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by: Ieuan Dolby
When a couple steps forth
with a baby in tow everything in life is stable and normal. People hold
open doors, hard shopkeepers “chuck” and go all
gooey before catching
themselves and generally life is an easy ride. But gentlemen, when he
who dares to step-out with a baby in tow (minus the wife) life becomes
a series of obstacles that never ceases to surprise.
I don’t
mean a trip to the corner shop, “no siree”! I mean
a fully-fledged trip
into town, pram, milk bottles and spare nappies to boot! Small things
are immediately noticeable, like that hard and mean-looking grocer down
the road! When my wife goes in to his establishment he goes all gooey,
in fact he doesn’t notice me at all; just talks to my wife
and son and
ignores me as if I was the invisible man. But walking in to his shop
with only my son, an apple to buy before the days outing ahead and he
became meaner and harder. In fact he noticed me for the first time,
glared at me as if I had just stolen the kid and was on the run and
said “hope that’s not for the little
one”! I felt like saying what’s it
got to do with you mate but
……………on the bus
the driver who suggested
that I sit near the front instead of upstairs was nearly out of his
seat and taking the part of usher before realizing that this was not
really in his job description!
Somehow some basic human
instinct suggests that ‘man’ is neither capable nor
fit to look after a
baby! This instinct immediately raises the hairs on the backs of
people’s necks, images of disaster loom in their minds and
unseen
forces push them forwards to offer help. They do not see a happy and
carefree father pushing his laughing baby along in the pram, they see a
harried father who is at his wits end and who is desperate for help.
They see a tormented and unwilling baby, screaming and kicking in
desperation, a father who is pulling his hair out and desperately
looking around for somebody to just show him what to do.
Once
in town and in the department store I headed straight for the baby
changing room! Same routine as always except minus one cog –
the wife!
I did what I had done so many times before whilst my wife had sat down
to read a magazine. Well, the plan was the same as all those times
before, make the milk give my son the bottle, lay him down on the nappy
changing “thingy”, change his nappy, etc! I did not
even get as far as
the hot water dispenser! One mum, before I had even entered the room
stopped me in my tracks and in a very serious way informed me that the
seat belt on the pram was not fastened. One has to be polite in
situations like these; I myself planning ahead as always had removed
the seat belt just then in preparation for lifting my son out of it
once inside the baby room. I did not know of the golden rule that one
cannot unfasten the seat belt until well inside closed doors!
Inside
the room, some mystical being ran around the room telling all of the
mums that a ‘father-alone’ was out and about! Upon
entering heads
swiveled in my direction, a series of forces pushing bodies towards me
and unwanted advice started to escape from mouths. Once past I could
hear whisperings, stories being generated and past on; a fictional myth
growing in reality to become truth in mind! I shut myself off, warded
off the numerous hands that where heading towards my sons cheeks like
locusts, barged through with forced smiles and “no
thanks”, and managed
to get to the water machine. I smiled politely to the lady who showed
me how to press the button for hot water, grimaced when told that the
milk I had made was too hot (how did she know?) and nearly barked when
asked “is the wife in not well dear”!
These kindly mums, whose
husbands obviously knew nothing about how to change a nappy or feed a
baby his milk, had my son crying within five minutes. He
doesn’t like
attention in the form of searching hands. He especially
doesn’t like
getting his cheek pinched or chin chucked! I felt like shouting
“give
him air” or wading in with elbows to rescue him but they were
all so
well-meaning, these poor mums! Needless to say that as my sons
screaming and bawling intensified to maximum pitch the mums turned to
me as one as if to say “look at the poor man,
doesn’t know how to look
after his baby”.
Naturally as they confirmed their belief that
I was totally inept and useless, wandering hands gained purpose and
started to lift my baby out of the pram to offer him comfort
– my son
hates strangers holding him! Well, I made a run for it, I grabbed the
baby in mid-air, swiveled the pram around on a sixpence, closed my eyes
tight and charged for the door, throwing aside mothers like pins at the
bowling alley!
I went to the men’s toilet to change my son’s
nappy! At least in the sanctity within, nobody talked to me, no advice
was freely given and no insects to ward off. Naturally, looks of
sympathy and confusion were issued freely, stories would abound later
as husbands rushed to tell their wives about the “poor sad
man with the
baby” – but who cares, just don’t talk to
me about it.
I suppose
all is not so bad! A new dimension opened up, one that it would be best
if my wife knew nothing about! I have never in my life had so many
young ladies (ones who wouldn’t know what the inside of a
baby changing
room looked like) surrounding me; albeit they were cooing at my son but
……… something about single men with
babies must be an attraction.
Anyway, I always enjoyed their reaction when saying loudly,
“ah, here’s
my wife coming now”, the desertion was abrupt and complete! I
know how
to handle that one; it’s the rest that bothers me!
About the Author
Author and Webmaster of Seamania.
As a Chief Engineer in the Merchant Navy he has sailed the world for
fifteen years. Now living in Taiwan he writes about cultures across the
globe and life as he sees it.
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