Teen pregnancies in Q-C region: Baby starts new role for teenage mom
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By Kay Luna | Sunday, December 02, 2007 | 282 comment(s)
Celia Magee, 15, holds her infant son, Russell, while sitting next to her mother, Leticia Magee, who gave birth to Celia when she was a teenager herself. Celia Magee turned 16 on Oct. 18.(Larry Fisher/QUAD-CITY TIMES) Buy this Photo!
Quad-City area
teenagers are still having babies. But the good news is that fewer teens are
doing so across the region — and in Iowa, Illinois and the United States as a
whole — than 10 years ago.
Some say the teens who are
having babies seem to be getting younger and younger, including a few junior
high or middle school students, but the most recent state health
department
statistics available do not closely track the ages of teen
parents.
What the statistics do show is an overall decline in births
among people younger than 20 years since about 1995.
And then there are
stories such as Celia’s.
She sits clad in pink Eeyore
pajamas, flipping through channels from her hospital bed.
The room
is dark and quiet, just right for sleeping. But Celia Magee is wide-awake. She
can’t stop looking down at the tiny boy cradled in her left arm.
“I don’t
know even what color his eyes are yet,” she says. “He never opens his
eyes.”
Russell Eugene is 1 day old.
His mother is 15.
She
fidgets with a bottle of milk as she talks.
She can’t wait to get back
into her old clothes. When will the baby weight go away?
And shopping.
She loves to shop. She can’t believe her son already has more new clothes than
she does.
Then, sitting up straighter in bed, she asks, “When do you
think I can play basketball again? I want to go out for the team at
school.”
She can’t yet imagine the sleepless nights, the
responsibility.
Until a few days ago, Celia’s bedroom was the biggest in
the house.
And she didn’t have to share it with anyone.
The big
bed, the colorful comforter set, the fluffy pillows: She loved it
all.
But the teen especially loved the sense of family, and the
tranquility, that came with it.
For six months, Celia lived at the new
Brighter Futures Maternity Home, which operates from a house in
Davenport.
She had to find somewhere to live because her mother was so
angry, she says.
And it turned out to be a good choice. The house parents
and volunteers treated her like family. She still talks to them almost every day
now that she has moved out.
Celia, who moved in when she was three months
pregnant, was the first to finish the program and have her baby while living in
the home.
“That was a special bond,” said Tammy Ryan, a member of the
home’s board of directors and the resident child birth assistant and educator.
“I got to know a lot about her.”
Celia’s mother, Leticia Magee, always
warned her to never get pregnant. It would complicate things, she
said.
Leticia is a grandmother at 29. She was 13 — a seventh-grader — and
living in Chicago when she gave birth to her oldest child.
She lived with
her grandmother and named the baby after her: Celia.
“I was determined to
finish high school, but college wasn’t for me,” she said. “I was 20 when I had
my next child.”
Now she has four: Celia; 9-year-old Romeo Johnson,
4-year-old Ramone Johnson and 1-year-old Romello Johnson.
She always
urged Celia to tell her if she was having sex so she could arrange birth control
for her.
But when Celia did tell her, it was too late. They found out
during a doctor’s appointment that she was already pregnant.
“I cried,”
Leticia said. “I was upset.”
Celia said she could not believe it,
either.
She and Russell’s dad are not together. They are more like
friends, she said.
Celia has known her own father, who lives in Chicago,
only since she was 10.
She and Russell are living with her mother and
three little brothers in the Lincoln Homes complex in Rock Island, where the
family moved five years ago.
They left Chicago after Leticia heard about
a friend moving to the Quad-Cities and how much low-income housing was
available.
She wants to open a beauty shop, but for now she stays home
with her youngest sons and new grandson.
Back at home with her mother and
brothers, Celia — wearing pajamas and a do-rag that covers her hair — holds the
baby. Her tank top shows off two black tattoos on her arms.
One, which
winds down her forearm, reads “Tish,” her mom’s nickname. Another, below her
shoulder, reads “Manica Magee,” which is the teen’s rap name.
Leticia
told the girl she could get inked if she kept her grades up. They went to
Chicago to get it done.
“She earned them,” Leticia said, nodding her
head.
Celia writes rap songs in her spare time, but she does not foresee
making a living by doing that.
“I want to do computers,” she said, or
maybe health occupations.
Leticia wanted Celia “to have more out of life”
than becoming a teenage parent.
“But anything can happen,” she said. “I
want her to go to college.”
Her mother admits that sometimes she is “too
much of a friend than a parent” to her daughter, who turned 16 on Oct.
18.
“Everybody’s gotta make their own decisions and your own choices,
too,” Leticia said. “But she’s cool. She’s gonna be all right.”
Celia was
supposed to return to Rock Island High School six weeks after having the baby
Sept. 26.
But she and her mother say there was a mix-up with the credits
she earned from the Kimberly Center in the Davenport School District while
staying at the maternity home.
Celia finally returned to school Nov. 13,
but not at Rocky. Now, she’s going to the district’s Thurgood Marshall
alternative school, which offers “credit recovery,” she said.
By the end
of the school year, she should qualify to start back in August as a junior at
Rocky, she said. She is taking basic courses such as math, health, English and
physical education.
And she’s dog-tired most days.
Russell —
almost 2 months old now, wide-eyed and alert — does not sleep much at
night.
“He got his days mixed up,” she said, gently rubbing Vaseline on
his little face. “He sleeps all day. I try to switch him around, but he
won’t.”
The baby has cradle cap on his scalp, too, she says. Her mother
tells her not to worry: The baby will grow out of it.
So she tries to
focus on school, but mostly she thinks about gym class.
“You can leave
early, but I stay,” she said. “I play basketball.”
The hoops are unlike
the ones near her apartment where people hang on the metal rims and bend them.
At school, they’re just right.
She can’t wait to get back.
Kay Luna can be contacted at (563) 383-2323 or kluna@qctimes.com.
ABOUT THIS SERIES
Quad-City Times
features reporter Kay Luna decided this fall to take an in-depth look at teenage
pregnancy and births in the Quad-City region, where statistics show fewer teens
are giving birth today than they were 10 years ago. The result is a two-part
series examining the issues and the people affected by
them.
TODAY: A new Davenport maternity home that houses
pregnant teens in crisis was home to 15-year-old Celia Magee of Rock Island. She
is transitioning to motherhood along with her own mother, who was also a teen
parent and is now a 29-year-old grandmother.
Monday:
What resources do Quad-City area schools offer teen parents? There is a day-care
center for the babies of teenagers at Rock Island High School, and a teen
parenting program operates at the Kimberly Center alternative school in
Davenport.
282 comment(s)
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