Daddy Don't Hit Me
Daddy Don't Hit Me

April 1st, 1985: A Comedian is Born - April 1, 2007

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by bc woods
I don't have many expectations when I walk into a room. I expect the floor to be there. I expect a ceiling, a few walls, perhaps even a window. Overall, my demands are minimal. In fact, the number of things I do not expect to see in a room far outnumbers the things that I expect to see. When I walked into the front room of my house, one day of my sophomore year of high school, I did not expect to see my mother's legs spread on a pair of stirrups, her hairy vagina opened wide and yellowed with iodine, sparkling like moonlight on a wet stone. In fact, it was probably the last thing on Earth I had expected to see.

I have a number of very good fight or flight responses. I can react immediately if a knife is pulled on me. I can raise my mind to a strategic plane when involved in emotional shouting matches... however, when I saw my mother on the living room television, screaming in a hospital gown, with her nether regions exposed... I honestly did not know what to do. No nature or nurture had programmed me with an appropriate response.

For the longest time, I stood in the doorframe staring, my backpack still strapped around my shoulders. It was undoubtedly a number of minutes before I turned to the left and saw my mother and her friend Kendra sitting on the couch sharing a bowl of popcorn.

"Mom... what the hell is going on?" I had finally managed to turn my head from the TV holding my hand between it and my eyes like the scene was a blinding sun.

"Kendra and I are watching your birth video," she said around a mouthful of popcorn.

"Hi, BC," said Kendra.

In a daze I responded, "Hi, Kendra."

I could have asked my mother why she watching my birth with a woman who was pregnant with her first child. I could have asked her why she was playing the tape in the middle of the day with the volume cranked up. Instead, when the smell of butter hit my nostrils all I could think to say was: "Why are you eating popcorn?"

"I was hungry," was her nonchalant reply.

My mother screamed on the video, the contractions becoming stronger. Against my will, my eyes riveted to the television set.

When I tell people about my birth, I now have the advantage of having had a first hand account of it. At the age of sixteen I witnessed my own birth.

April 1st, 1985... a day so ironic it's almost impossible to believe it is my actual birthday. It started as my father was watching the climactic second half of the Villanova - Georgetown NCAA championship game he had bet half of his pay check on. He was writhing on the sofa, cursing at the set, and squeezing the remote tightly in his hand.

My mother came in to the television room, the front of her pants wet, and said "Gary, I'm going into labor."

My father replied, "Ha ha, April Fool's."

My father then turned his head, saw the wet spot and said, "Oh! Oh... FUCK!"

Five minutes later, in the hospital after having thrown my sister into the back of the car like a piece of luggage and driven like mad, my mother's legs were spread, smothered with the aforementioned slimy disinfectant, and ready to squeeze me out into the world. It is here that the tape begins.

There was only one problem with my birth, from the standpoint of my actually being born: I was too large for the hole that was provided. Much too large. In a testament to just how much larger I was than average, I offer as evidence the fact that I was the last infant ever delivered by my family doctor. I can only imagine the experience was so traumatic, that to this day whenever he tries to move large pieces of furniture through narrow doorways in his house that he experiences post traumatic stress disorder.

For thirty minutes my mother pushed. When she became exhausted two nurses got on top of her stomach, and began to push for her. When that was not enough, it was four nurses. When my scalp started to appear, yet another nurse reached inside of my mother, grabbed hold of my head, and yanked like she was trying to start a lawn mower. They were as confident of success as a hillbilly backing his car into a garage that is too small, smoking a cigarette and saying "I know it looks tight... but it'll fit. Trust me." Behind the camera, my mom's best friend Jeanie muttered: "Jesus Christ." Demonic Exorcisms have been conducted in a less sensational manner than my birth.

It happened so slowly a single adrenaline rush could not sustain the need for energy. My father stood in the corner, nibbling his mustache with his lower lip. He had stopped speaking ten minutes ago, aware that today might go terribly, awfully wrong. I was pushed, pulled, and prodded... until finally "something snapped" and I slid out. That something was my clavicle.

As there were no instruments hooked up to my infant body it would be unfair to say that I was born clinically dead. Rather, judging from the way that Jeanie said "Oh my God" and the blood ran out of the faces of everyone on camera, I would prefer to describe my state as "uncomfortably not alive."

With my doctor's back turned to the camera for about half a minute, my lifeless, soundless, infant body was worked over with a fury. Finally, while I did not cry, I made an audible gasp for breath. Sighs of relief soon followed from everyone in the room. When the doctor turned around, my body was displayed in all of its gruesome glory. A lot of children are born covered in grime and after birth. I had that... but due to the extreme stress of my labor all of my body had hemorrhaged. I was the deep royal purple of a plum.

What follows next is a story my father has told me many times.

After a few minutes were spent with my parents, and everyone was finally assured that I would live, I was taken to be weighed and measured in the common tradition of bass fishing and viviparous birth. At 11 lbs 3oz in weight and 23" in height I would not have disappointed any river fisherman, and I did not disappoint my father. For months at the mill, his penis was held in supernatural awe for producing such an enormous child.

Now Dear Reader, I will reveal my true name... and my shame of it. For when it came time to christen me, with the name that I would carry with me through the rest of my life my parents had only one inspiration. The man who was in their minds, the greatest professional wrestler of all time up to that date: Andre the Giant.

"You see honey, he's so big, just like Andre. It makes sense doesn't it?" My mother explained.

"Yeah Darcy... but do you really want our son to have a French name?" My father's face was serious, his brows heavy with the responsibility of naming his first born son. If someone had informed him that Andre the Giant was not French I can only speculate on what my name would now be.

"Oh... I hadn't looked at it that way before."

"Andrew then?" my father offered.

"Deal."

Now, 22 years later I prefer to be called BC.

REQUEST FROM THE AUTHOR:

As you can deduce from this story, today is in fact my birthday. On this particular April 1st I am 22 years old, and could not be more pleased with what I am doing and where I am in life.

On Tuesday and Thursday of this week I will have new pieces up, as a kind of celebration for this birthday week. In return I would like to ask for a favor.

At the bottom of all of these stories are a number of links, I imagine most of you just skip over. I would like for you to give one link in particular an extra-long glance. It's the link marked "digg."

I know no one wants to take a lot of time to register for yet another internet service that requires you to fill out a form with your e-mail address, however I can assure you that it won't even take five minutes, and that you won't be spammed.

If you can go that far, would you please then simply click on the "digg" link at the bottom of this story for me? Every time you do this, this story will be given a higher and higher chance of being put on the front page of digg.com for thousands of other internet users to then see.

If you could please do this for me, I would consider it the best birthday present I have ever received.

If you haven't already, and would like to receive regular bulletins on my stories, and my plans for the future please add me on myspace.

Posted by BC Woods at 12:00 AM

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Comments

OBEY GIANT

Posted by: not a doktor at April 1, 2007 12:16 AM

Well then, happy birthday.

Posted by: Anonymous at April 1, 2007 01:14 AM

This is such bullshit. Your dad was lauded for producing such a large child. I have the same name, and I was weighed two more ounces, and my dad gets the "Burn the quarter-Turkish hellspawn." Fucking Indiana.

Oh, uh, great story. And Happy Birthday.

Posted by: BTFU at April 1, 2007 01:35 AM

Ok ok ok, I've finally joined digg, and will digg rudius sites when I read them

BC: I just got off the phone with Christ. You're on the list now.

Posted by: Mav at April 1, 2007 03:35 AM

Happy birthday, mate.

My birthday's sometime in this month, too.

When my internet decided to stop being shit, I'll check my email and "digg" you.

Cheers.

Posted by: Cameron at April 1, 2007 07:48 AM

Holy shit dude the same thing happened to me with my clavicle breaking. Except they never discovered it and now I have problems with my left shoulder limiting the range of motion with it. Atleast that never happened to you. OH and happy birthday.

Posted by: Anonymous at April 1, 2007 11:04 AM

Happy Birthday, BC!!

Posted by: Anonymous at April 1, 2007 02:14 PM

How tall are you Andrew?

BC: I'm 6'2"

Posted by: Jake at April 1, 2007 02:53 PM

I totally dugg you

Posted by: Cleb at April 1, 2007 03:01 PM

Hey Andrew, how much do you weigh now?

BC: Exactly enough.

Posted by: Anonymous at April 1, 2007 04:01 PM

I dugg you, too! And ..happy birthday!

Posted by: Kalyn at April 1, 2007 04:06 PM

Ugh, women are gross.

Happy birthday, man.

I'll bet you're dad was lauded around the mill, but I doubt the local sewing circles felt the same way.

Posted by: Ironman at April 1, 2007 05:16 PM

how did you get BC from Andrew?

Posted by: Anonymous at April 1, 2007 07:13 PM

how did you get BC from Andrew?

BC: Story for another time, my friend.

Posted by: Anonymous at April 1, 2007 07:15 PM

Happy Birthday!!!

I think Andre would've been a cool name.

Posted by: lili at April 1, 2007 09:03 PM

Whoa, another April Fool. April 1, 1985 is my birthday also. Happy birthday, I hope you got as drunk as I did.

Posted by: Adam at April 2, 2007 01:56 PM

HAPPY B-DAY BC Weeee diggggg youuuuu Great writing

Posted by: kathymorse at April 2, 2007 02:49 PM

I signed up and dugg you, happy birthday man.

Posted by: Sod at April 2, 2007 09:31 PM

My now three year old son tipped the scales at 10 lbs. 5 oz. and was 23 3/4 inches long at birth. I was fortunate enough, however, to have nurses look at the estimated weight of 11/5 and tell me I wasn't going anywhere, I'd be delivering by c-section that night. The fact that your mother didn't demand a c-section just goes to show she's insane.

ps: I adore your stories.

Posted by: Amber at April 3, 2007 06:45 PM

Andre the Giant WAS French. That's why he spoke with an accent and loved red wine and French food.

Posted by: Clint at April 4, 2007 02:59 PM

I stumbled upon your site from TuckerMax.com, and what a strange coincidence that your birthday falls on the same day as my late grandfather's (except about 65 years later). Keep writing. It's good.

Posted by: Nicholas at April 6, 2007 12:52 AM

Look, it says her water had broken by the time they got her to the hospital right? at that point, it means the baby's moved into the birth canal and it's too LATE to perform a C-section. I know, my brother got stuck halfway in, halfway out of my mom, as his ankles somehow ended up next to his head and caught on her hipbone. Knew he was male before we ever saw his face, let's put it like that. He needed a C-section but arrived to late to get one too. Glad you made it. it can be a fairly close thing.

Posted by: Killi at May 10, 2007 01:41 PM

holy shit, that's my birthday, too. April 1, 1985 o_O I weighed 12 pounds and some change, but things went smoothly. huh. awesome stories. keep up the good writing.

Posted by: Anonymous at June 14, 2007 02:05 PM

weird....i was born on april 1st 1985. I never thought i would meet anyone else, well, we didn't really meet. nevermind.. I was too big for my mom to give birth to me, but she had a c-section. This is like the twilight zone.

Posted by: Amanda at December 2, 2007 09:47 PM

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