The United States of America is the only developed
nation that does not offer paid time to new parents, and to combat that, we
parents have had to use any combination of FMLA or paid time off (PTO) from our
jobs – if we have enough of the latter. As I learned firsthand last year, FMLA
is only a placeholder for our jobs for the six to twelve weeks our employers
allow; the income continues if you have enough PTO built up over time to use
for that purpose.
But what if we didn’t have the safety net in place?
That didn’t matter in my case, as our daughter was
born nearly four months premature. Those six weeks gifted by my wife’s employer
certainly were not enough time off to bond with the baby nor was it enough time
to let her body heal from emergency labor – and I won’t go into the tepid
responses from my job. [Sidebar: Caeli’s birth is the only time
I have called in the four years employed by the company I have missed work. It’s
not an indictment of the company, but more of a common refrain many employers
share regarding profitability: more
people have to shoulder the load if one individual is away for an extended
period of time]. In other words, the same people who are likely pro-life at
all costs are the same greedy ones who push for new parents to return quickly
to work as if a childbirth were a minor procedure and are more than mildly
annoyed with us having to schedule doctor’s appointments, visits with
specialists and therapists, and what if childcare falls through that particular
day?.
Returning back to work after the addition of a baby mere
days after birth should not be a badge of honor.
What was my reward for having a newborn daughter?
I got the weekend off when Caeli was born.
That’s it.
It’s funny I say that because that was the same
weekend I had submitted my PTO request a few months prior since I was finally
going to put up the storage building my wife keeps griping about and watch the
NBA All-Star Game in peace. Fifteen months later, I could not tell you anything
about that game, and the building materials are still leaning on the carport
walls as a result. I ended up taking leave at various points: the first week of August (our wedding
anniversary week), and eleven days in late November that encompassed
Thanksgiving, Black Friday, and my early December birthday. I still feel like
it wasn’t enough especially in the beginning – Chastity was recovering from the
emergency C-section and dealing with postpartum depression without medication,
yet the twelve hour nights at my job and writing the Dad Chronicles were how I
managed to cope for those first five months. My coworkers, all of whom have
children, encouraged me to keep pushing and some nights were a reliable source
of humor!
Just because I wasn’t recovering does not mean my
wife didn’t need me.
I was stressed out, Chastity damn near lost it more
than once, and we both have been perpetually tired. Many days it felt like we
were substitute parents visiting the NICU for 143 of the 146 days Caeli was at
UAMS and Arkansas Children’s Hospital fighting for her life: one or both of us would spend hours with baby
bear reading, holding, praying, giving a bath, or talking to her establishing a
rapport. For the times we were at home particularly the three days we missed
around her, AngelEye [the video cameras set up over each NICU baby’s incubator,
and later, crib] allowed us to see what she was doing and which nurses were
working with her. When we finally came home whole July 20, we had to figure out
how to manage taking care of Caeli – I had only changed a handful of diapers
prior to her, and certainly not a girl! Feeding her mounted a larger challenge
due to the need to thicken each bottle of milk to honey consistency. There were
nights when she would cry for hours at a time or wake up babbling just as she
had done at ACH during Emily’s rounds or looking over at Freeman when he
glanced toward her.
Coming back to work wasn’t really that big of a
burden for me since I had worked all the way through. Bills had to be paid
somehow and on-time, meaning I didn’t have the option of using all of my PTO in
one felled swoop. In a strange way, it was a blessing to find a sense of
normalcy within the office because I didn’t have to answer emails about how she
was doing every single day. In addition, I also got to know my wife better when
the three of us were at home; hopefully, she rediscovered I was more than just
the “nigga payin’ bills ‘round here” and am deeply invested in her. The value
in bonding with my wife – and daughter – is greater than this workaholic ever
anticipated. At one point I even considered becoming a stay-at-home dad solely
to be around the house!
As envious as I get hearing about paternity leave in
Scandinavia and throughout Europe lasting for up to two years, I could only
imagine being away from the control room a fraction of the time. Give me a
guaranteed twelve weeks away from work WITH
PAY and the ability to keep my sick leave separate, and I’m good. The current
six weeks combined before and after birth are a double edged prescription for
serious depression and not enough time to set our logistics plan of action in
motion.
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