Was
that a knock?
I'm
wide awake in the dead of the night for the eighth or ninth night in
a row. Hell, I can't even remember how long its been. The baby came
only a few weeks back. My insomnia should
be coming from him,
should be, but no.
Here I am, unable to sleep and it's no one's fault but mine in a
household full of sleeping people. My girlfriend, Holly, and Brayden,
our son. Those two words are still very new to me.
That's
probably why I'm awake now, eating peanut butter straight out of
the jar, standing half-dressed in the kitchen in a desperate attempt
that I can induce a calorie-caused coma. No such luck for me though.
Now, there's a knock at my front door, or at least I think there
is.
I'm
tired. That's all it is. No one's at the door this late.
I
listen for another sound, a knock, a movement. Nothing.
Our
house is a small one, built during the Depression. The hardwood
floors and the quiet neighborhood in the suburbs officially sealed
the deal for me. You can hear everything in this house, from the
basement to the second story where all of the spare bedrooms are.
Holly
and the baby are sound sleep in a bedroom that I should be in right
now, just off of the living room on the main floor. Also on the main
floor is a kitchen with an island that doubles as our dining space,
which is where I've got myself propped up on my elbows and I chew
this peanut butter like a madman.
So,
this is what our friends and family had joked about before the baby
came. The complete and utter exhaustion that comes from parenthood
and all of the "perks" that come along with it. The kind of
exhaustion that makes a person regret every time before that they
complained about being tired. The kind of exhaustion that's a rite
of passage for shutting down the people that compare having a pet to
having a baby. The kind of exhaustion that short circuits the part of
a person's brain that tells a person to sleep, along with the
logical ability to determine what is and what isn't a knock.
Why
am I still awake? Why am I not in bed next to Holly and the baby?
From
my spot on the island in the kitchen, I have a clear gaze to the
front door on the other side of the living room. There's a glass
rectangle in the center of the door that lets in light from the
streetlamps from the quiet street outside.
I
could open up that door and leave right now.
It
would be better for both of them. People say that it takes time for a
mother to bond with their newborn, especially after the traumatic
birth that Holly had to go through. Emergency C-Section. She barely
has enough strength to take care of herself at the moment, let alone
a newborn. This leaves me picking up the slack around the house as
she recovers, with no time for the on and off switch of parental
responsibilities like you see in the movies.
Don't
get me wrong, I'm not asking for a pity party. We
wanted this child. We
planned for this
child. We
did, but where's that
we now? There's
barely a me.
I'm so tired I can't sleep, yes, I know it's a clich but
it's true. I'm not the same person I was back then.
I
focus my attention on the front door and fantasize about stepping
through it. How the cool winter air will feel on my skin. The things
I would pack. The note I would leave behind. I'd send money to
them, I'm not a complete asshole, but this isn't what I signed up
for, no sir. It's the worst kind of buyer's remorse and I know
that, but the hell if I know what to do with myself anymore. Hold out
on the hope that I'll learn to love this baby? I was under the
impression that babies are meant to bring out the best in people, but
ours did the opposite.
Wait.
Was that a knock again?
Stuffing
the spoon into the jar of peanut butter, I take a few steps towards
the front door. Even in the darkness of the room, I'm able to catch
a glimpse of my reflection approaching the square on the door. A
white T-shirt, a pair of boxers, and a pair of melancholy eyes that I
shouldn't recognize but do. I want to pull that reflection out of
the glass, strangle it, and scream, "Man up, enough of this. You're
a father ow, so take care of your child and girlfriend. They're
counting on you, and it's too bad if you don't like it because
you brought this on yourself. No one wants to hear about your
problems."
The
least I can do is pretend to be a man and check the door. Hell,
that's half of the male world anyway: trying to prove that you're
worth that extra Y-chromosome. There's no scoreboard for being a
father, no competition, no trophy, no gauge of masculinity. Instead
there's diapers, crying, doctor appointments, insomnia, gentle
hands, and no credit for any of it. This isn't anything like when I
first met Holly, back when it was all parties, alcohol, and late
nights. It's easy to show the world how much of a man you are with
those things.
But
now? I've been reduced to peanut butter eating frenzies and
stumbling through a dark living room in search the source of a noise
that might or might not be in my head. No thanks.
I
check the front door and, of course, there's nothing there. Walking
back through the kitchen, I twist the knob on the back door and find
the same result. The digital clock on the stove reads something like
3 A.M., but my bleary eyes aren't sure.
Was
I really in the kitchen for an hour?
It
felt like five minutes. I check the jar of peanut butter and there's
a lot more missing that what I remember eating. My throat should be
jammed with this stuff, but it feels fine. I gulp down a glass of
water, just to be sure.
That's
when I hear something else, and this time I'm positive that it's
not a knock. It's our son crying in the bedroom. Holly stirs from
beneath the blankets and whispers a faint, "Nick, honey. The baby,"
through the open door. Her stomach muscles are still too torn up to
get out of the bed without help, let alone having to tend to a fussy
baby.
I
notice my reflection again in the square glass on the front door as I
walk towards the bedroom. I look surprised, as if I were saying,
"What were you thinking? You weren't serious about leaving. Were
you?"
Part
of me wants to answer what I really think, but my tired mind can't
focus on more than one thing at a time. The baby needs a change.
After swapping out the diaper, I slip the little mittens back on his
hand to keep himself from accidentally clawing out his eyes.
Would
he even notice if I left?
Sleep
comes to me eventually, as it always does, but never soon enough. I
barely have time to close my eyes before my alarm goes off. Time for
work. Time to get dressed. Time to sit in my car for an hour and a
half in traffic. Time to fake being good at my job. Time to read
company e-mails about finding a balance between my personal life and
my work life. Time to thank my in-laws for coming over to help while
I was working.
You
think this is hard? Holly went through something much worse than
this. Shut up. It'll get better sometime soon, this is just a
phase.
I
hope that's all this is, because I'm starting to lose what faith
I have left.
Maybe
a good night's rest will help me.
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