Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Hi, Poonam.”

  • Hi.

  • Nice to meet you.

  • My contractions are about 15 minutes apart.

  • And I'm about to get pulled into an O.R.

  • at Cornell to have a C-section.

  • Like any minute now, they're going to come pull me

  • through that door.

  • And I'm gloved-up and masked-up.

  • And my husband's all suited-up.

  • He's literally in a hazmat suit.”

  • Doctor: “Dad, do you want to grab those shoes

  • and throw them?”

  • They're pulling me in.

  • I have to go.

  • Thank you.

  • My name is Poonam Sharma Mathis.

  • My husband is Kris Mathis.

  • We have a 4½-year-old, Pierce Mathis.”

  • “I need some Monday motivation, Pierce.”

  • My first birth was pretty uneventful.

  • The baby came out, we made eye contact

  • and then I closed my eyes, and I woke up

  • in the recovery room.

  • Everybody was kissing him and hugging him.

  • And I felt like the community and the village

  • that he's so blessed to be a part of was there.

  • I grew up with a lot of extended family

  • and a lot of love.

  • We'd been wanting a girl in this generation so badly.

  • So when we found out we were having a girl,

  • we were just grateful.

  • I was 37 weeks pregnant when they

  • started to issue stay-at-home orders.

  • OK, so I am officially scared.

  • I'm having contractions this morning.

  • I am not a hypochondriac.

  • I'm not somebody who's really prone

  • to general mass hysteria.

  • But we are

  • I'm breathless.

  • We are dealing with something we don't understand.”

  • Kris: “Only a couple of days prior to our birth,

  • they had been saying no partners, no spouses.

  • I was probably one of the first spouses that was

  • allowed into the hospital.

  • I was walking, and it was like, do not touch anything.

  • Make sure your mask is on.

  • Put the booties over your shoes.”

  • My husband could catch it right now.

  • Right?

  • He could bring it home, and give it

  • to my son who's 4 and a half.

  • And there's a thought about going home with my daughter,

  • and then just immediately quarantining

  • myself and my daughter.”

  • Doctor: “All right, Mom, are you ready?”

  • Do you want to open your eyes for me?

  • No?

  • Her name is Asha: 7 pounds, 11 ounces.

  • They put her skin on my chest.

  • But I had a mask on, so I wasn't breathing on her.

  • Daddy is cuddling with her.”

  • It's weird.

  • She opened her eyes right when she was born

  • really wide.

  • And then I haven't seen her eyes since.

  • She didn't like what she saw or something.

  • Our expectations were that I probably

  • wasn't going to be there anyway.

  • So just being there for the delivery

  • and seeing the baby, meeting the baby,

  • it was a really exciting thing for me.”

  • You realize you have to do a father-daughter dance,

  • and give her away one day?”

  • But then immediately after the birth,

  • I had to say goodbye.”

  • Say, good night.”

  • Sweet dreams.”

  • It's 11:30 at night.

  • I'm in my room.

  • I just breastfed.

  • [Asha crying]

  • I wore a mask, and I threw up.

  • The only good news is they let her stay in my room

  • because babies are not being kept in the nursery

  • right now.

  • They're being kept with the mom.

  • The next step is that we are waiting for news

  • of my coronavirus status.

  • Based on that result, they'll decide

  • how much interaction I'll be having

  • with her, for her own safety.

  • So now we wait.

  • I just want to kiss her.

  • It was really exciting to find out

  • that we tested negative, because that

  • meant I could kiss her head.

  • But it's definitely different delivering and recovering

  • in a hospital during coronavirus,

  • and it hit me yesterday.

  • Yesterday was the worst day of physical pain in my life.

  • I genuinely thought I might die.

  • This is one of the most intense surgeries

  • you can have, is a C-section.

  • But if you have any air bubbles that

  • go into your stomach when they cut you open,

  • which is normal, those air bubbles

  • don't come out right away.

  • Then they float around your body, I guess,

  • and they feel like knives stabbing you from the inside

  • until they come out.

  • And they don't want to come out.

  • It is so traumatic being here without somebody

  • to advocate for you when things go wrong,

  • because there's too much going on.

  • They are overwhelmed.

  • I'm pushing the call button to get care,

  • and they don't come right away.

  • And last time I gave birth here,

  • four and a half years ago,

  • they did everything right away because they were able to.

  • I was in so much pain for so long,

  • and waiting for my medication for so long,

  • that I was throwing up.

  • I threw up eight times from pain.

  • It feels like I was in a horror movie

  • where they chopped somebody up,

  • but then the person escapes and is running to safety.

  • And that's a ridiculous thing to say.

  • We have the best health care.

  • We're in the best city.

  • But that's how it feels.

  • I just want to get her home as soon as possible.

  • And hopefully then I'm able to walk and stand, and do

  • something to help my husband take care of these kids.

  • Thursday at around 1:30, my husband and son

  • came and picked us up.

  • She was so excited to meet you she didn't know what to do.”

  • Asha.”

  • “I haven't left the upstairs from Thursday till now.

  • It's Monday morning.

  • There's so much family that's just waiting, itching

  • to rush in and be with us.

  • And who knows if that will happen before she's

  • 3 months old.”

  • One toe is kind of curving.”

  • Yeah.”

  • Will she wrap her finger around your finger

  • if you put it in there?”

  • Poonam: “She's like a little animal, huh?”

  • You're going to be such a good big brother.”

  • Poonam: “Mm-hmm.

  • I'm just grateful that she's healthy.

  • I'm grateful that so far, my husband and myself and my son

  • are healthy.

  • I look at her eyes, and I do believe that the eyes show

  • something even from birth.

  • Whenever she does open her eyes,

  • she just looks and she's just laser-focused.

  • And it's not a curious focus.

  • It's likelike she knows she needs to be calm right now

  • or something.

  • I had a great aunt who always said

  • that if she could come back, she'd

  • come back as my daughter.

  • So maybe that's her,

  • I hope.

  • If so, nothing's going to keep her down.”

Hi, Poonam.”

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it