ANOTHER ‘JOY’ OF MOTHERHOOD (1)
Chikaima
stares at her breasts; they are swollen and heavy with milk. She sits by the baby’s cot, waiting endlessly
for him to wake up and suck out the ache in her breasts. But the baby keeps
stirring from sleep but never waking up. She opens the toilet door noisily but
Chidumaga remains still. She starts playing Phyno’s “Connect,” one of the many
songs she played to make Chidumaga move while he was still in the womb. She smiles
at the thought of her fear that the baby is not moving or even rousing in the
slightest way. She remembers pacing up and down the large expanse of the living
room in a violent march past while silently humming “left! Right!” repeatedly
yet the baby barely moves. She will quickly pick her cellphone and play Phyno’s
“Connect” to the loudest volume and Chidumaga will spring up to life, hands and
legs pushing through her swollen belly in irregular shapes and tickling the
breath out of her. Life knew no other bliss.
“Icho
my moni wete kollati wete kollati
D boy
na achi ma onwete alerti, nwete alerti
Do not
even messi with my konneti….”
A naughty smile plays out on her lips at the
thought of “reviving” her son with such music but then she has a niche for
rapidly-applied poetry−rap, and the Afro brand in the likes of Phyno, Ill Bliss
and Olamide appeal to her in many ways. Chidumaga smiles and stirs a little
from the sound of the very music that jostles him awake while he was still in
the womb. But that was all; a smile and a stir. As her heart grows with
frustration, so does her breast with milk, milk that has now broken through her
breastfeeding bra, the breast pads and now drips through the yarns of her
lovely post-partum gown. It is her first baby; she has read lots of information
on pre-natal, natal and post-natal experiences but here comes the difficult
part; the reality of it all. She is living it! She angrily kills the music
playing from her phone. Even Phyno couldn’t do the magic. She pulls her stretchy
gown a bit lower from the neckline to check the source of her pain. Her green
veins are remarkably evident through her yellow skin as her nipples stand like
pigeon beaks with milk streaming down.
She shrugs her shoulders in defiance; she is an
advocate of fresh milk, she will only feed her baby directly from her breast
for the next six months before considering water, formula and all that comes
with it. Her Masters dissertation in Child Health of the Department of Public
Health is a research in which she advocates for direct breastfeeding of
newborns to avoid infections and to encourage mother-child bonding. But the
idea of dashing out to buy a breast pump and empty her breast of their watery heaviness
becomes more appealing as she watches Chidumaga sleep soundly. She picks her
ATM Card and convinces herself that she is only going for a stroll in the
street to take her mind off the whole challenge. But her hurrying feet propels
her to Baby-Mother Super Mart where she bought both the electric and manual
breast pumps. On her way home, she keeps looking back as though one of her
schoolmates or Professors who were present during the very radical defence that
earned her an A in her dissertation will see her. Guilt.
“Sometimes a mother has to compromise,” she
consoles herself.
“Four full bottles, I must be a milk factory!”
She drops all four in the fridge telling
herself that she will warm them in hot water as soon Chidumaga is ready to eat.
******
Hyacinth staggers through the gate harassing the gateman as usual by shaking his head violently.
“Old Paapa!”
“The
day wey robbers go come here na you go first tear race.”
Paapa angrily dusts his head as though hyacinth
had poured dust on it.
“Hyacinth! I am a Professional Gateman and not
a Security Officer. I do not carry weapons.”
Hyacinth laughs hysterically and staggers to
the main house. He sits on the kitchen stool trying without success to shake
off the alcohol that is gradually taking charge of his entire system. He opens
the fridge and his eyes glow at the sight of the four jars of palmwine. If he
had known that his elder brother had supplies of palmwine he wouldn’t have gone
to the bar to incur debt. It’s a full house as relatives are around to celebrate
the arrival of Agumba’s son. They must have brought the jars of palmwine from
the village. He stares at the glorious jars again as his vision begins to fail.
The jars are now eight. He takes the first jar of palmwine and empties it. By
the time he emptied the fourth jar, he realized there were no more jars left.
He licks his lazy moustache and staggers to his room.
Chidumaga’s tiny voice slices through the air
awakening Chikaima’s mother who carries him off the cot and hands him over to
be fed. As Kaima tries to unbuckle her breast pouch, she remembers her full
bottles and smiles. Besides saving milk for her convenience, she also saves her
nipples of the pain from her baby’s constant gum-chewing.
“Mama, there’s no milk here,” she says hitting
her breasts.
“I emptied all into feeding bottles and stored
in the fridge.”
“Finally someone is thinking beyond lecture
room postulations. Go get my grandson’s milk fast,” says Grandma laughing like
she always does whenever she wins an argument with her unyielding and
incorrigible daughter.
Kaima dashes to the living room visibly
disturbed by Chidumaga’s now high-pitched cry.
“He must be very hungry,” she thought aloud.
She opens the fridge and could not find her
filled feeding bottles.
She looks around and finds parts of the feeding
bottles inside the waste bin and the remaining on the floor beside it.
Her head felt heavy and her heart sinks. She
staggers a little as her legs feel like sagged dunlop in need of extra support.
She rushes to her baby and puts the breast in his mouth but Chidumaga continues
crying after sucking for awhile. Kaima rushes into the kitchen and drinks hot
water but that wasn’t enough to stimulate her breast. The baby keeps crying.
She picks her ATM card and dashes off to the same mart and purchased baby
formula. She picks up one of the feeding bottles from the floor, rinses from
the sink and without sterilizing she mixes the milk and warm water and rushes
to the room to feed her baby. Her mother stares at her in dismay.
“Mum do not stare like that. Somebody poured
away all the milk,” she says cursing.
Grandma walks to the kitchen and sees the mess.
“No one in their right senses will empty milk
from feeding bottles in such manner”
She goes back to her daughter.
“This must be Agumba’s handwork! You bought him
over with that Direct Feeding Theory of yours!”
“Mum my husband is not callous. He will at
least consult me. You know he’s a perfect gentleman.
“Is Hyacinth back?”
“I don’t know he should be somewhere,
drinking.”
“Yea, drinking breastmilk,” sighs GrandMa.
“It must be one of the guests mum. You know all
these village people. I will deal with this at my time.”
Grandma silently walks to Hyacinth’s room, taps
him awake and asks,
“Did you by any chance drink the breastmilk in
the fridge?”
Hyacinth throws himself on the floor and
empties his belly of both palmwine and breastmilk.
Kaima stares at her son
sucking the feeding bottle silently and making satisfying sounds. She grows
jealous of both the bottle and the content as she reminisces on how she broke
all her breastfeeding rules in one day. She remembers her hallowed defence
which caused a little debate between the external supervisor from the
University of Ibadan and her project supervisor at the University of Lagos. She
recalls her last line, “If you must nurse a newborn, do so directly from the
mammary glands, to avoid infection and also to encourage mother-child bonding
otherwise, hire a wet nurse! But she was single and full of ideas then; now she
is a mother. She hugged Chidumaga tight and steps down the staircase to the
living room downstairs to meet her mum who points at the door to Hyacinth’s
room. She opens the door to behold Hyacinth on the floor in a pool of the
mixture of breastmilk and palmwine. She hugs her son tighter and walks into the
garden for fresh air. “The ‘Joys’ of Motherhood.”
I laughed at the end. Good piece
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