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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
Human Being.

Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

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Sleep Is
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Chicago Review Press

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Let's Panic

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At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

Lets-Panic.com → 

« Who wants to read my May Redbook column? You do, suckers! | Main | Better! »
Wednesday
Apr212010

The night before last

I woke up at 3 am to the sound of Henry calling for me. I stumbled into his room, reassured him that I was alive, stomped back to bed, lay there wide awake for what seemed like hours, finally dropped back into blissful slumber, then heard him calling me again. I nudged Scott and explained that his son was calling for him and if he was a sensitive and loving father he would run to his side. He totally bought that line and made his way to Henry’s room, showed Henry that he, too, was alive, and I heard him stumbling back to our room and then I heard a terrible sound. It was the sound of a delicate foot-part slamming into a heavy piece of furniture.

 

There was a millisecond of silence and then a string of expletives. This is normal procedure for Scott, who is well-known in these parts for taking out his anger on inanimate objects. He can usually be found instructing God to damn a computer to hell or unleashing brutal verbal abuse on a hinky small appliance. I could tell from the sound and the ensuing tenor of the cursing, though, that this particular injury was beyond the usual stubbed toe. This was bad. I wondered, from the comfort of the bed, if he had broken his toe. I considered getting up and helping him out, but on the other hand the bed was warm. I decided to wait it out. I heard him making his way to the bathroom, I assumed to check out his injuries in a well-lit place, and there was much hissing and gasping and cursing. I really should get up, I thought, and did not move an inch. Because really, what could I do? Wring my hands while he bandaged himself?

 

As I considered what a good wife I was, keeping the faith that he could help himself and in the process getting some much-needed rest so I could tend to the household tomorrow while he nursed his painful foot-wounds, I heard a crash. Actually it was more like a series of crashes, like all the furniture in the bathroom had come tumbling down. Except we don’t have furniture in the bathroom. I braced myself for the onslaught of cursing that would undoubtedly follow whatever it was that probably just landed on or near my husband, but I heard…nothing. Silence! Well, he’s handling that well, I thought. Just cleaning up the mess, without cursing and…

I sat up. My husband has never in his life taken events in stride. Especially when he already has what sounds like a painful injury. The silence continued. Shit.

I made my way through the dark hallway toward the lit bathroom, and then had what I referred to later as my Law & Order moment: turning the corner to see Scott sprawled, unconscious, on the bathroom tile. There were a couple of small puddles of blood a few inches from his arm, and a streak of blood across the cabinet. I would have been more alarmed if it hadn’t been for the small smile that was playing across my husband’s face, as if he were in the middle of a lovely dream, while his hand, now alarmingly close to all that blood, pawed the air. Did he think he was petting the dog?

 

I crouched down by him. “Honey,” I said.

He opened his eyes. “What?”

“You fainted,” I explained to him.

“I did it again?” he said.

Scott’s fainted a couple of times, the last time almost exactly a year ago, also in the bathroom, although that time he had been under the weather and not nursing a bloody toe. We ended up hanging out in the ER for hours and hours that time, only for the doctors to tell us that he was completely fine.

So this time, I wasn’t too alarmed. Only I knew that if he got up, he’d probably faint again, because that seems to be his way. And he was trying to get up.

“I’m okay,” he said.

“You’re not,” I said. “You’re lying on the bathroom floor. Stay down.”

Then we heard Henry open his door and amble over. “Hey, guys, what’s all the racket?” he asked, and then saw his dad lying on the ground surrounded by blood. He appeared…concerned.

“It’s okay,” I told him.

“It’s okay!” Scott repeated. “It’s okay!” His face was completely gray by now, and shiny with sweat.

“What’s wrong with Dad?” Henry said, his lower lip starting to tremble.

We then entered the wacky hijinks phase of the evening, in which I tried to reassure Henry that his father was, despite all the blood and the nearing-death quality of his face, actually fine, and also keep Scott from getting up and, in the process, pass out again and this time crack his head open, which was really the last thing we needed. I had to get Henry out of the bathroom and back into bed, and at the same time keep Scott lying down for little while longer, and while I was in Henry’s room comforting him and explaining low blood pressure and fainting and also how sometimes a little blood, strategically placed, looks like a lot of blood, Scott was in the bathroom, inexplicably calling out I’M OKAY to the Universe, and I kept shouting DO NOT GET UP WAIT FOR ME, and possibly the alarm in my voice kept Henry from dropping back into slumber, and then I got Henry to laugh by poking a little fun at his dad's fainting tendencies, and it was going well until I used the phrase “ripped his toenail off” and made Henry weep for Scott’s toenail, weep as if it were his very own, and I had to comfort him all over again and then get back to the bathroom because Scott was all I’M GETTING UP, and for some reason he went over to the couch, which was far from the bedroom and in the exact opposite place he needed to be, and then I went back to Henry who was now mourning Scott’s toe AND freaking out over the blood, and it’s amazing that any of us got any sleep that night.

 

But we did. In the end, Scott’s poor pinky toe was bandaged, his healthful glow returned to his face, and he managed to get to Henry’s room to reassure him and then get back to bed, and Henry fell asleep, and then I did, somehow, eventually. And the next day the source of the original injury—a heavy wood file box, which had been emptied and left in the hallway so that it could be thrown out—was taken outside and tossed to the curb, where it could never hurt anyone again.

Reader Comments (69)

You weave a good yarn there - thanks for that! If I could, I'd give you a big hug - for all the mama/wives lying in bed hoping the situation will rectify itself, and then coming to the rescue in the most loving way possible! :)
April 22, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterRebecca
I also laughed out loud. Thank you for that and I hope the toe is doing better. :)
April 22, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBria
I love that Henry said, "What's all the racket?" Sometimes kids are really just old people.
Oh, my. With file boxes like that, who needs scary neighbors? Well, I'm glad it all ended well enough.
April 22, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterZina
I know I shouldn't have laughed at any of that... but I did. Quite a bit.

Sorry, Scott. I hope you're OK.
April 23, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterWarsawMommy
Oy. A, I'm impressed you could keep calm in the face of: a) inert husband; and b) blood. I do not do well in either of these scenarios!
April 23, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBoston Mamas
Oh my, such goings-on. I am so glad you are back, and thanks for responding when I wrote -- though I truly did not expect it, so next time let yourself off the hook.

I fainted in the Ikea parking lot. I picked up a heavy box, felt a snapping in my back, and then sounds got very small, like they were coming through the wrong end of a megaphone. I looked at the friend I was with and said, "Jason, hold my hand while I faint." Then went down, down, down. It was kind of relaxing, except that when I woke up I could not move from the back injury.
April 23, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBeth
Once, in broad daylight, in an apartment I'd had for years, I walked barefoot (first mistake) into my home office and whacked my delicate shell-like toes into the corner of my desk, which had only been there for maybe three years.

Cautiously I looked down expecting to see blood but instead I saw my pinky toe sticking out at a distinctly unnatural right angle from the rest of the toes. I stood there looking at it for a moment and then realized two things: 1 - Any minute it was going to start hurting like hell and 2 - All an ER would do would be shove it back into place and tape it up. So that's what I did. The hurting like hell part did arrive right on schedule, in the middle of my self-treatment.
April 23, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterJan
Please tell Scott that he's not the only man who has fainting spells. My husband, a solidly built man who is now almost 52, has been fainting about once every two years since before I met him in college. It always has to do with some reference to blood or a blood-related disease--actually seeing blood isn't usually problematic. The first time I saw it happen, we were in a film class together watching Bergman's "The Silence" when he slid out of his chair and hit the floor. Since then, it has happened at the opera (Traviata), doctor's offices, and at home. He has discussed it with his doctor and is convinced there's no real problem, but I do worry...
April 25, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterLisa
I am not a fainter - but have done so a couple times and it is the weirdest feeling...to just float and then just not be awake, and then you wake up and you're not how you were a minute (or a few) ago. Very scary for everyone involved!

Sounds like a long and horrid night. And this is why I don't own a filing cabinet-they are deadly. I'll just continue to throw all my reciepts in a box!
April 25, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterkaylen
I am home today with my kids and by the time I got the part where you found him on the floor pawing at the air I was in TEARS laughing. My boys were perplexed at why mommy was laughing so hard she could not breath and TEARS!
April 27, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterJessica
I was also seriously worried and concerned until I read that it was his pinky toe! OH MAN.
April 27, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAngela
Great story as usual. Unexplained syncopy is a serious condition. I've been a paramedic for 24 years. The problem with ER's and some DR's is that they run the usual tests and find nothing and send you home, BECAUSE its not happening at the time of the tests. I'd go to a cardiologist because many times syncopy is caused by a short string of abnormal heartbeats that resolve spontaneously and then do not show up on any subsequent tests. The cardiologist would probably send you home with a monitoring 24/7 device that would likely catch and record the next incident and then the MD can treat accordingly. It doesn't need the record a syncopy event because these events happen throughout the day and don't cause snycopy because they resolve very quickly.Good luck with this and I hope this was helpful. Again great post, very funny.
April 28, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterDave F
Hey, you are a great writer and a very funny woman in your own right, but you stole that "baby looks like Churchill" line in your Redbook piece from Anna Quindlen. I suggest you add some acknowledgement
April 29, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAnne
I don't read Anna Quindlen, Anne, so no, I didn't steal the line. 



I am sure I am not the first person who's made that observation. 
April 29, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAlice Bradley
My daughter and I have convulsive syncope, which means that we both faint and it looks like a seizure. We just discovered last week that she suffers the same syncopal episodes after she was at school and stubbed her toe and passed out in response. Your post was very timely.
April 29, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAngela
Another fainter here. It's not all bad: the concussion I got before my A Level German Oral exam gave me a badly needed extra day to study...

Your husband needs to learn to lie down at the first hint of dizziness. Yeah, it can be embarassing, but so is coming around surrounded by scared looking strangers who will not take 'don't worry, it happens all the time' for an answer.

April 29, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterUK lass in US
Okay, so sorry if this adds more stress to your life, but my husband also went through a period of fainting every few months. Every time we went to do the doctor they said he was fine. I mean we did every medical test in the book, but everything looked great. The problem was that he kept fainting...and hurting himself (6', 3" man going down with no warning = hurt) They finally surgically installed a heart monitor and found that his heart was slowing down to the point where it was stopping for 15-30 seconds at a time. Lovely. When I was 9.5 months pregnant they installed a pacemaker and he's perfectly fine now. Again, there's nothing wrong with his heart or his head, just an electrical malfunction that needed a quick fix. Good luck.
May 1, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterKate

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