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Expecting : One Man's Uncensored Memoir of Pregnancy
 
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Expecting : One Man's Uncensored Memoir of Pregnancy [Hardcover]

Gordon Churchwell (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 16, 2000

Gordon Churchwell his a
problem he's never faced before--
his wife, Julie, is pregnant.

"What is happening to me? It's 6:30 A.M. My Wife is peeing on what looks like a scale model of the spaceship from 2001: A Space Odyssey. It's an early pregnancy test called something like First Alert, or Early Response, some name that sounds like a smoke detector or a piece of EMS equipment."

From this unavoidable physiological fact follows the greatest psychological crisis of his life, a story that eventually illuminates the journey of all men and women as they make the passage to becoming parents.

What really goes through a "pregnant" man's mind? Combining his personal story with interviews with doctors, midwives, evolutionary scientists, and other fathers-to-be, Gordon Churchwell delivers the gritty, intimate details, as well as important new information, in an irreverent style that mixes poignancy, wit, and laugh-out-loud humor.

He covers all the issues without flinching. On relationships: "There are moments when you are not just individuals trying to solve a personal problem, but representatives of your gender, acting out some social drama. Over Julie's shoulder I see a chorus of angry women. . . ."

On sex: "While the party line is that Julie remains 'my beautiful partner to whom I am devoted,' to Mr. Weenie, she is beginning to look like Danny DeVito in Batman Returns. . . ."

On why men find change difficult: "Why do I feel like a bystander in the most important 280 days of my life? Where are the stories that make a man feel like he's in it, and not out of it? The answer is simple. When it comes to the stories of fatherhood, our culture has discarded them."

When he starts having morning sickness, Churchwell turns science detective and makes some startling discoveries: He finds out that male pregnancy symptoms are extremely common and uncovers evidence of a physiological paternal response-men have hormonal changes, too, which help prepare them emotionally for fatherhood.

Does nature make fathers out of men? Working with a leading evolutionary psychologist, Churchwell argues for a revolutionary new perspective on a man's role in reproduction. Parental investment on both sides is not automatic. Pregnancy behavior is part of a continual process of negotiation about parental commitment. A man's response to pregnancy, including sympathetic symptoms, may signal his plans about investing in the child. His behavior can directly affect the mother's own response, including the quality of her maternal care.

By showing that men have a physiological transformation of their own that integrates them into the biology of the family, Churchwell restores men to the story of reproduction.

Expecting is an important contribution to the new literature of fatherhood that will amuse and inspire men and women as they transform themselves into parents. This personal story ends where it began, with him and his wife, Julie, struggling-this time as a team-through a harrowing thirty-five-hour birth ordeal, and welcoming their daughter, Olivia, into the world.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

From the moment Churchwell and his wife watch their home pregnancy test turn positive, Expecting : One Man's Uncensored Memoir of Pregnancy launches a rollicking journey into expectant fatherhood. "Well, what do you think? Aren't you happy?" his wife asks when she sees the test results. Churchwell responds, "I'm thinking: 'Isn't that what Marie Curie said to her husband when she discovered radioactivity?'"

Expecting combines the scientific and the personal into a dead-on funny and often provocative narrative. Once the reader is welcomed into the intimate circle, a miscarriage occurs, opening the door to all the typical doubts and fears of a mid-life crisis, compounded by the insecurities of novice parenthood. While his wife is suffering her final excruciating labor pushes at the "ring of fire," Churchwell muses on the historical clash between doctors and midwives over the birth process, men's thoughts about sex, and the absence of ritual narratives for men--while livening things up with such descriptions as his wife's efforts at birth class "to build up her abdominals into a baby howitzer." As much as anything, Churchwell's story is one of change, of the bonding between parents. He asks the questions that count and then responds with his own theories about how men and women transform into parents and learn, from society and biology, the art of nurturing. --Byron Ricks

From Publishers Weekly

With this lively memoir, Churchwell presents two books in one (twins, if you like): a funny, honest account of a regular guy's response to his wife's first pregnancy and a serious investigation of this "weird juncture" in the history of the family, when some men are trying to find ways to participate more directly in child-rearing. A typical "expectant zombie-father," Churchwell gestates into a man who asks challenging questions about why fathers are the "forgotten parent." He finds that "the typical American birthing experience for most of the 20th century is nothing to brag about" and that pregnancy, experienced as a crisis by so many men, can be "ground zero for many relationship problems." His inquiry into couvade (male "pregnancy") leads him to suggest that this crisis arises because men have "disappeared from the story of the family" and are not taken seriously as participants in a pregnancy. If they are not "invited early on into the process, is it any wonder that many men find it difficult to step into the sacred circle of parenting later on?" he asks. Myths and rituals that once helped us cope with what we could not control have been replaced by science, our "sole storyteller." One of this memoir's strengths is that Churchwell uses science to tell the story of "paternal response," a psychological complement to the biological changes experienced by pregnant women that might enable both partners to "transcend the gender boundaries that confine pregnancy and parenting roles." Agent, Elaine Markson. 5-city author tour; 25-city radio tour. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Harper (May 16, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060393459
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060393458
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,587,350 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars lots of wit and insight, a bit too much sociobiology, August 1, 2000
By 
S. Weaver (NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Expecting : One Man's Uncensored Memoir of Pregnancy (Hardcover)
This was a great read, at least for someone who's recently been through the experience (though on the female side). Churchwell was really very funny, and also illuminating on the topic of men's reactons to their partners' pregnancies. I could have done without the longest chapter, the one on "pregnant" men's hormone levels, evolutionary advantages to active fatherhood, etc. I kept wondering why Churchwell never seemed to find it necessary to consider the possibility that all these physiological changes are related not to some mechanistic biological process but to the choices and attitudes that these men (and women) were developing toward their pregnancies. Like maybe you get high hormone levels because you're anxiously awaiting the arrival of your offspring, and if for whatever reasons you AREN'T looking forward to it, you don't produce those hormone levels. Cause and effect in the other direction.

Sociobiology notwithstanding, I'd recommend this highly to anyone who's been through this or is thinking about it. Kudos to the publisher on the title change (I read the uncorrected proofs), and I've just got to ask Kirkus, isn't this Churchwell guy a baby-boomer and not a Gen-X? What's the cutoff here?

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intensely humorous memoir, June 17, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Expecting : One Man's Uncensored Memoir of Pregnancy (Hardcover)
This smoothly written and extremely funny book presents a surprising bit of news about pregnancy - women aren't the only ones who experience physical symptoms in the months leading up to childbirth. From morning sickness to pronounced changes in certain hormone levels, men have a paternal response to pregnancy that strengthens their bond to mother and child and helps prepare them for fatherhood. The author explains this 'couvade syndrome' through scientific inquiry, cultural comparisons, anecdotes and personal experience, all while tracking his own unfolding saga as an expectant father. The result is a warm and intensely humorous memoir that is also a scientific and biological detective story.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not exaclty what I was looking for...but an ok book, December 13, 2005
This review is from: Expecting : One Man's Uncensored Memoir of Pregnancy (Hardcover)
I thought it would be a little more insightful and therefore purchased it for my husband as a baby gift and he was disappointed with it and so was I. I think for a good book for fathers to be we will stick with The Expectant Father that is a Good book, for first time fathers.
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