My wife and I were overwhelmed and underprepared for the 10 week premature birth of our twins.
We didn’t know if the kids would make it. I didn’t know if my wife would make it.
After a long night of observations, we got prepped for an emergency C-section at Melbourne’s Royal Women’s Hospital. I kept thinking: why us?
But this type of thinking serves no purpose, so I focused even more on Kirsten, my wife. She was distressed on the operating table. She was, quite rightly, terrified. I had never felt so helpless in all my life.
After the kids were born, they were whisked away to the specialist care in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
I remember seeing my kids crying, with 10-15 health professionals working on them. I didn’t know who needed me more, Kirsten, or my new son and daughter Rupert and Maisie. A primal part of my monkey brain wanted to push the staff away. But logic took over.
I felt so proud of my wife and kids and their survival instincts.
Kirsten was able to touch the kids five hours after the operation and I counted my lucky stars; I had twins, my wife survived an emergency C-section, and Carlton beat North that Friday night by one point. I celebrated it all with a single solitary beer before falling asleep on the couch.
There were few texts or calls to friends and family that night – I didn’t know if the kids were going to be there in the morning, it was touch and go.
But this was only the beginning of the treacherous storm. I felt like I was standing on the deck of a small ship in middle of the ocean. Big, 10-storey ocean waves crashed over the bow. I’m trying to keep the ship, my family, our lives, balanced and afloat and chartered in the right direction.
Top Comments
I'm a brand new mum whose baby boy arrived 14 weeks early last weekend. He's down in NICU at The Women's & doing well so far. I'm still an in-patient as I'm recovering.
I'm so glad to read this article & hear about Books For Beards. I'm going to have my fiancé read this. He's already well onto the dad's group. We're both committed to looking out for one another to check how we're coping. Not to mention, the staff here are total experts & brilliant! It's just as you've described; we're learning fast. Today was my first kangaroo cuddle :)
We're very grateful and want to stay informed while maintaining a positive outlook.
Now, I must get back to pump research - super important!