(or “How I Learned to Stop Worrying About Having My Plumbing Messed With, Stepped Up and Booked the Appointment”)
Gord Fynes – I don’t consider myself to be a squeamish type of guy when it comes to medical matters of the body, unless it involves the voluntary giving of blood. Maybe it was all those biking and skateboarding incidents as a pre-teen that required several trips to the hospital emergency room for stitches that helped me overcome the shock and fear of the sight of my own blood. Both of my parents had backgrounds in the medical profession, so these were always calm and collected times while they would assess the situation and phone for a consult before deciding to head out to have me mended. In my early 20s, I had to be rushed to the hospital for an emergency appendectomy, so surgery and convalescence aren’t completely foreign to me.
Years ago, my father-in-law loaned me his copy of saxophonist Art Pepper’s autobiography Straight Life, which covered all corners of the jazz great’s life of debauchery. At one point in the book, Pepper goes into very explicit detail of how his vasectomy took place. Now, I don’t know if it was because I was tired, perhaps a little under the weather (it was wintertime) and riding a bus home after a long day at work, but while I was reading this particular passage, I had to close the book so that I could shut my eyes and, I’m guessing, faint in my seat. Me! Faint! To this day, I still prefer to chalk it up to exhaustion and bad-timing.
Throughout the years, I’d always heard stories from older fellows (former co-workers that had stints in the military, all of my in-laws, etc.) of “that” procedure. You know, the one performed in a man’s nether regions that is so delicate that most younger males would wince at the very thought of it. We all know the euphemisms: “the big snip,” “the snip and tuck,” “voluntary sterility,” “permanent birth control,” “having a stranger cutting your sack and capping your plumbing.” Before my daughter was born, I’d decided that I would forgo future reliance on latex birth control and undergo what is dismissively referred to as a minor procedure. Most of the married women I know, whose husbands had undergone this procedure, consider it to be the honorable thing to do. (It being a lot less invasive a procedure than for a woman to have her tubes tied. Duh.)
I recently became a father for the second time. My wife had somewhat of a harder time during this last pregnancy, more so than with our first child. She chalks it up to her body being six years older this time around. By about the halfway mark, she would be huffing and puffing while holding a spasmodic muscle, announcing in a semi-joking tone that “this is it…the baby factory is shutting down after this one.” I never really pictured us as being the types that would end up tripping over a large brood in our two-bedroom condo. Two children seems like plenty, especially now since we now have both a boy and a girl.
I’d joked during my wife’s heavy-duty labour that I would gladly exit the maternity ward and go and have “the minor procedure” done on another floor in the hospital and be back before our child was born. I’d even mentioned, in mixed company (doctors, nurses, our midwife - all there at once), that I’d go so far as to do it myself with some whiskey, a Gillette blue-blade, a mirror and Google. We all know that love can make you say some silly shit at the most inappropriate of times. It’s been said that you don’t announce to the world that you’re getting a vasectomy to see the reaction of others; you do it to get used to the idea yourself.
Last week, I saw my family doctor for a quick referral to a specialist whose field is The Gentle Vasectomy, which, apparently, is now a scalpel-less procedure. Full of bravado upon leaving my doctor’s office with specialist’s card in hand, I called and booked my appointment from the parking lot on my cell phone. The whole job, including the consultation, supposedly takes only about two to two-and-a-half hours. I’ve been advised that I should shave ahead of time and not to ride my scooter that day.
So, the date has been marked on the calendar in ink. I will try to refrain from doing any graphically detailed research between now and then. The whole debate of whether to freeze any of my, um, spirit, is a moot point; I’ve only to look at my two beautiful children, smile, and think of the soon-to-be similarities between myself and a movie prop gun.
Gord Fynes is a father, husband, civil servant and musician residing in the west end of Toronto. When not playing with his children or his Mac, he’s busy trying to think up worthy content for his weblog, Gordasm.org.
A co-worker just had this done, and it turned out to be a nightmare for him. The doctor couldn’t find the place to snip for a solid 60 minutes; the whole procedure took 80 minutes. Another co-worker of mine had to have it done twice because the first one “didn’t take” (how the fuck that’s even possible if beyond me).
The way a buddy of mine tells it, it is imperative that you shave before showing up. The nurse that made sure he was “clean” down there showed my friend the rusty, single-blade Bic that would be scraping any missed patches of fuzz that had escaped the careful home done job, and from the description of it alone my balls took refuge somewhere just below my heart.
With those comments said, good luck to you. I’m sure at some point I’ll be tucking in the string and getting this procedure done, too, and I send only good thoughts to anybody going through it.
My father has actually had it done twice. Once with his first wife, after a divorce and a remarriage he had it reversed so as to father my sister and I. He then had it redone so as to prevent any more kids like my sister and I. Love must really make you do some crazy things
I had it done a couple years ago by a cold-handed asian doctor. It was most disconcerting to see “my boys” farther away from my body than they had ever been. I had no idea my sack could stretch that far. After removing what looked like macaroni noodles I was pronounced, “sterile”. Now only baby powder comes out when I orgasm but it’s ok. Just kidding about that last part.
A co-worker of mine just had it that done.. Ended up needing a full week off as things became infected.. It’s now a week and a half later, and he’s still walking funny.
Hopefully by the time I’m talked into this procedure I’ve forgotten all about his horror story.
I had it done in January after my wife and I had our “whoops” child. I was given the choice of general anesthesia or “twilight” which makes you half loopy. I opted for general anesthesia since I hate that groggy feeling drugs give me. Probably not a good idea in retrospect. Every time the doc touched my sack, i practically jumped off the table. They almost cancelled the procedure. It took 3 nurses to calm me down a enough to continue. It wasn’t the pain (more discomfort than pain) but the feeling of being touched there really messed with me.
Doc told us to wait a week before sex. On day 5 i jerked it twice. I wanted to make sure everything was still working properly before “testing it out” on my wife. Needless to say, seems to be OK. I go back next month to have a sperm sample taken to make sure everything worked.
I seem to have had it way easy compared to all the other people posting. I got a shot of local anesthetic, laid back, and it took about 20 minutes. It felt like the doctor was tying up laces where I didn’t have any shoes, if that sounds right.
I had the most unfortunately-placed bruise ever for a few days. Unopened bags of frozen peas work very well to keep swelling down. Let me emphasize that: the procedure is not the bad part; giving yourself swelling and inflammation THERE is.
Might want to reconsider that newfangled version, as there are ample stories of it not quite working out right. My traditional, two-incision version went exactly as they said it would, with no complications, while a co-worker had the single-incision method and was bruised up over his beltline and unable to walk for 5 days.
Just remember that before you are sterile, you’ve got to “clean the pipes” at least five times. Nothing like medically necessary sex!
Well, I had it done the traditional way 7 hours ago. Was no problems at all, no pain, just discomfort. Lasted about 40 minutes and the worst bit was getting the local!