This evening I happened across a delightful little site on the Internet entitled The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor. Yes, the same Garrison Keillor of Prairie Home Companion fame.
According to Wikipedia, "The Writer's Almanac is a daily radio and on-line program and podcast of poetry and historical interest pieces, usually of literary significance. It is hosted by Garrison Keillor and is produced and distributed by American Public Media. Program sponsors include, among others, The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry Magazine and The Mosaic Foundation of Rita and Peter Heydon.
"Each program is five minutes long and begins with the phrase 'And here is the Writer's Almanac. . . .' Each daily program includes vignettes about authors and other noteworthy people whose birthdays coincide with the date of the particular program, as well as excerpts of important events in history. The program continues with one or more poems usually chosen by Keillor, and ends with Keillor's traditional sign-off, 'Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.'"
Not bad counsel: Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.
My passions in life include my faith in God, my family, American history, and a good road trip.
Click here for the scoop on why there is no Interstate 50.
Click here for the scoop on why there is no Interstate 50.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Wednesday, September 02, 2009
The birth of our first child
This is my 100th post on Interstate 50 since I first began blogging back on Christmas Day 2005. This post chronicles the arrival of our firstborn child.
September 2, 1973, was a fast Sunday. We had been to church on campus, where I served as a counselor in the presidency of a BYU branch. Fall was beginning, students were returning to school, it was the first Sunday of the new school year, it was a holiday weekend, and we were about to become parents. It was an exciting time.
Claudia was eight months along, expecting our first child on October 5, and everything seemed to be progressing as it should. She looked cute being so very pregnant. Two weeks earlier—on Friday, August 17—she had graduated cum laude from Brigham Young University with a bachelor's degree in elementary education. Following her graduation, we rode back to California as her parents' guests for a week at Laguna Beach. Our apartment there perched on top of a cliff overlooking the vastness of the mighty ocean.
But now we were back in Utah and looking forward to a new school year. We were both out of school, but our ties to the university continued through my employment on campus and through our associations in the branch. Just the day before, on Saturday, I had completed and mailed the first issue of the Cleverly Newsletter, a quarterly newsletter for my parents' family that I would continue to publish over the coming decades in quarterly, monthly, even weekly formats.
Sunday afternoon we were home from church, and Claudia had prepared our Sunday dinner. We sat down to eat around four o'clock in the afternoon. I noticed her squirming in her chair and asked what the problem was.
"Oh, just constipation," she replied. A bit later she was feeling worse and called her doctor.
His first question was, "Are you in labor?"
"Of course not. I'm not due for another month." From the way she described how she was feeling he couldn't tell what was wrong.
"Maybe it is constipation," he concluded. He prescribed some medicine, but before we could even think about finding a drug store that was open, she was feeling so bad that I called the doctor again. He told me to take her straight to the hospital and he would meet us there. We drove over to the hospital in Marshmallow, our little white Volkswagen. It was only a few blocks from where we lived.
At 5:17 Claudia was wheeled into the labor room with contractions at eighty seconds. Not bad for not knowing she was having contractions. I was sent down to admit her to the hospital, and when I returned she was in the delivery room having a baby. I was allowed to be with her, even though we'd had only three of the six required prenatal classes.
Our son was born at 6:30 in the evening. Michael Adam was seventeen and a half inches, six pounds seven ounces. A month and three days early. Claudia's labor had been extremely short—two and a half hours from start to finish.
The instant the doctor laid the baby on her stomach, Claudia said, "Let's do it again!"
For a few hours I was allowed to stay with her in the recovery room. There was little sleep for either of us that night.
Nineteen years later, as Michael was preparing to leave for his mission to Brazil, I spoke in his missionary farewell of that first night: "Nineteen years ago . . . Claudia lay in a hospital bed in Provo with her firstborn son in her arms, just hours old, counting his fingers and toes, as I suppose new mothers do, but even more importantly thinking ahead, among other things, to this very day. She was planning in her mind the future course of his life, envisioning his serving a mission, looking forward with an eye of faith. And so what does she spend the next nineteen years doing? The kinds of things the Lord's prophets have told parents to do to get their sons ready and worthy to serve missions. She has acted in faith, seeing with her eyes the things which she had beheld with the eye of faith."
The next day was Labor Day, even though Claudia had done her laboring on the Sabbath day. On Tuesday her mom flew in from southern California to help out for a week and a half. Our new little son was the Langes' first grandchild. Claudia and Michael Adam came home from the hospital on Wednesday.
September 2, 1973, was a fast Sunday. We had been to church on campus, where I served as a counselor in the presidency of a BYU branch. Fall was beginning, students were returning to school, it was the first Sunday of the new school year, it was a holiday weekend, and we were about to become parents. It was an exciting time.
Claudia was eight months along, expecting our first child on October 5, and everything seemed to be progressing as it should. She looked cute being so very pregnant. Two weeks earlier—on Friday, August 17—she had graduated cum laude from Brigham Young University with a bachelor's degree in elementary education. Following her graduation, we rode back to California as her parents' guests for a week at Laguna Beach. Our apartment there perched on top of a cliff overlooking the vastness of the mighty ocean.
But now we were back in Utah and looking forward to a new school year. We were both out of school, but our ties to the university continued through my employment on campus and through our associations in the branch. Just the day before, on Saturday, I had completed and mailed the first issue of the Cleverly Newsletter, a quarterly newsletter for my parents' family that I would continue to publish over the coming decades in quarterly, monthly, even weekly formats.
Sunday afternoon we were home from church, and Claudia had prepared our Sunday dinner. We sat down to eat around four o'clock in the afternoon. I noticed her squirming in her chair and asked what the problem was.
"Oh, just constipation," she replied. A bit later she was feeling worse and called her doctor.
His first question was, "Are you in labor?"
"Of course not. I'm not due for another month." From the way she described how she was feeling he couldn't tell what was wrong.
"Maybe it is constipation," he concluded. He prescribed some medicine, but before we could even think about finding a drug store that was open, she was feeling so bad that I called the doctor again. He told me to take her straight to the hospital and he would meet us there. We drove over to the hospital in Marshmallow, our little white Volkswagen. It was only a few blocks from where we lived.
At 5:17 Claudia was wheeled into the labor room with contractions at eighty seconds. Not bad for not knowing she was having contractions. I was sent down to admit her to the hospital, and when I returned she was in the delivery room having a baby. I was allowed to be with her, even though we'd had only three of the six required prenatal classes.
Our son was born at 6:30 in the evening. Michael Adam was seventeen and a half inches, six pounds seven ounces. A month and three days early. Claudia's labor had been extremely short—two and a half hours from start to finish.
The instant the doctor laid the baby on her stomach, Claudia said, "Let's do it again!"
For a few hours I was allowed to stay with her in the recovery room. There was little sleep for either of us that night.
Nineteen years later, as Michael was preparing to leave for his mission to Brazil, I spoke in his missionary farewell of that first night: "Nineteen years ago . . . Claudia lay in a hospital bed in Provo with her firstborn son in her arms, just hours old, counting his fingers and toes, as I suppose new mothers do, but even more importantly thinking ahead, among other things, to this very day. She was planning in her mind the future course of his life, envisioning his serving a mission, looking forward with an eye of faith. And so what does she spend the next nineteen years doing? The kinds of things the Lord's prophets have told parents to do to get their sons ready and worthy to serve missions. She has acted in faith, seeing with her eyes the things which she had beheld with the eye of faith."
The next day was Labor Day, even though Claudia had done her laboring on the Sabbath day. On Tuesday her mom flew in from southern California to help out for a week and a half. Our new little son was the Langes' first grandchild. Claudia and Michael Adam came home from the hospital on Wednesday.
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