twitter.com/ralphhogaboom

Posting tweet...

a kick in the face to dads

Posted: March 16th, 2009 | Author: ralphhogaboom | Filed under: life | Tags: , , , | 4 Comments »
Dunno if you have Safeway stores where you live, but on the West Coast they’re kinda big. So my eyes popped yesterday, when picking up groceries with my two kids 7 & 5, when I saw an ad in the cart for Mom to Mom.

It looks like an in-house brand that targets stores owned by Safeway -Randall’s, Carr’s, Dominicks, Vons, Genuardi’s, et al. Anywho, after purchasing groceries, and with one child barely under control, I still stopped by the managers office to tell him what I thought.

“I find the ads offensive,” I said. “I don’t like being told by my grocery store – which has no right to dictate my family job roles – told by my grocery store that baby diapers and wipes are for my wife, not for me. Actually, it makes me mad as hell.” He thanked me and I left, but can’t really stop thinking about it. For a few other reasons, too.

I’ve heard some great conversations going on about what we should be using and putting in our bodies. Organic produce, rBSTs, etc. The same is true of child care and chemicals et al in some products. Suddenly I find that Safeway/Mom to Mom is excluding me from that conversation. Made by moms, for moms. Don’t bother asking 50% of the responsible party.

Look, I can appreciate that Mom to Mom wants to celebrate (& monetize) the special connection mothers have within families, often as the primary caregiver. But it’s inappropriate. We should, all of us, be celebrating the family that comes together in sacrifice and service to each other when we have children. When something becomes exclusive to the mom, it takes responsibility with it, squarely on the moms shoulders. Aside from implying a bigger workload for mothers, it excludes dads from the conversation, which tells the child they have reason to doubt both parents can confidently raise her.

It isn’t good for anybody.

Vasectomy (2005) : Four Stars

Posted: September 1st, 2005 | Author: ralphhogaboom | Filed under: life | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

Vasectomy (2005)
Directed by: Dmitri Kuznetsov

Avg rating: * * * *

Genre: Drama, Comedy

Plot outline: Ralph goes in for a vasectomy and learns first hand about the ramifications to himself mentally and physically.

User comments: Great performances, some funny scenes with a good message at heart.

Details: Except this wasn’t a movie. I really did go in, about six months ago, and get a vasectomy.

Here’s the one-time-only warning that I’m going to talk, graphically, about my penis and testicles. If you’re feeling faint of heart, fear not! Simply read another article.

Meetings

The Procedure

Like you don’t know, the vasa deferentia, the tubes which connect the testicles to the prostate, are cut and closed. This prevents sperm produced in the testicles to be in the ejaculated semen fluid (which is mostly produced in the prostate and the seminal vesicles).

My Procedure

I was told to shave, but not exactly where. I was given drugs to take before my procedure.

Next thing I know, I’m in a surgical gown on stirrups and some woman is saying regretfully “You were supposed to shave.”

“I did shave, here, behind my testicles.”

“Oh on, Doctor Kuznetsov needed you to shave on the front of your testicles.”

So she proceeded to shave me, dryly, until she was satisfied. With the drugs, though, it didn’t really matter. My biggest concern was that some person touching me would give me an embarrassing erection, which didn’t happen. Turns out the drugs take care of that for you.

You’re seriously relaxed.

After the shaving, Doctor Kuznetsov came in. He had an excellent bedside manner. The first thing I noticed was that he informed me of every single thing he did, before he did it. This proved immensely comforting to me. It was a form of respect that I haven’t attributed to doctors previously.

He even joked about his Russian name, Kuznetsov, CUTS-nuts-off. The fact that he still found that funny gave me even more confidence (the drugs? …. nah).

I felt two distinct stings during the procedure. Then I was done, with a jock strap and an ice pack. Kelly was in the waiting room and took me home where I laid on the couch for a good two hours.

The instructions were to stay on my back for two days. Yeah, right. I have kids. No deal.

The physical recovery proved easy enough. There were some stitches, in the front of my scrotum, that made me feel uneasy. I thought that it was a permanent staple. A week later, the stitches fell out and everything looks the same as before.

There was a follow up sperm test 1 month afterwards. It took all of five minutes, and I was pronounced sterile.

Functionally, everything else is the same, as well. There’s no difference ejaculating, even looking at the semen. It seems the same as before.

Emotionally, I felt slightly off-balance. I was sterile. ‘No longer able to create life’ somehow meant to me unable to support life. I wasn’t really prepared for this, believing that I’d thought through all the ramifications of the sterilization process.

Here I was, doubting. I’m not even sure what I was doubting in myself, to be honest. But the insecurity was there.

As a male, I’ve heard the message that a sterile man can cheat on his partner easier. No need for condoms or birth control. I’ve heard the message that I’m somehow more free of children, or possible future children weighing me down. But although I’ve received that message, it fell way flat.

Sophie and Nels were to be the last of my offspring. Sophie and Nels were to be the last of my offspring. The only two out of a million possibilities. I’d never meet another child of mine. Those two were it. It seems so limiting.

Not that we’d do well with more kids, honestly. It’s more like the giving up of hope. Think about it — if you were told exactly what would happen each day of every day of the rest of your life, exactly what would happen, you’d be dead inside. It’d crush your spirit. Because it would take away hope.

You’d have no real wish for anything other than what you were told. If you knew everything that was going to happen, you couldn’t possibly wish for a better outcome. You’d know the exact outcome of every scenario. You’d lose hope in anything being better than what you knew.

How totally depressing.

And that’s what I felt, at least a fragment of it. I lost all hope that I’d ever get to know another child of mine. That’s a big deal. To have the cut off, irrevocably, permanent. Forever.

It was about a week of mourning, and then I moved on. I had actual, real children right here and now to enjoy. So I moved on. Emotionally, some change took place inside to reconcile my sterility with my fatherhood. I integrated the two, and I’m not sure how. I’d like to know, but for now, what I have is working for me.

Irrevocably, permanent. Forever. Amen.