.
After not one, not two, but three painful deliveries (the last one being drug free because the world is a cruel and merciless place) I thought I would never face pain like that again.
Then Bug died. Suddenly I was in the more pain than if I had to squeeze out a two tonne hiefer through my vajayjay. The emotional and physical pain was overwhelming. I expected mental anguish. I just never expected the physical pain that came along with my grief.
It felt like a weight was pressing down on my shoulders trying to grind me to dust while somebody was constantly stabbing me in the gut and in the heart. Add to this, the worst stress headache imaginable, lack of sleep and apetite and soon every breath you draw in feels like your body might explode into a million tiny shards – all broken fragments of the person you used to be.
This time there was no nurse waiting in the wings to grab my head, shove it between my legs and tell me to man up while she procures body-numbing drugs for me. This time I had to do it on my own.
So I did. There was no choice really. I had two kids and a husband who depended on me to stay sane and upright as they navigated the oceans of mourning alongside me. The pain was unbearable. And seemingly unending.
At times I thought of self-medicating, and if Bug were my only child, I probably would have made a different choice. I’d probably be typing this from rehab after months, years, of sitting on a couch, drooling and looking at the pretty sky while reaching for a half empty bottle of booze.
But Fric and Frac needed me. I needed a clear mind to steer through this tragedy and not inflict any more emotional trauma on them than they had already endured. Eventually, I survived the pain. And while it still lingers, like wisps of smoke after a forest fire, it is no longer the crushing pain it once was.
After surviving that loss, and of course the horror of childbirthing pain, I felt like there was no longer a pain in the world I couldn’t shoulder. In fact, after walking through those embers of hell, I didn’t really feel anything at all. I was numb.
So I started seeking out ways to feel. Painful ways to feel. I was a hollow shell of my former self, barren of the most basic human emotions. It was right about then I discovered the tattoo and piercing parlour. My new favourite place to relax. Some chicks dig spas and massages. I happened to find serenity in have a huge pointy needle shoved through my skin so I could bedazzle myself like a cheap pair of jeans.
It didn’t take me long to get past the whole wanting to be poked like a pin cushion. Body modification is intoxicating. Soon I moved onto tattoos. And then another. And then yet another. Each one brought a special mark to my body, a permanency to the fluid emotions swirling around me. Each one was relatively painless.
Which made me want to get another. With my 33 birthday on the horizon, I decided to treat myself to yet another ink spell. Because I have rocks for brains and I enjoy annoying my husband. I’m thoughtful like that.
I sat in that tattoo chair smiling like the stupid rube I am. I was cocky with the belief that this tattoo would be just as easy as all the others.
I was wrong.
Holy mutha of all that is holy!!! Apparently, my grief has receeded and taken my cloak of numbness with it. Picture a rather burly tattoo lady artist with pendulous boobs eyeing my watering eyes suspiciously and asking me every twenty seconds if I wanted to stop and take a break.
I refused to wimp out. I gritted my teeth and nearly died from the hot buzzing needles scratching ink into my tender flesh. Beads of sweat lined my brow like I was running in the desert. I was wishing for a big ole needle to be jammed in my spine to give me drugs, I’ll admit it.
I am a pussy.
But I am a pussy with a new tattoo who can once again feel the most basic of human emotions. Pain. Along with a host of other emotions that were once lost to me.
Time really does heal all wounds.
Now if only my damn tattoo would stop itching like crazy.
Edited to add: The tattoo is on my right forearm. Does this mean my arms look like legs or my legs look like my arms? Hmmm…








Melissa
Beautiful and Meaningful that is exactly what tattoos are supposed to be. I had Believe tattooed on my left wrist 2 months ago my first tat I could see but one that reminds me to Believe all things are possible.
Miss Britt
I think it’s that your palm looks like a heel.
insane mama
I totally understand seeking pain, just to feel SOMETHING! Nice tat
Lynette
Oh! That is beautiful. I was just thinking of new ink for my birthday. I think you just pushed me over the edge
Kim
Oh man, I feel your pain. I had no drugs with my last two babies, and it was rough, but worth it. I don’t have any tattos, but I do love the sentiment of your new one. Thanks for reminding me it will be okay, someday.
(hugs)
Vicki
That is beautiful. I have 4 tats myself and plan to get at least 4 more. One for my brother who died in a car accident. One for each of my children…as soon as this next one gets here. I have twin boys and am expecting #3 less than two weeks after they turn two. I see some serious ink in my future. Its awesome, isn’t it? Especially when you realize you can feel again…
Thumper
Beautiful…but you’re making me rethink the placement of my next ink. I want a memorial tattoo for my FIL and was going to get it on my inner forearm…didn’t stop to think that might hurt more than other places,
Heather~Domestic Extraordinaire
I am a big wuss. While natural child birth is no problem (the doc told me I had a body made to birth babies…LOL) I have this huge fear of needles and someone stabbing with one over and over to get a pretty picture out of the deal. Ummm, no thanks. I admire them on other though, and even fantasize about getting one, until I realize that I will have to get stabbed.
larrylily
I have been fighting skin cancer for the past 20 years. My arms mainly, but my neck, shoulders, back and ears.
The small ones they burn off with liquid nitrogen.
I started with 5 each arm, they hurt like hell. Every 6 months, like clock work I had this. Then after a couple of years I would get 10 per arm, then twenty. Now they dont even do burning, they cut them off. I told the skin doc, Hey doc, dont use that liquid crap, it only pisses them off, they come back faster and bigger.
Now, the cutting doesnt even get a flinch, the pain is gone. But when he does a new buring on a new spot, like the last one just above my man-tit, HOLY JUMPING JESUS CHRIST that hurts.
So while you have a tramp stamp and a a few others, I have my grizzley arms.
I never thought of physical pain when I lost my daughter, but I guess thats why we are different.
katie ~ motherbumper
And it’s reasons like this that I love you. Srsly – tell you husband to move out, I’m moving in.
Hally
I like the quote – but am in awe of your ability to stand the pain. That is a huge tatoo!
BackpackingDad
But if you have, like, 300 griefs do you need 3 joys? Or does that one joy do the trick?
“One joy scatters all griefs. Yo. Back off griefs. Here is my joy.”
Which reminds me of a Lucinda Williams song: Joy.
“You took my joy
I want it back
You took my joy
I want it
I’m gonna to west Memphis
And look for my joy
Gonna go to west Memphis
And look for my joy
Maybe in west Memphis
I’ll find my joy
Maybe in west Memphis
I’ll find my joy”
Not really relevant. But it has the word “joy” in it like 300 times. That’s enough to take care of 30,000 griefs.
twingly25
Love the ink!! Your story is amazing! You are an amazing person for the ability to work through your pain like that. I love the quote!
Jerri Ann
This is funny, not in a haha way but in a odd way. I asked for a c/s the day I found out I was pregnant. I couldn’t stand the thought of anything coming out my yahoohoohoo. Then, my ob told me that my pelvis was heart shaped and a very small baby probably wouldn’t be birthed from that canal but my insurance wouldn’t pay for c/s unless I had tried to birth vaginally first.
Anyway, I didn’t tell you that for any reason except that my second baby I chose my dr based on the answer, “can I have another c/s”. I left 2 because they said no, the third one, a high-risk doctor said absolutely, heart shaped pelvic and 3 herniated disks in your low back, you got a c/s.
That pain didn’t bother me, or the thought of that pain because I had an exploratory surgery at 18 and I knew what it meant to have my guts opened up……..
Anyway, I have always wanted a tattoo, but I was afraid of the pain. So, on my 40th birthday I got myself a big pretty Mickey Mouse on my shoulder. Well, not too big, just his head, I might get his body later. At the time when folks were suggesting I might get the body later, I was like, er…no, one little tattoo and that’s all I want.
The day after I got that tattoo, I begged to be taken back to the same tattoo place and I had my children’s initials tattooed on my ring finger on my left hand. The oldest child has my husband’s initials and the youngest has my initials. So, I thought they were just way too cool.
And, now, I think I might be addicted to the feeling of getting a tattoo.
Did you ask for me to guest post in your comments section? ermmm..sorry!
Tootsie Farklepants
You’re amazing.
paige
I love them, especially the neck one–really pretty!
Miss Grace
I could tell it was your forearm. I think it looks good!
Undomestic Diva
I love, love, love your artwork. I’d send you a pic of mine, but that would require me using lotion and a razor. And I’m just too fucking lazy.
ali
wow. my hat’s off to you, woman! i don’t have the cojones to get a tattoo the size of a quarter!
wm
beautiful post