now
because
I‘m
pregnant.‖
You might find it easier having a friend
or family member with you when you
break the news.
Some people prefer writing a letter
explaining everything. You could give
this to your parents in person or leave it
where they will find it. They will really
appreciate knowing what‘s going on in
your life.
If you really feel like all those are too
difficult try getting a friend of your
parents to tell them first.
Let them have some time to process the
news. They could get mad for a bit.
After a few days they should cool down
a bit. Once it settles in they will
probably offer to help.
Things to remember:
1.
They will get over it.
They are your
parents. They love you for who you are,
not what you do or did.
2.
They may ask you what you want to do
.
What DO you want to do? Make sure
that whatever you do, you don‘t
compromise yourself for the sake of
avoiding one argument. What is that
compared to possibly regretting this
your whole life? You are not alone.
3.
They might have preconceived ideas
about what is best for you.
If they don‘t
think it is possible to keep the baby,
have them read
Reason #19: There are
practical options to make things work
for you
, or call up some pregnancy
centers to see just how much help is
available.
Ways they could help:
Can you live at home with your baby?
Are they in a position to support you
financially or provide free room and board?
165
Can you learn some parenting tricks
from your mom or a female relative?
Is there someone at home who might be
a good male role model for your baby if
you're a single mom?
Can anyone help with occasional baby
minding?
Anything else?
Don't forget that you can also ask help
from many other family members,
including grandparents, aunts or uncles,
older siblings, cousins, and of course
friends, who are often as close as family.
Ask for help! You never really know
until you do.
Ask your boyfriend to stand by you
How will you tell the child‘s father? Use
the same hints for telling your parents.
Remember? Find a good time, a prepared
statement, a letter, a friend with you, or ask
a friend to speak for you. If you‘re young
you might choose to ask either or both of
your parents to join you as make an action
plan.
Depending on the situation you may be
very close to the child‘s father or not at all.
I know, because I‘ve heard stories of some
tricky situations out there! You might want
to talk about where the relationship is
going. Do you see yourselves staying
together (or getting together), getting
engaged, marrying or splitting up? Are you
ready to take a step forward at this time?
How will he support you? If he fathered
your child he does have a financial
obligation, and there are ways you can file
for that. (See
Reason #19
for info on
paternity tests.)
If you are in a relationship where your
boyfriend threatens to leave you if you
don‘t get an abortion, then you need to be
aware that:
a) Even though it's financially easier for
him to just pay for an abortion he may be
required by law to pay child support.
b) Some girls abort but then find the
relationship breaks up over it anyway, and
they are left with a choice they never
wanted (see also
Reason #75
for examples of
this). Above all, make sure you are happy
with your decision and do ask for help,
because you won‘t know for sure how he‘ll
respond till you do.
If you‘re interested in how abortion
affects guys, turn to
Reason #83: The
father might regret it too
.
What if they reject me and I
have no place to go?
hat if you family or boyfriend
isn‘t able or willing to stand by
you? You're still not alone!
There are many types of agencies that are
willing and able to offer free services. These
include
government
agencies
and
pregnancy centers. While both are equally
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good, a pregnancy center generally has a
more centralized resource base and more
free time to chat. They are a combination of
volunteer organization, charity and a social
service, and their great joy in life is to help
pregnant moms who have nowhere else to
go. Of course, you don‘t need to be in dire
straits to call them. Anyone of any age,
race, background or circumstance can give
them a call and see what they do. You can
also email or visit in person.
There are many differences and many
similarities in these pregnancy centers.
Most are staffed by trained volunteers.
Most
can
refer
you
to
a
wide
range of services, including temporary
accommodation, job help, information on
finishing high school, help with baby
supplies, child support and parenting skills
and just friendship. There is a lot they offer.
These places are all run differently, by
different groups and churches and have
different types of services. All provide
someone to talk to, a volunteer who can
listen to your story and put you in touch
with somewhere to stay, food and all those
essentials — if it comes down to that.
One great place to start is Option Line. I
think they‘re great, because they are
available to answer your calls 24/7. Their
number is 1-800-395-HELP and their
website, which has their chat line, can be
reached at www.pregnancycenters.org. You
can also go to the website and type in your
zip code to find a pregnancy center in your
area.
If one door shuts, others will open.
There are caring people out there, who
would love to welcome you with open arms
and give you the best opportunity to
succeed as a parent.
Remember also to read
Reason #19:
There are practical options to make things
work for you
,
as well as the resources
section at the end of this book
.
Reason #38
―Ask for help and you won‘t be
alone anymore‖
167
Reason #39
Some things in life
are wrong
Things in life are either
right or wrong
It is not immoral to choose abortion; it is
simply another kind of morality, a pagan
one. It is time to stop being defensive about
it.
425
—The Sacrament of Abortion
n today‘s modern society words like
―morals,‖ ―right and wrong‖ and
―Truth‖ have become unfashionable.
There seems to be this really weird idea
floating around that, somehow, the only
morality that has ever existed is the one
that you decide upon — the one that is
―right for you.‖ This is certainly what
abortion clinics push. ―You want to choose
what‘s right for you.‖
426
It‘s always you —
not your growing baby or the total good,
but
you.
Now, choosing if something is right for
you works wonderfully in many situations
— buying some jeans, getting a new
hairstyle, or trying to pick your favorite
variety of ice cream. That‘s tough, isn‘t it?
But life and death issues are a very different
ball game. There
is
such a thing as right and
wrong — and consequences to go along
with it (sorry if I just broke anyone‘s
bubble, but I think you want to know this).
In such matters we need to be very
clear. Is there such a thing as a neutral life
and death decision? I believe in these
matters we are either absolutely wrong or
absolutely right — there is no such thing as
―a little bit wrong‖ or ―just a little bit dead.‖
This idea of moral relativism says that
what is right for one person is not
necessarily right for another. But it‘s
unsupportable! Taking that position I could
then say, shoplifting is not right for me but
for other people it could be the right
decision. It‘s wrong for some people to sell
drugs, I could say, but it‘s okay for some
people. This kind of thinking would get
society into a lot of trouble!
Quotable Quote
―Right is right, even if everyone is
against it, and wrong is wrong, even if
everyone is for it.‖
-William Penn, one of America‘s
founding fathers
I have to say, if nothing is right or
wrong, then it‘s an awfully confusing world
out there. We might as well just eat, drink
and be merry, for tomorrow we die. There
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is no real right or wrong. No moral
standard, no principles. No conscience. No
higher law. No God. No purpose except
pleasure and milking all you can get out of
life. Unfortunately, some people do this.
The possibility that I may be
wrong…
Isn‘t it better to be possibly wrong on
the side of giving life a chance instead of
possibly wrong on the side of taking
life?
If abortion is right
The PRO-CHOICE crowd says that
legalized abortion empowers women and
that it should be "safe, legal and rare." My
question is: If abortion is such an
empowering experience for women, why
should it be rare?
—Pro-Life Action Cards, Life Dynamics
f abortion is right, then it is always
right:
…For any reason
…For any pregnancy
…At any point
…With no conscience pangs whatsoever
But if you disagree with me, then why?
What is your viewpoint? I find it
interesting that some pro-choice sources
even suggest that some abortions may be
undesirable — but
why
? A female
abortionist says:
―When women told me they were so
ashamed of returning to my clinic for
another abortion, I would ask them if they
got pregnant on purpose just to have an
abortion. It made them laugh, but really,
that's the only reason for a woman to feel
guilty.‖
427
Why? Why should women feel guilt
about getting pregnant just to have an
abortion? Is there anything morally wrong
with abortion that it should be restricted or
rationed out to women? How does a
woman getting pregnant on purpose change
what happens in an abortion? Is abortion
wrong or is it a right? If it‘s a right that we
are free to exercise, then why in the world
would you want to limit that right?
Yet some pro-choice books seem to
suggest that there are occasions where
abortion is not that desirable. For example,
Abortion Practice
slightly questions the
case of a grown up, well educated,
professional woman who wanted an
abortion because it was the wrong sex.
428
Yet, if abortion is right for other reasons,
what is wrong with this reason? Another
case described, with less than full
congratulations, is the case where a patient
returns multiple times for repeat abortions.
Staff are also said to have difficulty with
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late abortions for no real reason.
429
Yet,
again, if abortion is morally right once,
what is wrong with it a second time? If it is
right at one point of fetal development,
what is wrong with another point of fetal
development? (see
Reason #13: At what
point is it too late to abort?
)
Another pro-choice source reports that
―During training a student may be faced
with unexpected feelings or reactions.‖ One
clinic found that the need for extra
workshops on, ―their responses to patients‘
emotions, examining fetal tissue and
…repeat unintended pregnancies.‖
430
Why
would clinic employees or medical students
in training to become abortionists, have
difficulty with any of this if abortion is a
human right (as some say)? WHAT IS
WRONG with abortion?
Confessions from pro-choice
literature
―If abortion is justifiable. why should it
be rare?‖
431
—
Abortion Under Attack
A pro-choice book I have says that the
counselors tried to help women find a type
of contraception that they would use, and
that when they saw the same women
coming in repeatedly for an abortion, they
often became burned out.
432
But why were
the counselors burned out? The assumption
is that something is not good about repeat
abortions. What is it?
If abortion is a right, then late abortions,
abortions for the wrong sex, or even a
fleeting change of mind over having kids
are to be championed and outright
celebrated. In fact, why do we have to use
contraception, anyway? Why should we
frown on someone‘s 8
th
abortion? Isn‘t
contraception just a bother — I mean, if
abortion is so safe and if there is nothing
immoral about it? After all, it‘s our choice,
we‘re told, and what other basic,
inalienable rights should we limit? Speech?
Free Assembly? Freedom of religion?
433
It
doesn‘t quite make sense.
If abortion is right, then it must be good
in these situations too — there are no two
ways about it.
If abortion is such a safe and sinless
experience, why should women seek to
avoid repeating the experience?
Reason #39
If things are right or wrong —
which is abortion?
170
Reason #40
Are you getting an
abortion for someone
else?
Not even given a choice!
ane did not choose abortion.
When I finally told my mother, she
didn't discuss any options with me or
give me any choices. She put me in the car
and took me to an abortion clinic.
Tena did not choose abortion.
I remember wanting children as long as
I can remember. As a young girl I would
pretend I was pregnant and dream of what I
would name my baby and how much I
would love her. At the age of fifteen I
found out I was pregnant.
I was told by a boy at school but did not
believe him. Only after I passed out and
was taken to the doctor did I believe I was
pregnant. I did not tell my parents, for fear
they wouldn't let me keep the baby.
Somehow they found out. 28 years later I
learned that the principal at my Christian
school had called my dad to tell him I
wouldn't be allowed back if I had a baby.
My dad woke me very early the next
morning and told me I that was going in to
the hospital for an abortion. He never
discussed the decision with me. I remember
trying to talk to him, and he said we would
not discuss it.
Kayla did not choose abortion.
When my mother found out, she was
all, ―You don‘t know what you have done. I
don‘t know why you are happy about this,
because this is the worst thing that you
could have done.‖ Then told me she was
going to be the one to decide on the
abortion or not — which, as you all have
figured out, she decided on the abortion...
…I had to talk to a counselor before I
went in, but it was hard to talk with my
mother right there in the room with me the
whole time.
I told her that it wasn't my
decision. But when she asked what I
thought about it my mother gave me the
"look of death" so all I could say was "It's
the only thing I can do, so I guess I have to
do it" and left the room.
...I still can't look at the sonogram,
which gets me sad because I want to. I want
to look at my baby. But it gets me sad.
There are just a lot of things that get to me
now. I have also started back a really old
habit. I hate to say. I cut again. I used to
when I was in middle school and went
through intensive therapy to stop. I can't
help it though. I really can't, and I hate it
when people get onto me for it. But what
got me angry was that I tried everything to
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get my mother not to push me into this.
I tried using guilt, I tried explaining to
her how I felt. But it didn‘t work. She had
one between the time I was born and the
time that my brother was born (when she
was about 17-18), and she doesn‘t get that
she got to keep her firstborn. I at least
wanted that. If I already had a child and
was pregnant again, I think I could at least
somewhat understand why she made me
have an abortion. But I don‘t understand it
now, because that was my first child… her
first grandchild… and it breaks my heart
when I think about how my baby might
have looked or acted.
Vicki did not choose abortion.
One day when I came home from school
she [mom] was standing in the driveway
with the car running. Our conversation
went something like:
―Get in the car.‖
―Why?‖
―We are going to the doctor.‖
―Why?‖
―You‘re pregnant, aren‘t you?‖
―I think I might be.‖
She took me to the doctor immediately,
and the test they took confirmed what I
had been dreading… I was pregnant. Mom
called my dad and he came home from
work, which is something he never does.
They had me call Chuck over, and we sat
down to talk. I can honestly tell you that it
got pretty ugly! In the end my parents let
me know that they would be taking me to
have an abortion.
Katelyn escaped the forced
abortion attempt
Katelyn, a 19-year-old from Maine, was
kidnapped by her own parents! They
didn‘t like her black boyfriend. Or her
20 week unborn child. They told her she
had ―no choice‖ but to get an abortion.
She said no. So they bound her hands
and feet with rope, then forced her into
their Lexus, threatening to kill her.
Because Katelyn was 20 weeks along
and close to being viable, which Maine
laws wouldn‘t allow, they drove her to
New York. During the trip Katelyn
convinced her parents to let her use a
bathroom in K-mart where she used a
cell phone she had nicked from them to
call 911. Police found her crying
hysterically. The girl‘s parents were
arrested when police found them
driving around the car park looking for
her. Police found a .22-caliber rifle, duct
tape, rope and scissors in the vehicle, as
well as extra ammunition on the man.
The parents were arrested and charged
with kidnapping and are being held on
bail of $100,000 each. If convicted they
could face anywhere from 7½ to 15
years prison time.
434
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