What We Blog About When We Blog About Love

Entries tagged as ‘babies’

A Correction

November 10, 2009 · 7 Comments

We take accuracy very seriously here at Voreblog, and when a correction is required we want to set the record straight as soon as possible.

In a recent post Ben wrote about his somewhat traumatic experience during a semen analysis appointment, and in that post he referenced a porno entitled Whispering Horses. You may have perhaps Googled Whispering Horses to verify the authenticity of this film. Had you done so, you would not have had any luck finding it.

This is because the title of the film was not, we regret to report, Whispering Horses. A return visit to this office confirmed that the title is actually Whispering Hearts (starring Star E. Knight). In his flustered state, Ben misread the second word in the title. (The words were in cursive lasso.) Coupled with the fact that the film opens with extended shots of men and women on horseback (it is set on a dude ranch), and we hope you can understand — if not forgive — the error.

The original post has been amended.

And Ben was able to give the thumbs up after visit #2.

———————-

Question for discussion: How exactly do hearts whisper?

Categories: Uncategorized
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Friday Recommends With Great Hesitation: Semen Analysis

October 30, 2009 · 20 Comments

Pete Campbell always gets to home base.

xx

Since Erin and I have been trying to have a baby for several months now, I agreed to get a semen analysis last week.¹ This is not something I imagined when I thought about the steps toward fatherhood. What man assumes he is fertilely defective?

The first embarrassing thing I did was walk into the wrong office. The lobby I entered had three sets of couples seated together: holding hands, talking quietly, smiling or staring at the floor. I walked past them to the front desk.

The woman behind the desk was drinking Diet Coke through a straw and reading People magazine.

“Hi, I’m Ben Vore and I have a 9:30 appointment for …” I didn’t finish the sentence.

She leaned in and finished it for me. “For a semen analysis?” she said in a whisper that was louder than normal talking. Behind me I imagined the men shaking their heads, thinking, Poor guy.

But am I really a poor guy? According to WebMD, “Up to half of all cases of infertility involve problems with the man.” What’s more, “Doctors arbitrarily diagnose infertility when a couple hasn’t conceived a child after 12 months of unprotected and frequent sex.” We’ve hardly been trying for 12 months. This was more of a preemptive test for peace of mind. (WebMD notes, “Male infertility testing can also spare women unnecessary discomfort and expense.” What husband doesn’t want to spare his wife unnecessary discomfort — lack of insurance coverage be damned?)

“You’re in the wrong place,” the woman informed me. “You’ll want to go back out those doors, turn right and go down the hall. The lab is the last door on your left.”

I exit gracefully.

The lab is tucked away at the end of the hall. I think of the mutant toys from Sid’s room in Toy Story, hidden away in the dark corners. I am not a mutant toy.

No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t picture what the room where I would ejaculate into a tiny cup at nine thirty in the morning would look like. It turns out to be like a mini-hotel room. There is a couch with, disconcertingly, a folded white bed sheet. A TV with built-in DVD player sits on a small cabinet. A radio is next to it, preset to white noise volume on an AM station. There is a lamp on an end table with a miniature wicker drawer where I am told to leave my cup. In the corner of the room is a nook with a sink and clothes hamper.

My doctor says, “When you’re done, just give me the thumbs up as you leave.” He gives me a thumbs up as if I need a visual reminder. Then he shuts the door.

I am left alone in a room with more pornography than I have ever seen in my life. Next to the TV is a DVD entitled Whispering Horses. (See “Correction.”) There is a stack of Playboy magazines in a bin below the end table. It is 9:38 a.m.

I have never watched a porno. (Magazines were a different story.) I have friends for whom this is an astonishing fact, and I have friends for whom this is not an astonishing fact at all. My first experience not-watching a porno was in seventh grade at my friend Aaron’s house. When it was clear what was being put into the VHS player, my hairless twelve-year-old armpits began sweating. On one hand I was intensely curious about what was going to be on that tape. On the other, I already knew the shame and guilt that would come with watching it. I was a very conflicted twelve-year-old.

I ended up not watching. First I sat facing away from the TV, then I pretended to sleep. My friends thought it odd I wasn’t joining them, but they didn’t pressure me. They were my friends.

Even though I didn’t watch the porno, I still felt riddled with guilt. I ended up telling my parents that we had watched a porno at the sleepover, only I said it in a way that implied I had taken part. Why did I do this? I think because I wanted to feel “normal” (every guy wanted to watch this, right?), and because I felt like I needed to be scolded.

What was clear to me even then was that lust was not love. My conception of the two was mutually exclusive. I subscribed to a sort of sexual gnosticism: lust, fully bad, was also the route that offered pleasure; love, fully good, was the route that offered the endgame of chaste, sexless thrills (like side hugs or eternal cheek kissing). I, of course, would be doomed to love. At the age of twelve, I believed I would marry a nice, smart, kind, compassionate — and forever homely — girl. I firmly believed this.

“What are you going to do?” Erin asked me after I agreed to the semen analysis.

“I think I’ll figure it out,” I said.

“But, like … how? I mean, what will you think about?”

We had just finished a series with our junior high youth group about sex, and pornography and masturbation had been topics of much conversation among the men. The irony of my situation was not lost on me.

I had been advised to remain abstinent for two to five days prior to my appointment, a task I (we) failed. At around 9:44 a.m., I realized this might be a problem. I didn’t have much in the tank.

At that point I put in Whispering Horses. It had the opposite effect: I am — and I thank God for this, though I wanted to curse him at that moment — someone who is not turned on by pornography. The magazines did not work either. I couldn’t not picture those women as daughters, sisters, wives and mothers.

I kept thinking, “You cannot fail at this. You cannot fail at this.”

At 9:53 a.m., I acknowledged that I was going to fail at this.

When I passed my doctor’s office on the way out, he looked at me expectantly. I gave him the thumbs down.

“Oh,” he said.

We rescheduled the appointment. I was told I could not be refunded my money but that I wouldn’t be charged for a second visit. This seemed fair to me.

I left Erin a voice mail informing her of my failure.

“Honey, it’s ok,” she said when she called back. “You don’t have to go back again.”

I gave this some thought. “No, I can do it,” I told her.

A little later in the conversation she said, “This would be kind of a funny blog post. Too bad we can’t write about it.”

“Yeah,” I said. “Too bad.”

x

1. The original version of this post did not have Pete Campbell’s picture, but upon watching episode 5 of season 2 of “Mad Men” this morning (“The New Girl”), we couldn’t help ourselves.

Categories: Friday Recommends · marriage
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The Voreblog Photo Album, part two

December 8, 2008 · 4 Comments

Part one was a recap of some of our favorite vacation pics. Now it’s time to catch up on some wedding shots. Lights, please.

 

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Cincinnati. August 2004. The Beers driveway. Erin and sisters.

 

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Jon G., moments before escorting Erin down the aisle: “I want grandkids and I want them now.”

 

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“It’s been eight seconds. I don’t see any grandkids.”

 

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Ben thanks his lucky stars he beat his receding hairline to his wedding day. The morning after, virtually all of his hair fell out.

 

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Erin & Ben discover that Dan Vore has left a shaving cream butt imprint on their car. (Jon G. is checking to see if Erin is pregnant yet.)

 

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“So I’ve been thinking we should start a blog in four years.”

 

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Erin & Ben scope out the crowd at the Art Museum. “Ten bucks says you can’t hit table three with a loogie.”

 

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Our friends and family. Look very closely and you’ll see a gob of spit on table three.

 

Regrettably, we do not have digital photos from many of our friends’ weddings. Thus, any exclusion should not be taken as a slight or any indication that you failed some kind of friendship test. (Though some of you have. You know who you are.*) From the weddings we did photograph, here are a few highlights.

 

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Jesse and Elaine Savage (background) toast the married life. October 2006. San Francisco, CA.

 

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Ben toasts Jesse. He refrains from using any analogies about men in a boat.


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The Vore clan at Joseph & Mary Tufts’s wedding. Columbus, OH. May 2007. (We do not know who the strange bearded man is in the back.)

 

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Later the strange bearded man put on a “Mr. Happy” t-shirt and caused a ruckus in the conga line.

 

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Do not let this man near the dance floor at your wedding. He will burn it up.

 

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Jenny Porterfield at her wedding in Columbus, OH. June 2007. David, not pictured, makes a mean grilled salmon. 

 

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From Joe & Sarah Giordano’s wedding at Ault Park, June 2007. Mike & Gail Cicak and Erin enjoy a tasty June Sparkler.

 

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They also served Coneys at the reception. (Best. Idea. Ever.)

 

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Lauren & Patrick Brown’s wedding. Hudson, OH. September 2007.

 

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Patrick and Mr. Brown Dr. Steidl, also a beekeeper.

 

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The Beers women at Ellen & Eric’s wedding. Peterloon, Cincinnati. October 2007.

 

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Jon G. Beers, calculating how much this wedding is costing him per minute.

 

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Jon G. prepares to give the toast.

 

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“Having kids isn’t rocket science. So let’s get crackin’, gals.”

 

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“Seriously, who stole my grandkids?”

 

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“Suz, shut it down. No one’s having any more fun ’til I get me a kid.”

 

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Eric & Ellen make a run on the cake in case Jon isn’t joking. 

 

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Rob Smart, taking a brief rest from his full-time calling as a dancing machine.

 

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Steve & Donna Vore mask their grandchild-less rage for a split second. Donna later cut the power under direct orders from Jon G.

 

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From Tom & Kathleen Freyvogel’s wedding. Pittsburgh, PA, January 2008. The post-rehearsal dinner fireworks spelled KATHLEEN (HEARTS) TOM.

 

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This is a good-lookin’ bunch of men. 

 

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They married a better-lookin’ bunch of women.

 

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More good-lookin’ ladies, smothering Tom & Kathleen with affection.

 

Final installment of the Voreblog Photo Album coming sometime in the indefinite future and showcasing: numerous unflattering pictures of Scooter Thomas, scandalous shots of celebrities from our days in the paparazzi, pictures of Ben flexing in front of the mirror, and incriminating shots of Erin picking her boogs when she thought no one was looking.

 

—–

* = Fred and Lucinda.**

** = Fred and Lucinda are not real. If they were, we’d make every effort to find something likable about them, grueling as that task may be.

Categories: marriage
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Saturday Recommends: Having Grandchildren

December 6, 2008 · 2 Comments

Today’s Saturday Recommends is written by Jon G. Beers.

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Heyyyyyyyyyyy!

You know what’d be really great today? Besides making honey?*

It’d be having grandchildren.

On the first snowy day of the year, I can’t think of anything better than sitting down in the living room with a fire in the stove and a little baby on my lap.

Sure would be nice if at least one of my daughters got on that real soon. Susie’d like it too!

No pressure or anything!

 

—–

* = I am a beekeeper. You are all getting honey for Christmas.

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Not-So-Subtle Signs From Our Parents That They Want Grandchildren

October 13, 2008 · 12 Comments

  • At parties, they spend more time holding other peoples’ babies than anyone else.
  • As they’re holding them, they make eye contact and nod toward the baby.
  • Then they point at us to make it clear what they’re trying to say.
  • Then they gesture at their watch and make a sad face and pretend to cry.
  • The number of times they casually remark, “Pretty quiet around the house with just our cat.”
  • Or, “Sure would be nice to have some grandkids.”
  • The airplane that flew over our house today pulling a sky banner that read, HOW MUCH LONGER WILL YOU MAKE US WAIT???
  • When we ask how their day went, they respond, “Pretty good, despite the fact we didn’t have a grandchild to share it with.”
  • All signs of fatigue or illness point to pregnancy.
  • A look of sad resignation settles over them whenever we go out to eat and Erin orders wine.
  • The rent-a-grandchild catalogs that come in their mail.
  • The number of times they say, “If we’re being too subtle, let us know so we can lay it on thick.”

Categories: marriage
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Tiny People

August 9, 2008 · 1 Comment

We would like to use this space to officially welcome four babies (and one baby blog) to the world:

  • Maxwell Patrick Morgan (July 1), who strikes the Heisman pose when he gets burped;
  • Ava Lynn Andolina (August 3), who’s hitting the ground running with a road trip to Rochester;
  • William Frederick Beekman (August 6), soon to experience the joys (and pains) of an older sister;
  • and Kyle Eric Cicak, born this very afternoon, who you can see (soon) at cheechfam.blogspot.com.

Welcome, babies, and you too, baby blog.

You newborns are probably asking yourselves, What do Unkie Ben and Aunt Erin bring to the table? You’ll soon begin sorting out your favorite aunts and uncles, and we’d like to weasel our way into your hearts. Here’s what we can offer:

  • Absolutely no discipline. We’re not uptight like your parents … we’re cool and laid back! We’ll let you stay up late and run around naked and do whatever else your heart desires.
  • Lots and lots of sugar. Whatever your parents won’t let you eat, we’ve got it in the Vore pantry. Need a sugar fix? Gotta have some ice cream before bed? Head on over to the Vores!
  • Indoor Sandbox. And by “indoor sandbox” we mean Scooter’s litterbox.
  • Bedtime Stories. And by “bedtime stories” we mean Law & Order: Criminal Intent at eleven thirty with everyone’s favorite storyteller, Vincent D’Onofrio.
  • Poker and R-rated Movies. Sick of Baby Einstein and Barney? Get some real culture at the Vores. Nothing says good parenting like no-limit Texas Hold ‘Em and a Sopranos marathon.

We think this is a very attractive package. We hope you’ll accept. You know where to reach us.

And finally, did someone say B-A-B-Y by the Brunettes?  Yes please!

Categories: music
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