TITER MADNESS: With A New Baby On The Way, The Best Gift You Can Give Is A Shot

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By Elissa Caterfino Mandel

My youngest son calls me searching for titer guidance. He’s not sure about the blood tests or vaccines he should be getting, so he can be cleared to see his new niece. Who is this person? On one hand, he is the former teenager I once had to lobby — no, plead with — to get a flu shot. But now, he is a 25-year-old with an unhealthy fixation about CDC vaccination sites.

Some people assume the only thing families have to do to get ready for a new baby is set up a crib and a car seat. For the extended expectant family, that’s not true, at least not anymore. Rather than gifts, we have to bring injected versions of ourselves when we meet the new baby — or bloodwork that shows we have titers aka immunity. This is not as easy as it sounds. My youngest son doesn’t even have an internist.

Luckily, my son should be fine with his 1994 measles inoculation; he was not born on the cusp of vaccine chaos the way I was. As a 1961 baby, I recently learned the MMR vaccine I got was probably subpar. Oh, goody. The next thing I’ll find out is that my high school diploma was also a fake.

It’s strange I’m in the role of vaccine arbiter, given that I usually slip up and refer to the MMR as the MMRI.

While my son ekes out a pass on the MMR, he does need a Tdap booster, an inoculation against whooping cough. I also tell him to confirm that the chicken pox vaccine he got at around age five is still protective. The parents to be haven’t mentioned a particular fear of chicken pox. But I figure I might as well use my son’s new openness to shots to satisfy my own curiosity.

It’s true, I’m not having a baby. But as I compile my family vaccination statistics, I feel like I’m on the front lines of parenthood again. Three of my four boys are good. My parents are covered. My husband and I have a plan. The one outlier is the family dog.

I did not lobby for the position of vaccine enforcer, but I can appreciate the impulse behind wanting a healthy child. Twenty nine years ago, I remember calling my own mother- in-law to ask if anyone in her family had diabetes. I’m not sure what moved me to ask such a stupid question, which was more like an accusation.

And what was my poor mother-in-law supposed to do if someone did have diabetes? It’s not as if I were going to rescind my entire pregnancy because of a misguided fear of some inherited condition. Yes, your son impregnated me, but you know what? I don’t really want any of your genetic material. I was an anxious pain in the ass.

And this is a much scarier time in the childhood disease world than 1990 was. I don’t mind getting shots. Bring them on. It’s the least I can do to make sure my new grandchild is safe.

There is an impulse when you’re about to deliver a baby to not want a nasty thing like the world to impinge upon the experience. I remember that feeling. But my kids are almost all in their 30s now. They’re good people, willing to take time out of their lives to get the vaccinations they need to meet our family’s newest member. In retrospect, I’m pretty glad the world has done whatever it did.

BUCKLING UP: How My Dad Taught Me The Fine Art Of Passengerhood

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By Elissa Caterfino Mandel

My dad always drove — even if we were only going six miles to the grocery store. I colluded with him in the fiction that I was fifteen years old and happy to be buckled into the passenger seat — of my own car. The truth is, even at 50 I liked being driven. Dare I say chauffeured? If my dad was behind the wheel, everything felt safe.

Fortunately for him, my dad got to stay on active dad duty longer than most. When my husband died at 39, my father took up the paternal mantle as if he’d never relinquished it. He began changing lightbulbs in my house. He played with my boys in the pool. He sat on the sidelines at Little League and for my younger son’s brief sojourn in football. Eventually he taught the boys to drive.

With his paternal care came my dad’s finely curated brand of craziness. At a distance, what he does looks like simple overprotection. But it’s overprotection to the power of 10 thousand.

Into his 70s, he persisted in an especially insane behavior; if he and my mom traveled somewhere, they always flew separately (as he had done throughout my childhood). This way if the plane went down, one of them would stay alive to help serve as caretaker to my children. Obviously he considered me a useful accessory but not really a main player in this parenting thing. In retrospect, it is a little disconcerting.

Even though we are obviously related, my father’s version of parenting was, at heart, radically different from mine. I am grateful for all he did. But his help came with his foibles. Among his edicts for a safe and healthy life? Don’t put a cardboard pizza box in a warm oven.

“Are you crazy?” he said when I did it. “You’re going to start a fire.”Really? Because of a cardboard box in an oven set on warm?

If my dad was going to be the driver of my car, I would be the navigator of my kitchen.

I reminded him my husband was already dead. How could anything worse possibly happen? I should have just smiled and taken the damn pizza box out of the oven.

I can tell myself a lot of myths about what fatherhood meant to my dad. But I do know whatever he did was wrapped up in the need for prodigious safe keeping of those he loved. Last weekend at my 40th high school reunion, a boy — now a man — who lived in my neighborhood reminded me that my parents had a heated driveway — in 1968. Apparently my mom always turned the neighborhood kids away when they wanted to make money shoveling snow. I didn’t remember the heated driveway coils. But it was a really steep driveway, and installing coils to ward off falls and skidding — well, that sounds a lot like my dad.

In fatherhood, my dad found the role of a lifetime. Why cede authority to me or to anyone else? He never wanted to be a supporting player.

About six years ago, my father drove me to the city to see an investment advisor; he did it every year. As he got out of the car, about 5 years past brisk and purposeful, he fumbled in his coat pocket to turn over his keys to the parking attendant. The guy in the parking lot promptly ignored him. “Will you be staying long, Miss?” the attendant asked me. At 81, my father was as good as invisible.

At first I pretended it hadn’t happened. But then as we made our way onto the sidewalk, I tried to talk to my dad about how it felt to have his whole persona kind of sideswiped by the young parking attendant.

My father just shrugged his shoulders. He was never one for those “how did it make you feel” kinds of questions. God knows it’s hard to be gazing at your navel when you’re behind the wheel of a car.

I, too, would have liked to shape the world into a less dangerous place for my children. But I never quite figured out how to do it — or whether I should. Incidentally, I don’t drive for my children. Whenever my boys come to visit, I do what I always did. I step aside and buckle myself into the passenger seat of my car.