February 21st 2014 – A Magical Morning
Finally it had arrived. The date that had felt so far into
the future was finally here. The day before I had worked frantically trying to
wrap everything up to give enough time to come home early to start the
preparations. Of course I had gotten slammed with a proposal that was due the
day before my son was to be born. I had received text messages from Jess
throughout the day. She had successfully made it to the hospital to register
and take her blood work. Expecting another battle with the George Washington Hospital
administration about scheduling, Jess had been knocked over by the care and
attention she received in the Labor and Delivery department. Her last of many
prenatal visits over the last 9 and half months. All was now in place.
I sprinted home on my bike that night on my regular commute
pulling into the back yard around 7:00pm. The lights were all on in the house
and I could see Jessica’s parents had arrived. I walked in and was greeted with
a unanimous “nice of you to join us
Hayden”. I quickly retorted, “this
baby is half Aaronson, so I knew he was not going to be coming early”. I
quickly changed my clothes and collected Jeter’s things to take over to our new
neighbor Shawn, who had graciously agreed to dog sit while we stayed in the
hospital for the next three nights. Jeter climbed right up the stairs and burst
into Shawns house and immediately started playing with Chase, his new best
friend. This is perfect I thought. No dog guilt to saddle us until we come
home, when Jeter would find out he is no longer the top dog in the house.
I arrived back in the house to find shopping bags full of
food in the kitchen, with more being off-loaded from the Huber family car in
the front. Immediately our refrigerator had doubled in size and pantry over
flooded with all kinds of comfort foods.
I guess I should not have been surprised as food is a Huber family
tradition, but I was still amazed and appreciative that we would not have to
worry about groceries for the next week.
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| Bags in the following order from left to right: Hayden, Jess, Austin |
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| Michelle - Labor & Delivery Nurse |
We were first met by a wonderful woman, Michelle, the labor
and delivery nurse. Jess
recognized Michelle from her appointment the day
before. She was the right mix of competent and caring with an efficiency gained
from 13 years working as a nurse in a large hospital in New York City. As she
started to take all of Jessica’s vital signs, insert the IV and punch a slew of
information into the computer, various doctors, resident doctors, interns and nurses
popped in with questions. The first was the anesthesiologist, a short Indian
American woman who was very energetic and peppy, especially for 8:00 in the
morning. She explained thoroughly the procedure that Jess would be receiving a
spinal block, a shot which basically does what it says, blocks all pain from
reaching the nervous system below your spine. Additionally, they would be
inserting an epidural, which would be used only in the case there was a
complication and a need to ensure a longer term supply of anesthesia that could
be easily administered. She was joined by her resident anesthesiologist, Dr. Rowe,
who would be overseeing the anesthesia on Jess’s surgery. Next came, Dr.
Jackson, another young female doctor (it seemed like no doctors or nurses were
over the age of 35 in the hospital), pale skin with red hair, Dr. Jackson, was
a OBGYN, and would be working under the oversight of Jess’s main doctor, Dr. Amr
Madkour. She walked Jess through some of the procedure, at one point bumping
into Michelle, who interjected with a classic New York saying, “Your killin me”, much to Jess’ delight,
further endearing her to us.
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| Dr. Jackson - Resident OBGYN |
| Dr. Amr Madkour - Attending and OBGYN Extraordinaire |
Dr. Madkour greeted us and said that one of
his interns had caught something on the baby’s paperwork. Both Jess and I
looked at each other nervously. Originally, Jess’s due date had been March 5th,
the date estimated from her last period before the pregnancy. But after the first
12 week sonogram, Dr. Madkour moved up the date to February 26th due
to the baby’s size. But because Jess was
a C-section they moved the date up forward another week as a precaution to
prevent unnecessary strain on the uterus. Somehow the two due dates remained in
the system, so on the day of delivery, one of the interns saw the two dates and
said that if they went by the March 5th due date, then would be
delivering earlier than nine and half months, the recommended timing for
C-sections. Jess quickly stopped him and said “Dr. just tell me you are not going to cancel the C-section today?”
He quickly reassured her that they we were within the window to operate, albeit
on the early side, but felt obligated to inform her. It was a small scare that quickly
dissipated back to nerves as we refocused on the task ahead.
Jess was finally admitted into the OR. She was dressed in her blue hospital gown. I kissed her, told her I loved her, and that I would see her soon. She nodded slowly and kissed me back, “I love you too”, she said in reserved manner that betrayed the fear of the coming procedure and she followed Dr. Madkour and Michelle into the OR. They told me to wait about 15 minutes until the anesthesia was administered and then somebody would come get me to come in. I quickly put my blue scrubs over my clothes – pants, shirt, hat and shoes and began gently pacing back and forth. I decided I had time to run to the bathroom. I came back and continued pacing into the hallway to look and see if somebody was coming from the OR or not and then back into the recovery stall. I started adding stretches to my pacing, stopping every time to stretch my calves, my thighs, my groin, or roll my neck. There were a few nurses and doctors casually walking around the hallways. One nurse was walking a student through the clipping of the umbilical cord. I listened out of one ear, but could not focus on the details. I thought to myself, I must look like such the stereotypical anxious Dad-to-be right now. Nobody though seemed to pay much attention. I started worrying about my large DSL camera. Should I bring it in with the whole case or without? What should I do with the lens cap? Should I leave it on or turned off? I needed to be ready to shoot at a moment’s notice. I didn’t want to miss a thing. Finally settling on a strategy, I continued my obsessive pacing and stretching.
Jess was finally admitted into the OR. She was dressed in her blue hospital gown. I kissed her, told her I loved her, and that I would see her soon. She nodded slowly and kissed me back, “I love you too”, she said in reserved manner that betrayed the fear of the coming procedure and she followed Dr. Madkour and Michelle into the OR. They told me to wait about 15 minutes until the anesthesia was administered and then somebody would come get me to come in. I quickly put my blue scrubs over my clothes – pants, shirt, hat and shoes and began gently pacing back and forth. I decided I had time to run to the bathroom. I came back and continued pacing into the hallway to look and see if somebody was coming from the OR or not and then back into the recovery stall. I started adding stretches to my pacing, stopping every time to stretch my calves, my thighs, my groin, or roll my neck. There were a few nurses and doctors casually walking around the hallways. One nurse was walking a student through the clipping of the umbilical cord. I listened out of one ear, but could not focus on the details. I thought to myself, I must look like such the stereotypical anxious Dad-to-be right now. Nobody though seemed to pay much attention. I started worrying about my large DSL camera. Should I bring it in with the whole case or without? What should I do with the lens cap? Should I leave it on or turned off? I needed to be ready to shoot at a moment’s notice. I didn’t want to miss a thing. Finally settling on a strategy, I continued my obsessive pacing and stretching.
At last, a doctor came out of the OR and said, “they are almost ready for you, they are just
finishing the anesthesia”. Finally I thought, looking up at the clock as it
was just after 9:00AM, about 30 minutes since she had gone in to the OR.
Another ten minutes went by and I started to get nervous that they had forgot
to call me in and that Jess was too drugged to remind them. I asked a nurse if she could check again for
me. She peaked into the window and said it looked like they were almost done.
Finally after 45 minutes of deep breathing and pacing back and forth somebody
told me I could come in. I walked into a very brightly lit large wide-open room
with at least a ten people standing in different positions wearing identical
blue smocks. I saw Jess in the center lying down on a table with a large blue
partition over her stomach. She turned her head to the side when she saw me. I
quickly walked over to her side where a chair was waiting for me. I sat down
and nervously asked how she was doing. She nervously smiled back, and said “I don’t really feel anything.” She
began to tell me that the only uncomfortable part had been when her blood
pressure dropped suddenly and she had started having trouble breathing. Jess
said they had quickly stabilized it and now she was all right. This all
explained the delay I realized.
Jess seemed to be handling everything in stride and then I
realized that the surgery had not yet begun when I heard someone say, “Okay, we are getting started”. Over the
next 30 minutes I continually asked Jess “How
are you doing?” “Are you alright?”
and then tried to stay as positive as possible “You are doing great!” “Just
keep it up, you are going to get to meet your son real soon!” At one
point I tried to make a joke by saying “See.
Isn’t this easier than natural child birth”. And then I heard from over the
other side of the partition, Dr. Madhour reply back – “Maybe for you. For us this is hard work!” We laughed, feeling
comforted by the fact that things must be going smoothly enough if he can make a
joke in the middle of the surgery. Finally, I heard “We have the head!” I looked at the partition again and could see
the curtain shaking and then Jess being slightly jolted. There was some more
jolting and I could see Jess was feeling at least some of what was going on.
She said she felt heavy pressure on her stomach. We were getting super anxious
now as we knew things were getting close. I swung the camera around and turned
it on. I looked up at a large digital clock on the wall and took a picture of
9:29, thinking this could be the time of my son’s birth. It turned to 9:30. We
continued to wait.
Finally, I heard Dr. Madkhour say “Do you want to meet your son?” Then from side of the partition, almost
like a magician, one of the nurses pulled out a pasty white screaming baby. Jess
and I both just stared in disbelief. Then Jess started instantly crying. I was
too amazed to follow suit. I looked over as a team of nurses and pediatricians
quickly moved this child over to a side table on top of a baby warmer. They quickly
took some kind of small cord and began to run it through the baby’s nostrils
and then through its mouth. They looked to be vacuuming out some of the
amniotic fluids. I carefully wandered over to watch them. I could see a long whitish grey umbilical
cord attached to his stomach and a smattering of blood in his hair. He looked
so pasty white. The child kept crying.
Then
they placed him on a scale and one of the nurses announced, “7 pounds, 13 ounces! at 9:33!” Wow. I thought. That sounds
big; slightly bigger than Jess or I, who were both barely over 7 pounds. The
doctors had taken a bet before the surgery, Dr. Jackson estimating close to 8.5
pounds, while Dr. Madkour, was more conservative, at the mid sevens. After
several minutes of quickly working on him they brought him over for us to see,
holding him up from head to toe. He looked tall to me. His torso long and his
legs even longer and skinny. I began to take photos of him. They then lifted
him over a large certificate that said Congratulations!
From the George Washington University Hospital and had two outlines of footprints.
They took both his feet and stamped it in some ink and pressed it gently on the
certificate. Then the nurses put him in a bassinet and swaddled him tight with
a white blanket with blue and red stripes and the smallest pink and blue skull
cap I had ever seen and then handed the tightly wrapped little package over to
us. | The first cuddle |
d. His eyes were closed tightly and were twitching under the bright lights in the room. I put my hand over his eyes to shield him from some of the light.
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| There's a lot going on in this photo |
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| Baby warmer |
I took a break to stop staring at him and looked around. It
was like bumper bassinets in the nursery. There must have been over ten newborns
in clear bassinets on wheels. The
bassinets all had nametags with last names on them and the birthdates. I looked
back at Austin’s bassinet – no nametag yet. How cool it will be to see his name
in writing I thought. Most had been born yesterday or the day before and were
in for their daily physical. The newbies were a cornucopia of colors and shapes
a nice reminder of how multicultural a city DC is. | First sponge bath |
I awkwardly pushed the big bassinet out of the nursery, feeling a little uneasy without any chaperone. I took Austin back past the waiting room and into the OR recovery room where everything had started. Lying on a table was Jessica and sitting next to her were her parents.
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| Baby burrito |
An addendum:
Hayden, this captures our best day perfectly.
I want to add details to two moments for posterity.
Before you arrived in the OR I was administered the spinal block and epidural. As you paced the hallways, I paced mentally. I climbed up on the table and as the anesthesiologists went to work, I ran through comforting moments of my life, some expressed in my head and as the process grew in length, I began to say these things out loud. I commented that a drink to take the edge off would be nice. I blurted out that this was as scary as landing in Tripoli airport for the first time. My hero, Dr. Madkour who was standing in front of me holding my hand, told me he was once engaged to a Libyan woman (interesting!) As the needles were going into my spine and as I had to stay still and not think about the needles going into my spine, I started talking about New York. Michelle chimed in about pizza and Dr. Madkour, who did some of his residency at Columbia Presbyterian (of course he did) told me about a new distillery in New York that was producing “baby bourbon.” I guess I spoke a few times about needing a drink.
As I was laid on the table, my blood pressure dropped. I was told this might happen. It was super scary. At first I tried to tough it out, telling myself “you have to push through this.” But then I really started gasping for air. It felt like I got the wind knocked out of me. I couldn't take any more and started saying “I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe.” They talked to me the whole time and presumably gave me meds to push it back up. They also gave me oxygen and then I could feel myself calming down and able to breathe.
Not long after that Hayden came in and I felt immense relief.
After Austin was born and they showed him to us and I saw that he cried right away, I cried right away. He is ok. He is here. He is ok. He is here.
As they performed the APGAR testing on him with Hayden watching over him, another feeling came in. I felt…NOT PREGNANT. Woo hoo! It felt so good to have that little guy out of me. Hayden and Austin left for the nursery. I lay on the table for another hour listening to the doctors stitch me back up. I was so calm. Austin was ok and I had survived the mental and physical feats of a c section. It was interesting. Dr. Madkour was walking Dr. Jackson through the close. She was clearly doing it and he would very gently say things like, “try this and you need to move this way a bit. That’s it.” I didn’t feel worried. For the first time in many months, perhaps in many years, I was not worried (especially since I wasn’t actually able to see the procedure; although I could see the suctioned blood and stuff in the drainage buckets that were not so strategically placed right next to my head…)
It was a serene moment. It felt great and now they would wheel me out to my baby.
| Proud parents |

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Hello! First, congrats on a healthy delivery and birth of your child! Dr. Madkour is my doctor and as I was researching him I came across the birth story of your bundle of joy Austin. How wonderfully reassuring it was to see that you had a beautiful and successful story to tell of your experience with Dr. Madkour. My first 2 children (now ages 8 and 6) were delivered at INOVA Alexandria hospital via C-section (1st, emergency, 2nd scheduled but I went into labor on my own and INOVA Alex was the closest hospital at the time albeit not the hospital I was scheduled at) and I had such great experiences that I am nervous about delivering in this new unknown hospital. THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU for blogging about your experiences with Dr. Madkour. You have definitely confirm that our decision to stick with him and with GWU is the right one.
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