It always was, from the very start, something very abstract. A concept. A mirage. Something that makes you go, “I can’t say for sure, but I know it’s in there…”
Suddenly, I look down and instead of seeing my legs I see only the tips of my feet and my belly button pushing its way out. I try poking my belly button back to its original depth, as an experiment. Something inside pokes back.
And then, it hits me: Something inside’s poking back! And what used to be a concept, a mirage, or something that makes you go “I can’t say for sure, but I know it’s in there” asserts itself. Kicks from the inside.
“I have zero mother instincts,” I complained to Timi as we lunched at Mcdonald’s during our lunch break, a big fat cloud of grease and fat from burgers and fries hovering over our heads.
“Everyone has mother instincts,” Timi argued.
“I don’t. What scares me is coming back home with the baby and not knowing what to do with it.” I slathered a fry in pommes frites sauce and popped it into my mouth. My Little Surrealist kicked as soon as I was done chewing. “I mean, how do you even give a baby a bath?”
“Like this,” Timi said. She cradled an imaginary baby over the crook of her arm and moved an imaginary sponge over the imaginary baby’s imaginary head.
“Seriously?” I asked after she had finished her demonstration.
“Well, I don’t know… I guess,” she admitted. “Anyway, maybe the mother instincts come when the baby arrives…”
***
“Of course you’ll know what to do when the baby arrives!” Marissa exclaimed over lunch Saturday afternoon, as I recounted my conversation with Timi as we started attacking the salmon on our plates. “You’ll be surprised at how naturally it’s going to come to you.”
I must have still looked worried, because Marissa then said, “You shouldn’t worry. If a baby cries, it means three things: it’s wet, it’s hungry, or it’s sick.”
“I don’t even know how to give a baby a bath,” I told her sullenly.
“You need a bathtub,” she told me.
“I already have a bathtub at home!” I said, instantly cheerful.
I detected a hint of pity in her eyes. “Not the normal bathtub, Kala. I meant a plastic tub.” After a few minutes of silence, she said, “Maybe I should help you buy stuff before the baby comes.”
***
“You mean you don’t have a bathtub yet?!” Dr. Doom exclaimed over the phone when I recounted my conversation with Marissa about the bathtub. “Are you kidding me? You’re what – 5 months? What have you been doing all this time?”
“Uh… working?” I replied sarcastically, ignoring the italics in her speech. “Look – it’s not like I can just take the afternoon off to go and look for plastic bathtubs or baby beds or stuff like that.”
“You don’t have a crib yet?” Dr. Doom shrilled once again. “Do you even keep a baby calendar?”
(For your information: Dr. Doom is pregnant, too. She got pregnant a month after I announced my pregnancy. “Don’t think I did this on purpose. You’re still the star, for god’s sake.” That was the sms message she sent me to break the news.)
“… I have a baby book where I list down all my baby-related appointments. It even has a checklist of things you have to do every month. Milestones, and all that. It even has useful information about your baby’s growth. You can buy it in any bookstore, I think. Or you can order it online. Wait, let me give you the address…”
(When she was in university, Dr. Doom kept a list of the clothes she’d wear during that week tacked on the door of her wardrobe drawer. The purpose was to avoid the embarrassment of being caught wearing the same pair of jeans/shirt twice in the same week.)
I had spaced out a bit during her monologue, but finally floated back to earth just in time to hear Dr. Doom saying “… and please tell me you’re still taking your prenatal vitamins. You don’t know how important that is. What did your doctor say about your sugar levels?”
“I haven’t asked her about it yet. I’ll ask during my next appointment.”
“How many weeks along are you?” she persisted.
“Uh…” I did a mental calculation in my head, and failed. “Between 20 and 22 weeks. I think…”
Even her sigh was judgmental. “Oh well. I’m 16 weeks and 3 days. Three and a half days,” she corrected herself, trying to dazzle me with her accuracy.
***
What am I going to do, I asked out loud to My Little Surrealist, one evening when I’d come home from work earlier than usual and Julien was still at the office. I was sprawled on the couch, feeling like crap. My hand crawled to my belly and I stroked it, marveling at the unfamiliarity of it all, my changing body, my expanding belly. I don’t even keep a baby calendar, I continued. I don’t even know how to give you a bath. I don’t want kids calling you Stinky at the playground, I don’t want that. I want you to be squeaky clean. But occasionally dirty, too. You know? I started to bite at the skin of my lower lip. I don’t know anything about baths, or baby clothes. I can’t even keep track of my sugar levels. What if I turn out to be a shitty mom? My eyes moved to the bookshelf, where my robot Mahmud stood, giving me the hairy eyeball, probably thinking “She’s gone mad, my master; she’s talking to her goddam stomach.”
Even Mahmud is judging me, I whispered conspiratorially to My Little Surrealist. The bastard. He’s sore because I haven’t oiled his joints in the past three months.
The sun shifted the light in the living room and I kept on lying on the couch, worrying. I worried so much it almost suffocated me; it was painful to draw in my breath, and I could feel the tears threatening to fall. I lay there, drowning in self-doubt and self-pity, and a healthy dose of melodrama.
You’ll still love me, right, even if I don’t know what to do? I finally asked in a pleading tone, then I lapsed into silence, still stroking my belly.
My Little Surrealist kicked me.
And just like that, I think I’ll be all right.
Currently listening to:
Phoenix
It’s Never Been Like That

17 comments
Kat says:
May 18, 2009
We used a batya for the first few months–hey, it was good enough for me when I was a kid and we didn’t have a bathtub at our old place.
Don’t worry about mothering instincts. By the end of the first week, almost every new mother realises she’s far more incompetent than she’d imagined.
I signed up to get newsletters from babycentre.co.uk — it helped me keep track of what week of pregnancy I was up to. *g*
Hanim says:
May 18, 2009
Kala…seems that you worried too much. Like Marissa and Timi said, it will come naturally. and of course, in the hospital, the nurses will teach you how to bath, put on the clothing/bodies/pajama and feed the baby. Don’t worry, I was there too and my kids turn up okay – surviving! For both pregnancies I went to this site : http://parenting.ivillage.com/.
Makis says:
May 18, 2009
You will do fine, Kala! It’s your first baby so it’s normal you feel that way. But do something! Just don’t let baby Barba-Court stink
And yes, everybody has mother instinct & I bet they do teach you all you need in the hospital. You’ll be a great, cool mom.
Hanim says:
May 18, 2009
I knowwhat I’m going to call your baby Kala…little stinky..but in a very cute way:P
kala says:
May 18, 2009
Kat> LOL, thanks for the advice. That’s really what I wanted to hear!
Hanim> Will check out the site, thanks. I was thinking Little Stinkypoo would be a sympa nickname as well, hehe
Makis> Hay naku, only time will tell! Bahala na talaga si Batman!
jessi says:
May 18, 2009
as chaotic you are, I know you will do fine and your child will be happy to have such a gorgeous person to be its mother. don’t worry.
haze says:
May 19, 2009
When I was not a mother yet, I assure you I didn’t have a mother instinct until I have them. I’m sure when that little boutchou comes you’ll know how to handle things.
Just learn how to trust your maternal instincts. Do not be too harsh and tenaciously persist in mothering….it will come naturally. I’m sure you’ll do well
! Remember, at the end of the day we learn to be a mother by instinct and a mother’s instinct is rarely wrong
! Courage, you can call me anytime !
Timi says:
May 20, 2009
You’ll be fine for sure – and we”ll support you while we’re still in Paris. Of course I”ll blog about your baby
Btw, I will need your photo (you have to smile ha) when you’re already 9 months pregnant and ready to pop – I will have to post that – it’s gonna be legendary.
apol says:
May 20, 2009
I’m six months pregnant. I don’t have a neither a bathtub nor a crib yet. And I believe everything is going to be just fine
Christianne says:
May 21, 2009
Hi! I got here through Toni’s blog
When I was 6 months pregnant we moved from Pinas to Sweden and of course, spent all our savings on plane tickets and the deposit on the apartment, so we had to save up again and buy all the baby gear in the last month
So don’t worry. You will be fine, and your baby will be in great hands. All babies really need are milk, warmth, and a pair of loving arms.
Junnie says:
May 22, 2009
would you wish they come with manuals? but even that you dont read. no worries Kala. when the baby comes out -it will have some sort of warranty….and a sign that says “hug me, feed me, and wipe my poop”
those are the 3 things it needs from you.
toni says:
May 25, 2009
You will be alright. *hugs*
We will be alright.
We’ll support each other!
And you’ve got J.
sparks says:
May 30, 2009
little surrealist. me likey
you’ll be fine bel.
AnP says:
Jun 25, 2009
have you seen that johnson and johnson commercial with how the mom felt love as soon as she touched her newborn? and then all the other moms said that they had the same when they gave birth…
well, I didn’t experience that. the first time, JP was given to me (after 3 days of labor and knocked out during the emergency C section), the first thing that popped in my head was “darn, this kid does not look pretty…” and i just gave him back to J because i was so tired.
that teary-eyed-i-have-a-baby feeling came much later.
and in between those are bouts of paranoia and doubt about my parenting skills.
but i got over it all.
it’s normal. to have doubts. to be nervous. to now know what you need to do.
but you will learn
enjoy your time
all those sacrifices will be truly worth it… even after 16 years and you have “potah, nasaan na ba ang batang ito…” moments… hahahaha
enjoy…
AnP says:
Jun 25, 2009
* to noT know what you need to do
Joy says:
Jun 26, 2009
Hey you, how are you doin?
Don’t worry much about the mother instincts and all… you’ll be having a Motherhood 101 course with the hospital staff after giving birth. It’s tough at first but you’ll get use to it- practice makes perfect they say.
Books and Google help us a lot, use them for the theories. It helps us be informed. You’ll get by over your apprehensions. Mother instinct shall come once you become a mother!
Take care.
Analyse says:
Jul 17, 2009
oh kala, sana magkapitbahay tayo, i won’t mind helping you out.. but don’t worry that much, isipin mo na lang, marami na ang dumaan dyan, if they could do it, kakayanin mo din yan.. mother’s instinct? darating din yan.. i have the same reaction as AnP when I had Louna, the first thing i had in mind was, yan na ba yun? ang pangit naman.. but little by little, i got addicted to my daughter and honestly, i thought she was the most beautiful baby in the world.. i think at that point, i gained that famous mother’s instinct, lol.