Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Son comes into world with a bang

- By Tammy Keith

It’s been four years since I’ve written about my younger son’s unusual birth.

I promised not to write about it again until he was 30, but I think turning 25 is a milestone, so I’m reliving it.

Those of you who’ve read this story before, feel free to move on to other articles in this section, the comics or your breakfast. Those of you who have no idea what I’m talking about, come on.

Disclaimer: If you’re pregnant, it will scare you, but the odds are slim that it would happen to you, too. How many people do you know who gave birth in the front seat of their car — on the Fourth of July?

Twenty-five years ago on July 4, I was in Malvern, visiting my in-laws and my husband’s grandmothe­r to celebrate her 95th birthday.

It was hot as a firecracke­r; that’s for sure.

As I lumbered — and by this time, I had gained every ounce of 55 pounds — through stores downtown on July 3, a woman in an antique store eyed my humongous belly and pointed at me. She said I would have the baby that night because it was a full moon.

No, I told her. Scott wasn’t due for a couple of weeks.

As we watched fireworks in the distance that night, I looked at that full moon warily. “OK, Scott can come now!” a cheery relative said.

Sure enough, at about 2 a.m., I woke up. It was happening. Of course, the first thing I did was put on my makeup. John, my then-3 1/2-year-old, woke up when he heard us getting ready. I had to lie down with him and get him back to sleep. Then I told my motherin-law what was happening, and off we went to the little hospital.

The nurse examined me and called the doctor, who said we could make it to North Little Rock. She said, “Hurry — don’t stop for anything,” and she sounded urgent. That was our first clue.

We delayed just enough for my husband to put in his contacts. My pains started immediatel­y, and my husband drove faster and faster. At one point, he saw blue lights going the other way on the interstate, but he didn’t slow down. The cop didn’t chase us, either. We also narrowly missed hitting a pedestrian.

I kept asking my husband if we were gonna make it, and he assured me we were. My mantra was, “Please God Please God Please GodPlease God .” I vividly remember thinking: “I never have to do this again.”

My husband first went to the wrong entrance, squealed around to the emergency-room entrance and ran in to find a doctor.

I was sitting in the front seat of the Bonneville, henceforth known as the birthmobil­e. Unlike in TV shows and movies, babies don’t wait when they’re ready to come.

I took off my seat belt, and Scott Robert Keith, or Scott Rocket, as his Aunt Katie calls him, made his appearance as my husband came back to the car. I remember a hospital employee sauntering way

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States