Eugene
Was Born
Eugene
was born in April of 1977 in Evanston, Illinois. We had an apartment on 121
Clyde Street. I remember that street and the view from the kitchen window where
you could watch the cars switching on the RR tracks -- what we call the L in
Chicago, L for Elevated.
The
photo shows Eugene just born, not smiling, not yet. He was born at St. Francis
Hospital, so his middle name is Francis. That reminded me that I was taught by
Franciscan nuns in grade school... A happy memory... Maybe we should have
stopped at Francis, but I thought we should also give credit to the Jesuits,
because they taught me in high school so we added another name... Ignatius
after the founder of the order... Then we stopped the naming and he became Eugene
Francis Ignatius Owens. He was quite a healthy and uncomplicated baby, the
nurses told us.
Writing
about when Eugene was born is making me incredibly unhappy. It reminds me of so
many things that were going wrong at that time, things I have not thought about
in many years.
I
will continue. We had been staying at my mother's house for two months but by that
November we had enough money to pay the rent. We chose the apartment on 121
Clyde St. because it was such a solid building and there a lot of old ladies
living there. Susan was pregnant and it was November in Chicago. The bitter
cold was upon us. But I saw all these old ladies living there, and that means
the landlord keeps the building warm. I was right about that. The apartment was
warm enough to keep the kitchen window open a crack. Steam heat. You could grow
a baby in a place like that. Mr. Muehler, the super, got up at five a.m. to
shovel the sidewalk when it snowed. Then he went to the furnace room in the
basement and turned up the heat when it got below zero outside.
We
lived at 121 Clyde St. when Eugene was born, on the second floor, near the back
of this u-shaped building. It was sturdy and warm. Clyde Street was not a
sought-after address -- you can just tell things like that if you grew up on
the North Shore of Chicago like I did. It was only one block to Howard Street
where you had immigrants and cheap stores – “It’s not as nice as it used to be,”
people would say about Howard Street and you knew what they meant.
Clyde
Street had once been respectable, and in 1977 it
was only a little bit shabby. That didn't bother me. What did bother me is that
it was dark. The buildings and the sky and the trees just seemed a little dark,
and our apartment, with other apartments on three sides -- you looked out the
window but you couldn't see the sky, unless you almost peaked your head out the
kitchen window and saw a little bit of blue sky over the rail yard.
We
didn't have any furniture. A twin bed in the bedroom, a good color TV and a
good stereo with some records in the living room, otherwise we sat on the
floor. We could have gotten furniture, but we didn't bother. For records we had
Neil Sadaka and Chick Corea. Our favorite record was Stevie Wonder, Songs in
the Key of Life.
We
had two folding chairs but we never used them, except that time my cousin Denny
came over with his wife to visit. Denny had converted to being a Baptist, which
was awful. In my family becoming a Baptist was worse than being a drug dealer.
It was unthinkable, but he converted and he wanted to visit us with the hope of
converting us too. So we let him and his wife sit in the folding chairs and we
sat on the floor, and he talked at us until we went bananas, but finally he
shut up and left.
Eugene
was born in St. Francis Hospital, an old-fashioned place, yellow bricks.
Evanston Hospital was the preferred location for birthing, but we went to St.
Francis Hospital where the birthing ward
did not have too much business. Maybe that helped with payment because it
didn't cost us. I told them we had no health insurance. I showed them my pay
stubs and rent receipts. They said forget it, we'll just write it off.
The
doctor was a young Indian man, which was not common in 1977. He was quiet and undemanding. We showed up
unexpectedly because Susan had only come in once for prenatal care. We
apologized for that, but they only smiled. They gave her an X-ray, I think.
Then they wheeled her into the delivery room for a C-section. It didn't take
long. Susan was calm.
The
baby was born by C-section. Afterward Susan was resting well. The nurse brought
the baby into the room all bundled up and clean. She said here he is. Look at
the top of his head, she said. We saw a big round sore spot on the top of his
head. "That's where baby was trying to push through the birth canal, but
he could not make it, his head was too big. He couldn't be born that way.
"You
see, he's a dwarf. He has short arms and short legs and an overlarge
head."
She
explained it nicely because I had noticed something. I saw my son for the first
time and I noticed something different and I was puzzled. The nurse explained
-- his nose has no bridge. Dwarves are like that.
I
really loved that nurse, the way she held the baby so tenderly, and then gave
her to Susan. Susan loved him too.
I
loved the baby but I didn't like having to explain him to people. Strictly
speaking you never have to explain the fact that he is much shorter than
everybody else, but you do get the double take when he walks into a room for
the first time.
Eugene
has his own way of handling this now as an adult. As a baby, adoring friends
would lean over the carriage and smile, but with a slightly puzzled look.
"Yes, he has a big head, He's a dwarf. That's just the way he is,
otherwise he's normal in every way."
And
he was a champion baby. A baby like Eugene should be given a trophy by grateful
parents. Listen to this -- he began sleeping all through the night at the age
of one month. Sleeping all night! Never waking up until morning. Such a good
boy. He never got sick, never got colic or diaper rash or runny nose, or super
poopy. He was mostly happy most of the time. We would have loved him anyway,
but Eugene made it easy.
. .
. . .
We
are pregnant. People actually say this. No, we are not pregnant. I can offer
evidence. In 1977 one Susan Owens was pregnant and one Fred Owens was not
pregnant. Nothing could be more obvious. I saw it with blinding clarity every
day. Her whole life and body was erupting into this very unusual situation and
changing every day in ways that made no sense to me at all.
Well,
it made some sense -- she could tell me in specific terms, and I might read
some literature on the topic, about varicose veins and stretch marks and weight
gain. Friends and relatives might advise me. But nothing was happening with me.
And
then comes the very awful part. This was 1977 and the idea was just getting
started..... the idea that the father ought to be included in the birthing
process. He cannot actually do anything or help in any way or be the least be
useful -- ah, but he can be "present."
Actually
I had a job, which is different than being present. It was a crummy job, but it
paid the rent. I could have gone to work and told the boss, "Look, I'm not
going to do anything today, but I will be present." He wouldn’t understand
that kind of thing.
It
was still dark in the morning when I left the apartment at 121 Clyde St.,
walking over brilliant, crunching snow, a half-block to Howard Street, then
turning left, going under the Northwestern RR tracks, and coming to Chicago
Ave.
January
in Chicago is very cold. I would get to the corner of Howard and Chicago and
wait for the bus, freezing, slapping my hands, jumping up and down. But I
didn't care about that because the bus was always on time and the lights were
bright inside the bus, and the bus driver wore only a sweater because it was so
blissfully warm in there. The heat embraced you like a mother as you stepped
aboard.
It
was a 15-minute ride to where I got off and walked over to the office and
warehouse of General Printing. That was my job -- assistant shipping clerk --
the place where I went every day. I was doing something, and not being
"present." Actually I was quite present in the sense of being mindful
of the people and the boxes of paper, and the smell of the ink, and the clatter
of the printing presses.
Meanwhile
she's back there at the apartment on 121 Clyde St., stitching baby quilts and
growing a baby. I'm loading large stacks of paper on a pallet jack to feed the
printing presses. I knew I had the easy part, but I didn't know much more than
that.
Man Wants Work. Call
251-4714
This
was the ad I placed in the Evanston Review. "Man Wants Work" was my
original composition. You would be amazed at how quickly you get hired with an
ad like this, if you don't care what the work is or how much you get paid.....
Right away they called me from General Printing. This was the winter of
1976-77. General Printing hired me as the assistant shipping clerk. My wife was
pregnant. This was my first job in the new era. I was now Married with Children
and about to achieve Fatherhood. I should have set me sights higher. But I had
no plan, no dream, no hope and no ambition. We had been two months living at my
mother's house -- I guess that was the goal. Man Wants Work -- so that he can
make enough money to rent an apartment.
They
ran three big offset printers. I was the guy who brought large stacks of paper
from back in the warehouse, wheeling loads on the pallet jack up to the
printers. I hated to think how much money those printers made -- union jobs.
But you had to know somebody to get into that union. I didn't know anybody. I
was thirty years old. I was already past my prime, if I had known that. If
you're willing to take the job of assistant shipping clerk, then that is what
you're good for. You are thirty, you are no longer on the career track.
I
didn't know that. I was only Man Wants Work. The Magical Mystery Tour was over.
I was not living in a teepee on a commune in California. I was renting an
apartment on 121 Clyde St. in Evanston, Illinois, only miles from where I grew
up, miles from where I left home and never came back. Except I did come back.
I
could have blamed my wife or my mother. They were at hand and not innocent. But
who wants to hear that? I decided to blame God. He can take the abuse. Blame God
for taking my father away from me. I wished he had been alive in 1977, just
when I was ready to actually listen to him. Dad, what should I do?
But
I wasn't lost, I knew where I was. I was in Evanston. I was born in Evanston --
the leafy trees, the tall towering oaks and elms that shaded brick streets in
summer. The Lake. Lake Michigan, but we always called it the Lake, so big and
calm in summer, so rough and icy in winter.
At
least I knew where I was, and Eugene could be born here. It would be all right.
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