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You Can Keep the Scalpel Sheathed, Doc, We Still Don’t Need It

August 27, 2012

This was originally publisher in 2010. Back then, we had a toddler and a plain baby and we knew we were done. It’s 2012 and now we have a kid, a toddler, and a newborn and we’re really for real done now, but I’m still not letting anyone come at the jewels with sharp tools, so I dusted this classic off.

When your wife is pregnant, she goes to many doctor’s appointments. Toward the end of the pregnancy, or maybe right after birth, one of the conversations the doctor insists on having is what birth control you’ll be using once the post-partum dry spell ends. I’m not sure why the doctors include this topic. Perhaps they’ve gotten so accustomed to teenagers they feel the need to explain the birds and the bees to all new parents. “Just in case you don’t know how this happened, here’s what you did and here’s how to prevent it in the future.”

For years, when the topic was hypothetical, I always assumed I’d take the outpatient route and go under the knife. Several close friends had faced the scalpel and none had complications or bad things to say. When the conversation turned to prevention after our second daughter, I told the doctor that I would take the necessary steps and we moved on to other bits of wisdom such as a newborn’s inability to digest turkey dogs (all Kosher beef or nothing) and the fact that newborns wholly prevent you from sleeping for the first six months. (Don’t worry future parents — The hallucinations are better than anything you achieved from the fungus and sugar cubes provided by the questionable dude with dreadlocks and no last name in your younger years.)

There is a reason I once assumed I’d go down the snippery slope. Penelope and I, to use clinical
terms, are fond of raw dogging and creampies. Condoms seriously impede raw dogging. Our non-Catholicism impedes a roll-the-dice mentality. The pill is an option, but past experience suggests the pill gives the wife severe headaches.

Still, no matter how much I hate condoms and no matter how hard I try, I cannot make the call and schedule the appointment. No matter how certain I am that we don’t want a fourth, I can only think about what Dave Barry wrote: “If you’re a man considering this step, you need to reflect upon the fact that they are going to cut a hole in your scrotum.”

When I was 13 years old, I was quite daring with my bicycle. Once, while doing front wheelies, I decided, for some idiotic reason conjured deep within the idiocy of my 13 year old brain, to build up to a good speed, and corresponding momentum, before slamming on my front brakes.

It was a racking to end all rackings. The soft graze that moves from contact to limbo for approximately 10 seconds before crescendoing to crippling pain, normally the bitch mother of all nut pain, paled in comparison to the shock waves that rippled through my groin and radiated out through my body. I crawled into my house and to the bathroom. There, upon examination, I discovered a tiny amount of blood. Not free flowing, but it was blood! On my nuts! I limped to the back yard and told my dad the family jewels were in serious peril.

My dad was building something at that moment. He didn’t even turn off the circular saw. He just dropped it to the ground. It spent the following 2.5 hours, while we were at the doctor, chasing the dogs around the back yard. We didn’t close doors, we didn’t turn off anything, we just got in the car and left.

Once at the doctor’s office, the serious damage was determined to actually be a minor scrape on my sack. No tearing, no rupturing, no lasting effects.

Rather, I should say, there were no lasting physical effects. Emotionally, that story haunts me, especially when I think about purposely scheduling an appointment in which my doctor, a fine and talented man, will cut a hole in my scrotum.

Thousands upon thousands of men have undergone this procedure, but I will still not be joining their ranks. There is always a chance that something will go wrong. Any possibility, no matter how infinitesimal, that I could become such an outlier is too great a risk. I’m reminded of a joke. Why do women rub their eyes when they wake up in the morning? Because they don’t have balls to scratch.

Perhaps in the future I will overcome this fear. Perhaps there is a doctor so infallible, so intelligent, so skilled with scalpel, so trustworthy, that I will find the courage to schedule the appointment. But until I see the sign that says, “The Office of Dr. Jesus H. St. Einstein Sushruta is now open for business,” no one wielding a scalpel is coming within 10 miles of my scrotum. I’ll be damned if I’m going to wake up in the morning and rub my eyes.

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11 Comments leave one →
  1. August 27, 2012 2:41 pm

    C’mon man. It’s not that bad. Take 4 advil and drink a bottle of bourbon. Plus it’s football season, so you can sit on the couch and watch all the games. Just make sure one of your kids doesn’t jump on you for some affection.

    • August 27, 2012 8:50 pm

      We’ll see, though if she has any hydrocordone left from her c-section recovery, those will trump ibuprofen.

  2. AverageMarriedGuy permalink
    August 27, 2012 3:32 pm

    Timely post, I just had a Dr. fondle my nuts to do as a consultation to the procedure. Haven’t scheduled it yet but will. A little apprehension to be sure.

  3. Jake P permalink
    August 27, 2012 4:29 pm

    Just don’t do what I did: Take a couple extra codeine tablets and think you can play softball the very same evening. Felt no pain, went 3 for 4…and woke up wanting to die.

  4. August 27, 2012 5:01 pm

    We look forward to reading abut baby #4.

    • August 27, 2012 8:47 pm

      I’m afraid I’m going to disappoint. The wife is giving the pill another shot. If the headaches return, I’ll think long and hard about buying her a non-hormone IUD. You can’t say I’m not considerate.

  5. August 27, 2012 7:54 pm

    Given all we know, and all we don’t know, about how seemingly discrete physiological functions end up affecting others: There is no way I’m allowing someone to cut on my balls.

    Plus, there’s this: There is no way I’m allowing someone to cut on my balls.

  6. Eric permalink
    August 28, 2012 8:56 am

    Umm, I’d be wary of letting your wife go on the pill. There’s some scientific literature out there which suggests that the pill, by fucking with a woman’s hormones, can potentially alter preferences in mate selection (read: sensitive, metrosexual type males preferred as opposed to a manly man). From reading your posts I can only assume you’re more of the latter. And, if this were to happen to your wife, it’s likely to follow that relationship disruption could ensue. This, along with a newborn, is a road I’m sure you’d rather not take the chance of going down.

    P.S i don’t have any citations for the material on the pill and its affects, but I know Heartiste posted something on it a while back. perhaps you could consult him, or just do your own google research.

    • August 28, 2012 9:02 am

      She’s been on the pill at other times in our relationship. I have read the studies you mention, but I don’t know that the effects are as pronounced in an existing relationship as they are when a woman is on the prowl. Or maybe that’s just my experience and being married gives me a little more beta leeway.

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