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British News
Articles:
Bad Behaviour: Labour Pain
GQ's
chronicler-on-call plots the meagre distance from hell to
maternity, and withdraws with libido in tatters.
A
friend of mine worked as an obstetrician and was frequently
required to address those awful parental classes, usually held
in grim hospital basements next to where they sort out the
medical waste. My friend's Health Authority removed this
imposition upon him, though, after his advise to the expectant
parents became ever more flippant. On one occasion, a dad
politely enquired how lone one was required to wait after the
birth before attempting sexual intercourse. "Well," my friend
replied, "a gentleman would wait until the afterbirth has been
removed and the midwives have left the room." Cue silence and
open mouths.
Despite all those droll Fifties Doctor films with Dirk
Bogarde, the health service is not notably possessed of a sense
of humour. My mate was strongly reprimanded and never allowed
near prenatal classes again, a blow he took with equanimity. But
then, prenatal classes are universally quite appalling. Some
superannuated member of the medical clergy shovels honeyed lies
at the gathered throng, the point being to convince the women
that childbirth will be a breeze, no more inconveniencing than a
spot of shopping. Just follow our advice: no drugs, don't lie
down and don't even think about a Caesarean. Then you mull this
over for a bit and eat some biscuits and the other doctor or
midwife stands up and tells you more utter lies. Your minge will
snap back into place straight after the birth with the speed and
precision of a spring-loaded man-trap; your weight will slough
off within 24 hours. You will never find out better than this.
Yeah, right. Later you will find out that something like 90
percent of doctors and nurses book themselves an elective
Caesarean as soon as the tenacious little sperm has penetrated
the ova.
But listen, you want a genuine prenatal insight? Sneak into you
local hospital maternity ward - it will probably be called a
"birthing garden" or some such euphemistic new-age wank - and
wander the corridors at random. You will hear screams the like
of which would have chilled even Dante. Listen well to those
screams: do they sound as if they are emanating form someone
doing a spot of shopping? If your feeling really brave, push
open the door to one of the private rooms and peek inside. Have
you seen many Sam Peckinpah films or Brian De Palma, Scarface
for example? Get one out on DVD so that your acquainted with the
term "bloody carnage". And after you've pushed open that door,
close it quickly before you're hit by a corporate spray of an
indeterminate colour.
These days, most hospitals have succumbed to political
correctness and thus maternity wards are, as they say,
"midwife-led", rather than "doctor-led". This is both
politically correct and, luckily, a hell of a lot cheaper for
the hospitals. In practice, it means only two things:
First, if something goes wrong, your wife or girlfriend will
die, unless the midwife presses the red panic button quickly and
the golf course is situated nearby.
Second, throughout the duration of labour you will be talked
down to by working-class people instead of by middle-class
people. Rather than being bamboozled by medical jargon you will
be made faintly nauseous by the recitation of down-to-earth
aphorisms. And the midwife will refer to your newly arrived son
or daughter as "babby:, with cloying familiarity you may feel is
inappropriate. And to my original question - just how soon after
birth can you resume sexual activity? Well, that depends upon
who with, really. As far as your partner is concerned the answer
is probably never. And bearing that in mind the experience she
has endured, one is tempted to be sympathetic. After all, there
is only one proven, 100 percent, method of birth control - not
to have sex. The Catholics are dead right about that, at least.
As
the brighter among you have inferred, I have recently welcomed
an addition to my somewhat unorthodox family. In fact, right
now, she's screaming like a fucking banshee in the bedroom five
yards away. She is clamouring for my girlfriend's breasts at a
decibel level which would have shamed the Who. I might Clamour
equally loudly for what good it would do. The whole place reeks
of stuff, that sickly sweet smell of moist wipes, overlaid with
the sharper tangs of sour breast milk, urine and, of course,
excrement. The truth is, nobody in this place wants to have sex,
least of all me. I want to sleep, to dream of being 17 and
ignorant of almost everything, especially childbirth. Now,
there's the rub.
Story Written by ROD LIDDLE for the British GQ Magazine.
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