OMG - let me tell you about the circumcision!   It was heartbreaking but memorable.
Yesterday my son-in-law, MV, had to go back to work so he could not go to the circumcision.   Because my daughter, M, still cannot drive I took M and N to get N circumcised while my granddaughter, E, was  in school.   The hospital (a prestigious Women and Babies Hospital) had given MV a referral to a pediatric  practice that regularly did circumcisions for them, a husband and wife team.  All sounds good, right?  
We had an adventure  finding the place to begin with.  When we finally got there  it was a small practice in a funky little inner city shopping center.    Just one waiting area (no "well" waiting room with a separate "sick"  waiting room like M & MV have become accustomed to with their pediatrician).  The floor of  the waiting area was tile, and obviously had not been mopped in recent years.  There was only one other family waiting, but they had a very  sick little boy, so we sat all the way on the other side of the room from them  and I held up N's blanket over his face to block him from germs.  
The woman in the other family was a skanky, skinny, white street momma  with obscene tattoos all over her arms.  I cannot figure out how she had two children because she had the skinniest butt in the world; absolutely no hips and 0% body fat.  Her lank hair hung to her waist.  She could not sit still.  Her  eyes were messed up and unfocused - maybe on drugs?  Apparently she had been there for a while because she  was super angry, bitching out loud to her equally skinny Goth  husband about the doctors making their kids wait and taking others in  before them.  She also ranted on about how the doctors spent too much time with their patients and should just get a better system to move people through more quickly.  I found that to be an interesting argument for a young mother to make when her kids were sick.  She kept interrupting the secretary to give her a hard time every 5  minutes or so.  She just would not shut up or sit down. She was working my last nerve.  
I scoped her  out, figured I could take her down if I had to (she was really skinny  and obviously distracted) and passed the time by fantasizing about beating her  to a pulp.  She stayed on her side of the room.  At one point she  caught my eye and said, "I'm so mad at these damn doctors, I'd like to  just clean this room."  That made me laugh, and then I felt less inclined to kick her ass.  
When an African American family came in, both  parents with their children, it made the skanky white woman settle  down.  The African American mother was clearly a woman of substance.  She had  three small children and would not let them play with the toys because of germs,  and had the children singing church songs while they waited.  Cutest  damn thing - those kids sang so sweetly and were trying to remember the  words to "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands."  
M texted MV the  whole time we waited, seemingly trying to get information to fill out  the forms.  She told me later that she was texting him about  leaving because the place was so skeevy.  He was  helping her plan her escape.  She was just getting up to tell the  secretary we changed our minds when they called her name.  So we went in.    Keep in mind that we expected this surgery to happen in the hospital,  but the hospital dropped the ball.  MV took him to his regular pediatrician  last week, and that doctor said she did not do circumcisions.  This poor  baby needed to get this circumcision done before he was old enough to  remember!  I decided that if the doctor did not wash his hands I was going to grab N and run with him.
I really liked Dr. W (we got the husband).   He wore superhero  scrubs and was funny and friendly.  He talked to N, and laughed at  my jokes.  He was kind and thoughtful to Mother M.  The room we were  in was clean, and the nurse was sweet and attentive.  The  doctor said that, although we were welcome to remain while the procedure  was done, most people opted to go in the waiting room.  We wanted to  stay.  I asked if I could watch.  He said "Sure, as long as you don't  get queasy."  I am the woman who wanted to be awake for my  hysterectomy, so I knew I was going to be fine.  
I am not one to display (or even feel) emotions in the midst of a crisis.  Well, that's not exactly true - I do feel anxiety.  If that is an emotion.  Mostly, I am just there... in the moment, rolling with the punches.  I  fall apart later, when I am alone.  Crying in public is not an  option for me.  I would not be able to cry if I wanted to in most situations.  Good thing, too, 'cause I look God awful  ugly when I cry, and I need an entire box of Kleenex.  Plus, in this particular situation curiosity got the  best of me and I could not pass up the opportunity to see exactly how  this infamous surgical procedure was done - up close and personal.  
I could not believe my good fortune.  At  first M was up there with a touch to his face and the pacifier handy,  but when N started raging and turning all red faced (he has never  cried that hard before) she just could not bear it; she had  to sit down next to the desk where she cried her heart out at the idea  of her baby suffering.  They both cried their way through it, actually. 
Of course that  meant the way was clear for me to move in and get a closer view, and  also to provide some emotional support and love to that sweet, sweet  baby boy.  I was there like a shot!  I put my left hand on his hair to make sure he knew he was  not alone and then I sang to him.  I sang every nursery rhyme and  children's song I knew.  He actually stopped crying a couple of times to listen.  All of this while I  struggled to contort my upper torso to keep out of the way of the doctor  AND continue to keep my eyes on the task at hand.   
Actually, they had numbed his private parts, so I do not believe he felt any pain after the needle delivered the pain killer.   The needle hurt  him, I am sure, because that is when he started crying.  But what REALLY pissed  him off was that they tied down his hands and legs so he couldn't move -  and this boy is a mover and a shaker.   It freaked him out and he was  raging against the injustice of it all.  The reason I know this to be  true is because if you could have seen what I saw, and if that baby  could have felt what was happening, he would have been shrieking in  pain. Which he was not.  He was red faced and mad.  Totally different  cry.  Anyway, that's my story and I'm stickin' to it.  I hope it is true.
By the time I drove them home, I was shaking.   All three of us were overwhelmed by what we had been through.  I just wanted to drink a beer and stare off into space for an hour or two.  But I needed to pick up E from school instead.  That's another story.   Next time.
 
