was deeply troubled still himself. We cried
as I told him I so wished I could have
received some healing with my mother
before her death, 20 years after that
abortion. During the healing process I
pulled my record and read I had given birth
to a "perfectly formed male 21 cm crown to
rump and 11 oz in weight." I can only
imagine the anguish she experienced,
seeing her grandson of 20 weeks all burned
from the saline abortion. I can only imagine
the nightmares she endured and the way
she silently suffered for allowing that to
happen. Dad said when she came home she
cussed him out and did not speak to him for
weeks. That was all she ever said to him
about that fateful day.
At least we agree on one thing
Late-term abortion…should be openly
discussed and rationally understood.
514
—pro-choice columnist
OUTLAWED IN 2003, CHALLENGED
IN 2006, STILL OUTLAWED IN 2007:
Dilation and Extraction
(D&X):
hat is it and what does it do?
Dilation
and
Extraction
abortions, also referred to as
Partial Birth Abortion, involves dilating the
cervix, partly delivering the intact body of
the fetus (arms, legs and torso) and, while
the head is not born yet, a pair of surgical
scissors is stuck into the back of the skull
and the brain is suctioned to enable the
fetus to be fully delivered from the mother.
A reminder, also, that these abortions are
performed on live fetuses. If the doctor does
the same thing but pulls off the arms and
the legs first, then it‘s legal — because it is
not an ‗intact D&X‘ which is what was
recently outlawed.
Witnesses to the procedure relate that
the fingers and feet of the fetus are moving
prior to the piercing of the skull
515
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211
—Justice Kennedy, Supreme Court
When is it used?
Third trimester abortions
Hysterotomy:
hat is it and what does it do?
Hysterotomy is an uncommon
but fully legal procedure that
has decreased in popularity due to its high
risk.
516
According to an abortion clinic
which performs these today, a hysterotomy
―is basically an early cesarean section.‖
517
The difference is, the baby is not able to
survive disconnected from mom‘s life
support. If by chance he doesn‘t die
immediately, chances are he will die
struggling to breathe, from exposure to cold
and we have occasional anecdotes of
stubborn babies being smothered. One old
pro-choice book says that hysterotomy is
performed where a saline abortion (and
presumably
today‘s
other
induction
abortions) have failed.
518
In other words, it‘s
the last chance to have an abortion. The
government‘s CDC reported that a partial
listing of ―other‖ abortion methods
(specifically excluding curettage, medical
abortions and induced labor and specifically
including hysterotomy and hysterectomy)
accounted for 2.1% or 13,916 late abortions
in 2005.
519
That‘s a lot for being a
supposedly ―rare‖ procedure.
When is it used?
Second and third trimester abortions
Knew at that moment she‘d condoned
murder
The last time I gave anesthesia for an
abortion, it was to be a hysterectomy,
because the woman was about 6½ to 7
months pregnant. I put her to sleep as
usual, the incision was made in the
abdomen, then into the uterus, and a baby
was pulled out — I mean a fully developed,
moving, breathing baby. It hit me like a ton
of bricks — the baby was put into a bucket
of water and drowned. I was shaken. I
knew at that moment I had stood silently
by and condoned murder, not only this
time, but many times before.
520
—Ila Ryan, nurse anesthetist
Q. Aren‘t we as women people
who
hate
bloodshed
and
violence?
Reason #49
―Abortion procedures are cruel‖
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212
Reason #50
Abortion may make
you unhappy
Let‘s talk about it!
ven pro-choicers admit it. We don‘t
talk about abortion like we should.
We don‘t allow women the chance
to talk about their bad or sad feelings, for
fear it would come across as anti-abortion.
While pro-choice Naomi Wolf says we
need to allow women to express their
feelings of ―loss, of death, of mourning,‖
521
she also admits that keeping closed lips
about abortion‘s bad side has been
politically useful:
Too few prochoice women risk
expressing their aversion to abortion in
public since it breaks what has been a
politically useful, even necessary feminist
taboo.
522
Post-Abortion Syndrome,
Real or Fake?
There are now literally thousands of
support groups across America to help
women overcome the emotional train
wreck of abortion, but no one has found it
necessary to help women deal with the
emotional toll of letting their children
live.
523
—Mark Crutcher,
Pro-Life Answers
ost Abortion Syndrome (PAS) or
Post Abortion Stress Syndrome
(PASS) is a name that has been given
to describe the psychological side effects of
abortion. While not universally recognized,
both sides recognize that some women are
upset by and have emotional problems
following an abortion.
Planned Parenthood has long denied
that such a condition actually exists. They
say that women who have had an abortion
"do not suffer adverse psychological effects‖
and ―in fact‖ have higher self-esteem and
self-worth than those who have not
terminated their babies‘ lives!
524
They go on
to state the ―fact‖ that ―anti-abortion groups
have invented this condition to further
their cause.‖
525
If post-abortion syndrome is
not real there should be no evidence to
back it up. Yet there is.
But abortion clinics will not say that and
are likely to deny that an abortion may
cause emotional problems afterward:
Q
UESTION
: Will I get Post Abortion
Syndrome from having an abortion?
A
NSWER
: "Post abortion syndrome" is
something that exists only in the mind of
anti-abortion zealots.
526
E
P
213
Rarely, a clinic will admit that women
may have problems:
If the feelings you are having are
interfering with your ability to function the
way you would like to in your life, we
suggest that you consider talking to a
professional counselor… Whatever you do,
please do not sit with your grief until it
consumes your life.
527
In contrast, here are a couple of studies
pro-life sources like to refer to:
Almost half of all women experience
psychological conflicts, such as guilt or
regret, for a minimum of 8 weeks.
528
—British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
―Almost all‖ women experience some
guilt and depression.
529
—British Medical Journal
Did you know?
The American Medical Association still
does not recognize a link between
abortion and post abortion syndrome…
but that doesn‘t mean it‘s not real!
Convicted by their own data!
he very liberal
Ms.
magazine allows
that only 1% of women could
possibly suffer ―Severe post-abortion
psychological distress.‖
530
(Whoa, I didn‘t
even think they believed in that!) Then we
have another pro-choice source which
estimates that for 2005, the latest date for
which data is available, there were 1.21
million abortions.
531
Women age 24 and
under make up 50% of that figure.
532
What
does this all data mean?
It means lots. The
best case
scenario, i.e.,
the admission of the pro-choice perspective
alone
, indicates that…
Every year
12,100
American women
suffer severe post-abortion psychological
distress.
One percent of abortion patients
means 6,050 young women under 24 will
also be amongst those suffering severe post-
abortion psychological distress every
year…by the mouth of pro-choicers alone!
They also don‘t account for the fact that
in any given year there will be other
women suffering from abortions in
previous years. Severe post-abortion
psychological distress is not likely to vanish
after a year. The number of women
suffering is likely to be in the hundreds of
thousands.
Just think
, if this rate is accurate since
abortion was legalized, that means that for
the approaching 50 million abortions
533
500,000 women have silently suffered
―severe
post-abortion
psychological
distress‖ …and that‘s according to 1%
figures
produced
by
pro-choicers
themselves
!
This does not take into account repeat
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214
abortions, so, strictly following this pro-
choice logic, their number may not be quite
as high. Even so, it‘s bound to be a high cost
that American women have paid. What
would the real numbers be, with prolife
figures included?
The 1% of aborting women that
Ms.
magazine admits experience problems
excludes everyone else who experiences
―mild
to
moderate‖
post-abortion
psychological distress. Just because you
don‘t seek extreme professional help like
Sheila did doesn‘t mean you aren‘t hurting:
―At one point I even sought professional
psychiatric help, because I felt like I was
really going crazy.‖
So if you aren‘t lining up for the
psychiatric ward, what are some of the
milder indicators of PAS? The post abortion
ministry, called Safehaven, includes the
following symptoms on their website:
depression and thoughts of suicide
re-experiencing the abortion
sudden and uncontrollable crying
"Anniversary Syndrome" (an increase of
symptoms around the time of the
anniversary of the abortion and/or the
due date of the aborted child)
development of eating disorders
alcohol and drug abuse
deterioration of self-esteem
disruption of the bonding process with
present or future children
disruption in interpersonal relationships
other self-punishing or self-degrading
behaviors:
abusive
relationships,
promiscuity, failing to take care of
yourself medically or deliberately
hurting yourself emotionally and/or
physically
534
The problems are real
The quick change in hormone levels after
you‘ve had the abortion may cause mood
changes and leave you feeling a ―little blue‖
or depressed.
535
—Hassle Free Clinic
linics will claim that it‘s purely
hormonal. While the sudden end to
your pregnancy no doubt changes
the hormones in your body, and may play a
part in feeling moody, there is no doubt
that such hormonal shifts cannot be held
responsible for a
lifetime
of pain, upset,
depression and sorrow. We live in
interrelated worlds — our body affects our
mind and our mind affects our body. But
that doesn‘t mean that we can or should
just write off any post-abortion feelings as
―hormones.‖
I am not claiming that all women
experience PAS, but undeniably, many
women who have had abortions do indeed
describe having those symptoms of PAS.
Here are some experiences of women who
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215
have written to me:
Denise
became an addict:
However, after telling my Mom, she
said, "Denise, you're only 16, you have your
whole life ahead of you..." She told me to
have this operation, forget about it, and get
on with my life. After the abortion I tried
— becoming a drug addict and alcoholic,
letting myself go, and looking for love in all
the wrong places.
Cindy
got into abusive situations:
I tried to forget about all of it by a lot of
partying in college, hanging out with not-
so-good friends, and making very poor
choices in my dating relationships. And
when I mean poor, I‘m talking emotionally
abusive (and somewhat physically abusive)
guys, and over-controlling guys… so over-
controlling that I even had to get a personal
protection order against one boyfriend. My
self-esteem was that low that I put up with
anything. I didn‘t think I deserved anyone
good anymore. I tried to numb my feelings
with alcohol too. I don‘t have many good
memories during that time in my life.
Finally, I came to a point where I just
couldn‘t handle the nightmares, the
thoughts of how old my child would‘ve
been, and the depressing life that I was
living. I decided that I should tell other
girls the truth about abortion and its
aftermath, so that at least they could have
all the facts in front of them before making
a decision. I wouldn‘t wish for anyone to
go through what I had experienced.
Hope
developed an eating problem:
In July 2004, I had Gastric Bypass
Surgery and as of now, November 2008, I
have lost over 300 lbs. That weight I gained
over all the years was like a cover for me. I
didn‘t want to feel the pain of the abortion
any longer. I have been denied plastic
surgery two different times. I need to have
this skin removed so that I can become
healthier. Because of a job change, I no
longer have insurance. So here I am with
no husband, no children, and am all into
my work that I have no time for myself. I
did graduate from college in 2006. I just
wish that I could really truly be happy...
way down deep in my heart.
Carol
got
into
self-punishing
relationships:
Life went on for 13 years. In that time I
left the church. People walked all over me,
but that was okay, ‘cause I didn‘t deserve
any better treatment. Mike was the same
way. We were a mess. But we did the best
we could. We never talked about it, but we
were both deeply affected and it spilled out
into every area of our lives. Mike was
finally tired of our mess and decided to
leave me.
536
216
Tena
suffered with depression, weight
issues and sexual issues:
I suffered severe depression and gained a
lot of weight. I lost interest in everything I
used to like to do. Sexual intimacy became
repulsive. Somehow, I just kept waking up
day after day, going through the motions.
Nicole
considered suicide as a way out:
It took years to come out from under the
shadow of that horrible decision to take a
life. A decision that I thought would solve
my problem at the time just added a log to
the fire to create many more troubles.
During that time I began contemplating a
suicide attempt, and several times I had to
fight off thoughts about killing myself. It
was my faith in God that kept me from
that.
Pro-choice researcher finds abortion
hurts women – and has the courage to
print it
It‘s the kind of situation that makes pro-
choicers cringe. When one of their own
sets out to prove once and for all that
abortion is harmless — but finds
otherwise...
―I‘m very much pro-choice, and when
we did the research I was very much
convinced that abortion didn‘t have any
harmful effects. So from a personal point of
view, I would have rather seen the results
come out the other way but they didn‘t,
and as a scientist you have to report the
facts, not what you‘d like to report.‖
537
These are the words of New Zealand
researcher, Professor David Fergusson. His
research followed 500 women from birth to
age 25, and found that those who were
post-abortive were one and a half times
more likely to suffer a mental illness.
Does it surprise you that many many
journals refused to publish the report, even
though it was by one of their own? The
results they hadn‘t wanted to see in print?
―Those having an abortion had elevated
rates of subsequent mental health problems,
including depression, anxiety, suicidal
behaviors and substance use disorders.‖
538
Abortion clinics explain it
―This is normal.‖
‗―Don't confuse "sad" with "bad."‖
―Abortion is normal‖
539
—Northland Family Planning Centers
ow does one clinic explain your
feelings of grief (their word) after
an abortion? ―When you have an
abortion you are giving something up —
you are deciding to intervene and not have
a child right now.‖
540
‗Intervening,‘ in this
case, is a code word for sucking out your
growing baby out of your body, while still
alive — though not for long. That‘s one
way not to have a child right now!
H
217
Many clinics now have sections on their
website referring to ―After Abortion
Feelings‖ or ―Taking care of yourself after
your abortion.‖ Yet most clinics do not
address this seriously either. Descriptions
are usually along the lines of mostly relief,
maybe a bit of bleeding, a little tired or
hungry, you could be a little down for a few
days, but you should be fine after that.
Some go as far as to outright deny that you
could have serious emotional reactions to
abortion:
―Emotional reactions are uncommon
and if they occur, they usually go away
quickly.‖
541
This advice is for abortions 14-24 weeks.
Or rarely, as this quote shows, the clinic
is more honest, though keep in mind they
are the ones that caused the problem in the
first place:
―If you are having emotional or spiritual
pain after an abortion, there is a healing
process.‖
542
And how about this advice? This is one
of three reasons why she might feel bad
afterwards:
Negative feelings could last longer if she
has not had much practice making major
life decisions or already has serious
emotional problems.‖
543
Ah ha. So that‘s the real reason women
are sad after their abortion?
Under, ―What should I expect after
abortion?‖
The
National
Abortion
Federation says women may have difficulty
after an abortion due to:
―The obstacles encountered while trying
to obtain abortion care.
―Feeling alone while making an
important decision.
―An environment where choosing
abortion may be stigmatized.‖
544
Notice there is no mention of grief at
realizing that your abortion killed a baby
not a blob.
Did abortion make these
women happy?
personally corresponded with the
women in this book and I can say with
certainty, abortion did not make
these
women happy. Do you think they would
have had an abortion if they knew they
would feel like this?
That was when I started to cry. Not like
the screaming crying, but real tears of
heartache.
—Violet
I have never been the same, and for
years I would sit in a corner of a room and
cry for hours. God has forgiven me but it
took me years to forgive myself, and the
pain lives forever.
—Lana
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218
No amount of time will ever heal these
wounds that I carry.
—Rhonda
For many years I was depressed and had
suicidal thoughts. I am a changed person,
and I don't think I will ever get over having
an abortion.
—Christy
I took care of the problem, and in doing so I
would never be the same. I felt awful,
disgusted, ashamed, damaged, sick, and I
hated myself for what I had done.
—Becky
I didn't like myself, or the world we
lived in. I had no hope for the future.
—Jane
I managed to get to my bed and let out
heartfelt sobs for what I had just seen and
what I had done. One of the pregnant ladies
came over to me and asked if I wanted to go
for a walk with her. I couldn‘t speak.
…When I got home I just sat on the
sofa. I couldn‘t eat nothing.
HOW COULD I
? I
didn‘t deserve to eat. That night was the
worst. I was even scared to go to the toilet,
in case what I saw wasn‘t my baby, even
though deep down I knew it was. When I
finally did allow myself to go, I saw
something else that frightened the life out
of me. I didn‘t know what it was, but it
distressed me a great deal. I refused to go
back to the toilet after that. The next day I
was still not eating and still deeply upset.
About the following day, mum had got
some wine. I was tempted to take the whole
pack of pain killers the nurse had given me
and drink them down with a bottle of wine,
but for some reason I didn‘t.
—Hayley
Quotable Quote
―Pro-life here until no more children
die, no more women cry."
-Pro Life rallying cry
Reason #50
―Abortion often leaves women
feeling worse than it finds them‖
219
Reason #51
Abortion creates
secrets, suppression
and denial
Abortion may hide one secret
but creates another much
worse
or Adena, it was a secret never
mentioned again.
―When I was 16 years old I killed a
baby, and I kept it a secret for more than 20
years… W
E NEVER SPOKE OF IT AGAIN
.
—Adena
For Sheila, it was a secret that no one
else could know about.
This choice remained a deep secret in
my life for 14 years — only my husband
and best girlfriend knew about it. I had no
idea this secret would affect so many areas
of my life and other choices I would make.
I was extremely paranoid that somebody
would find out my secret, and did
everything in my power to cover myself
and make sure that would never happen.
I suffered panic attacks within me but I
made sure nobody could see them on the
outside.
I wouldn‘t allow my husband to see who
I really was — I refused to be open and
honest with him about anything, especially
my ―secret‖ and how I felt about it — we
never spoke about the abortion for the first
8 years we were together.
I was a nice person so I never got
―angry‖ — I got depressed.
—Sheila
For Yoli, it was a secret never to be
discussed again.
I went ahead with the "procedure" and
the father and I never talked about it again.
It was as if it never happened. We would
go on with our lives... Oh, how I would
come to regret that decision.
—Yoli
For Maria, it was a secret she was too
ashamed to share with her own fiancé or
mother.
I told my fiancé that I had an ectopic
pregnancy and the same to my mom. I am
so ashamed of what I have done.
—Maria
For Tena it was a secret that took 28
years to discuss with her father. (See
Reason #49: Abortion procedures are brutal
for more on Tena‘s induction abortion.)
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220
Abortion clinics encourage this
silence!
While this abortion clinic writes
, ―The
silence around abortion hurts us
all
,‖
545
they assume women will need
secrecy, so no one else using the
abortion clinic can see them:
A private abortion allows you and your
support person to be escorted directly
into your own room, where you can stay
throughout your visit without repeat
trips to the more public waiting area.
The staff and physician will come to
your private room, and you will have
your entire visit—from paperwork to
counseling to the abortion itself—in a
room of your own. …Please note that
these specialty visits are somewhat more
expensive.
546
Then there‘s the abortion clinic that
requests women don‘t talk about why
they are there (and as far as I can tell
that‘s all they do):
Please do not discuss the reason for your
visit in public areas.
547
This same place also suggests that the
abortion can be disguised from other
people:
It is easy to disguise your symptoms as a
bad period or an early miscarriage.
548
Suppression
raumatic and stressful situations can
do weird things to your emotions.
It‘s kind of like survival. You turn
off, tune out, disassociate yourself or switch
off. It‘s too much to deal with. So, you
don‘t.
Carol
purposely ‗forgot.‘
God created us humans with the ability
to survive just about anything. So I had to
figure out how to survive. In order to do
this, I forgot! I slipped into denial so deep,
I really did forget. Well, 99% forgot. One
tiny little piece of me always knew. But for
all practical purposes, I couldn‘t remember.
I was so deep into denial that when the
topic ever came up, due to news or politics,
I went stupid. Didn‘t hear, didn‘t answer,
totally ignored the conversation. Just kinda
zoned out. But once, I remember being
pushed for an answer on the topic. I don‘t
remember what I tried to say, but I
remember when the word abortion tried to
come out of my mouth, I literally gagged
and ran to the bathroom and vomited.
549
—Carol
Christine
shut off her emotions.
I was spiritually and mentally numb. I
shut off my emotions because I knew what
was ―right‖ in my heart, but I wasn‘t
willing to adjust my life… After my
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221
abortion I became the master of disguising
my pain and ―stuffing‖ my feelings… I
experienced an overwhelming sadness at
the realization that I had made the wrong
decision and that the decision was
irreversible. I had willingly and knowingly
changed the course of my life as well as
affecting the lives of many others. I tried to
forget the baby and the abortion. The only
problem was that I couldn‘t forget. The
feelings didn‘t go away and they eventually
manifested themselves into other areas of
my life — sex, drugs, alcohol, etc.
—Christine
Rhonda
became a closed person.
Years went by of depression, anxiety
and fear. I was a closed person. Numb in
my head and brain — just walking through
life, not living. I am 45 years old now.
When I was 40 I finally came to the
realization of my abortion and was able to
mourn. 21 years after my abortion, 21 long
and silent and painful years of keeping my
secret locked up inside of me. If I had to do
everything all over again I would have
reached out to God, taken His hand and let
Him lead me. Instead, I took the hand of
the world and let it destroy my life for a
long time.
—Rhonda
Kathy
buried all memory of it.
No one, however, told me that the guilt
and shame of it would last for years. I
buried all memory of it, or so I thought. At
odd times, small memories would come to
the surface.
—Kathy
Jane
stayed high to keep from feeling
anything.
There was something very wrong inside
me. I was even physically ill for a time, an
illness the doctor apparently thought was
psychosomatic judging by the placebo he
prescribed for me. Eventually those feelings
went away or sunk so far inside that I
didn't even know they were there
anymore. And just to make sure I didn't feel
them, I stayed high on pot, cocaine and
anything else anyone offered me for the
next 8 or 9 years.
—Jane
Yoli
could never openly grieve.
Pretending that it never happened
didn‘t work very well. I cried all the time.
Over the years, when I was all alone, I
would break down seemingly for no
reason. Sometimes I cried so hard I
couldn‘t go to work the next day. My eyes
would puff up so much, I looked like an
alien. My soul knew my pain and it was
weeping for my lost child...
This lie ate me up inside. From the
outside, it was a different story. It looked
like I had it all together. I always had a job,
222
a car, nice clothes and lots of stuff. I had a
man in my life and we traveled. I told
myself I was happy, and why shouldn‘t I
be? Well the reality is, I always wanted
kids and I wanted to be married, but I did
something very wrong. I could not admit it
because that would make me a monster.
What kind of woman kills her own baby?
Isn‘t that the worst possible crime? I had to
protect myself. We were told a fetus was
just tissue; that it wasn‘t yet a life. I was
afraid so I believed the lie.
—Yoli
Study reveals high avoidance
levels among women who abort
A recent Norwegian study compared the
mental health of women who had had
miscarriages to those who had had
abortions. Now, this is an interesting
topic because it‘s a parallel some clinics
like to draw, attempting to make
induced abortion seem more ‗natural‘.
The women were interviewed at 10
days, 6 months, 2 years and 5 years after
the end of their pregnancy. They were
rated (in most cases by themselves) in
areas of intrusions, avoidance, quality of
life, anxiety and depression, relief, grief,
loss, guilt and shame.
The largest discrepancy between the
two groups was in the area of avoidance
of thoughts and feelings related to the
incident. Both groups reported high
levels of avoidance, although the
abortion
group
led
the
way.
Interestingly, at the end of the 5-year
period the abortion group was 8 times
higher than the miscarriage group,
which had decreased to almost nil.
550
What this says to me is that many
women
who
undergo
abortions
experience difficulty in processing the
event and choose to avoid feeling or
thinking about it, even after 5 years. To
me, this indicates an unresolved issue.
Denial a part of it
or
Carol
, it was afterwards that she
realized how much denial was
created.
Since then I‘ve come to realize just how
much denial, guilt, pain and shame was
created when I had the abortion.
551
For
Sally
, her denial ended when she
faced up to it.
Even though I experienced the hardest
time of my life — coming face to face with
the reality that I paid for the death of my
first child, was in the room when it
happened, allowed violence to be done to
the child I was supposed to protect. I am
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223
glad that at least I did face up to the truth
— after all, anyone who stays in denial for
anything, to the very end, never sees
freedom. Coming to grips with what really
happened on the abortion table those many
years ago was painful, and I can never go
back and change that terrible day when I
coldly chose death for my child, but I'm
glad I faced up to it all the way.
One of the reasons that it is so very hard
to come to terms with one‘s abortion is that
it is either very right or very wrong. It is
either a woman‘s right. Period. Or it is
killing your own child. A pretty terrible
deed if I ever saw one. Nobody wants to
face up to that kind of a past (and I
wouldn't either) which is one reason that
denial is so big. However, running from
your past or present doesn‘t set you free; it
only creates more problems. Facing up to
an unplanned pregnancy or a past abortion
might be difficult now, but avoids creating
psychological hang ups in the long run.
A post abortion counselor
encounters a woman with no
regrets
A most interesting thing happened. At
the end of my talk a woman came to
speak to me (usually happens) and she
told me about her own abortion 20 years
earlier and she assured me that she had
not suffered adversely and had
processed it back then. Of course when
someone comes to me with this I
immediately know that she has not
processed it at all but just ―shut it away.‖
I thanked her for sharing and told her
how pleased I am that she is well and
asked what gender was her baby, and
quick as shot she said, ―It was a boy.‖
Again I spoke gently about how lovely it
was that she had a son who is with God,
and proceeded to ask her had she named
him and again, quick as a shot, she said
―Alistair,‖ and then she looked straight
at me and the tears rolled and rolled and
rolled as if a dam had opened up and
spilled years of accumulation of lacrimae
[tears].
She then looked sadly at me and
said ―Maybe I have never dealt with it,
have I?‖ ―No, you haven‘t‖ said I, and we
went off together for several hours and I
let her speak; and because she is a grief
counselor herself, she understood the
need to conclude her little boy‘s story.
We have promised to keep in touch.
552
—Anne Lastman, a post-abortion counselor,
who herself is post-abortive
Reason #51
―Using abortion to hide one
secret creates a secret much
worse‖
224
Reason #52
Suppression leads to
anger, depression and
forbidden grief
Depression and anger based on
unresolved psychology
hough openly she rationalized the
abortion,
Sabrina
was becoming
depressed
For many years I believed the lies told to
me by the abortionist, I rationalized that I
had done the right thing, while all the time
my self-worth deteriorated. I was deeply
depressed and became suicidal. The result
of my legal abortion was a spiraling down
of my self-worth that led to three suicide
attempts.
Donniel
became deeply depressed,
even attempting suicide.
I left the building, looking at each
woman in the waiting room and tried to
tell them to run away and don‘t look back.
But I couldn‘t speak. It was at that moment
that I fell into a deep depression. I was so
ashamed and embarrassed. After all, I
killed my baby. I tried killing myself
several times to no avail… I still struggle
quite a bit with the decision I made and the
serious depression it has caused.
Adena
suffered periods of anger and
depression.
Even though I rarely thought about my
abortion, hiding it deep within, I suffered
periods of
DEPRESSION AND ANGER
. I
thought that these issues were because of
PRESENT CIRCUMSTANCES
and it wasn‘t until
the Lord drew me to a place in my life,
where I was willing to see my abortion
through God‘s eyes, did I realize how
connected it all was. God has been faithful
to forgive me, love me and restore me. I
still
LIVE EVERY DAY
with the knowledge
that I committed the most violent of acts
that any human can commit against
another, the taking of a life. I can never
change that.
Wendy
struggled with depression,
anger and addiction.
I wrestled with depression, addiction
and anger for the next twenty years. My
anger alienated me from my husband, my
children and many others. The depression
debilitated me at times, even hospitalizing
me more than once. Addiction plagued me
as I desperately sought relief from the anger
and guilt I felt. Every November I thought
of the baby I aborted.
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225
…Fast-forward to one day when a
friend of mine told me about a Bible study
called Binding Up the Brokenhearted. I
agreed to go through it with her. She also
had an abortion and had been affected over
the last 20 years as well. Upon reading the
third chapter, I came face to face with the
anger issue I had allowed to take such deep
root in my being.
I have spent the last three years
allowing myself to heal. I am being
reconciled to my two children and have
been reconciled to my husband. I have not
had an anger issue for almost three years.
This doesn‘t say I don‘t get angry, but anger
does not rule my life. Anger will kill you. It
will destroy relationships and opportunities
in life. Anger will alienate you to the point
of wanting to commit suicide. I have been
set free from anger now, but it was through
much prayer and choosing to change my
behaviors. I no longer expect others to fix
my pain and I do not turn to drugs, food,
anger or other substances for comfort.
Kathy
became angry, fearful and
depressed.
Angry outbursts were commonplace.
Fear of God taking away my only child left
me immobile. I crawled into bed, pulled the
covers over my head and stayed there for
months, battling crippling depression.
A grief you are not supposed
to feel
arol
couldn‘t tell anyone.
Sometimes, it feels like no one
can understand your pain, because
you are not supposed to have any. The
feelings I had isolated me because I was too
afraid to tell anyone. I didn‘t know how
they would react. If they were pro-choice,
they wouldn‘t expect me to feel any pain; if
they were pro-life, then I must be the
enemy.
Rachel
couldn‘t let go.
I was unable to let go, to move on. I
needed desperately to grieve the loss of the
baby, but how could I? I had went on my
own two feet to get that ―taken care of;‖
how could I possibly think that I had any
right to grieve?
553
Yoli
carried her pain and grief with her.
I never openly grieved because I stuffed
it down so deep, it couldn‘t get out. The
pain was literally crying to get out. I felt
unworthy and was depressed. I desperately
needed healing, but I could not grieve or
heal while living a lie...
When my partner died in 2000, not only
did I grieve for him, but I began an
agonizing process that would unleash 23
years of suppressed grief for my baby.
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226
Becky
carried her shame and guilt with
her.
I never realized the impact that the
secret shame, guilt, disgust, remorse and
stifled grief I carried with me for years
upon years had on me… I never realized
this until I got counseling and help through
a post-abortion ministry called the Healing
Hearts. It is only by God‘s grace that I can
write about any of this today.
When
Jane
finally woke up she
mourned for what had happened so many
years ago.
It wasn't until I was pregnant with my
third child that I realized what I had done,
some 20 years earlier. One morning God
woke me up from a deep sleep and revealed
to me the horror of it all. I mourned for my
baby, the baby I would never hold. It was
devastating, like it had just happened
yesterday, not 20 years ago. I cried all the
time, but only when I was alone, because I
thought it was silly to be upset over
something that had happened so long ago
and that I couldn't change.
Cindy
carried her baggage and found
other women who did:
I‘ve now been volunteer counseling for
10 years and have led post-abortion support
groups for the last 3 years. And with all the
women I have met, I have yet to find a
woman who was glad she had an abortion.
In fact, many of the women‘s stories are
much more depressing than mine. Most
women carry the baggage of shame for an
average of 7 years before getting help.
Tip: for post abortion contacts go to the
resources section at the end of this book.
Reason #52
―Abortion
often
creates
depression, anger and forbidden
grief‖
227
Reason #53
The fetus can feel
pain
And the first sense is…
ouch? You guessed it! Not sight or
hearing, but touch.
554
It is through
touch that we experience both pain
and pleasure on a physical level.
We discuss your baby‘s touch in detail
in
Reason #55: Your unborn child can feel,
taste, smell, hear and see
, but we‘ll also
‗touch‘ on it here.
Just like with us, the fetus‘ lips are one
of her more sensitive parts. At only 8 weeks
old they are responsive to touch.
555
The
other sensitive parts are the rest of the face,
palms of the hands, soles of the feet and
genitals.
556
What about the rest of the body?
It slowly catches up! One source reports
that the fetus can feel touch all over his
body — apart from the back and top of his
head — by week 17.
557
Another source puts
this stage earlier at 13½-14 weeks.
558
Complete feeling is said to be achieved by
week 20.
559
A different source says 23-27
weeks.
560
The fetus is more sensitive
than adults
Unborn children can experience pain even
more so than adults, as the baby has more
pain receptors per square inch than at any
other time in its
life
.
561
—Sam Brownback, American politician, 1956
As a fetus you have a greater
concentration of pain receptors than you
will ever have in adulthood. The peak of
these occurs in weeks 20-30, and during
this time we know that the fetus not only
can feel, but can feel more intensely than
an adult.
562
I would think the reason for
this concentration of pain receptors is that
they are all present but in such a small body
they are necessarily close together; and
when you grow, they would grow further
apart.
The fetus has a less
developed pain blocking
system
In fact, anatomical evidence suggests that
the unborn child is more sensitive to pain
than the rest of us; the inhibitory pathways
that block incoming pain do not develop
until after birth.
563
—Thomas R Verny,
Tomorrow's Baby
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228
s I researched this topic, one thing
that surprised me is that the fetus is
actually more likely to experience
pain than pleasure. The reason for this is
that ―Key nerve tracts that carry pain
signals from the spinal cord to the lower
centers of the brain are laid down in the
nervous system between the second and
fourth months of gestation.‖
564
That‘s
between 8 and 16 weeks, and close to the
time that the majority of abortions happen.
So, in fact, the body systems that carry pain
signals are ready before the systems that
carry endorphins (feel-good hormones).
The endorphin network doesn‘t become
operational until around 16 weeks; that‘s 8
weeks after the pain system has already
started.
565
We used to think we knew
everything
ere‘s a little interesting bit of trivia
for you. Did you know that as late
as 1987 doctors believed that
newborns couldn‘t actually feel pain?
566
Yes, that‘s right. Back then, newborns were
subjected to painful surgery without
anesthetics because, after all, they couldn‘t
feel pain. Incredibly though, the babies
were still drugged to immobilize them
during surgery. This sounds very barbaric,
yet today we are in the same situation with
the fetus. Who knows how barbaric today‘s
procedures will look in another 30 years?
Fortunately, newborns and many fetuses
are receiving anesthesia for their surgery.
Unfortunately, aborted babies the same age
are given no such mercy.
How might a fetus express
pain?
f he can‘t talk and we can‘t hear him,
how do we know if he‘s hurting or not?
There are other things we can look at.
For example, the fetus‘s levels of stress
hormones go up. In one study there was a
600% increase after taking fetal blood, a
procedure most of us wouldn‘t find
pleasant.
567
Further information showed
that when pain killers were given the stress
response of the fetus was halved.
568
This
indicates that the unborn child is stressed
by painful procedures and does better with
pain killers. The rise in hormones is exactly
what you‘d find with a feeling adult who
was also in pain.
No one likes surgery and that seems to
include the fetus! There is an anecdotal
story of a little girl who needed fluid
removed from her lungs but kept moving
away from the doctors. In the end she had
to be paralyzed in order to give her life-
saving treatment so she could make it to
birth.
569
Similar behavior was noticed in a
study that tracked the fetus‘s response to
the amniocentesis needle. It‘s not painful
A
H
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229
but it‘s a scary looking needle, so it should
be no surprise that the fetuses moved away
from it, covered themselves or even tried to
kick the needle — and all this while their
eyes hadn‘t developed enough to open!
570
While not evidence of pain, if a baby is
geared to defend himself like this, would he
not also be able to feel pain?
In an actual example, babies born
prematurely at 23 weeks gestation respond
to heel pricks with demonstrations of pain
— clenched hands, leg withdrawal and
facial grimaces.
571
In another case, an
anesthesiologist witnessed a fetus the same
age
flinch
during
fetal
surgery.
572
Remember that most other human babies
are still fetuses at this point and elective
abortions are performed later than this.
But couldn‘t these be a
reflex?
ow, you might be thinking, okay,
well, these responses might all be a
reflex, you know. Like, he might
actually be feeling no pain in reality.
Well, it‘s possible, but let‘s not be too
hasty here.
The reaction you see in an 8-week-old
embryo, moving from whatever is touching
them could be an automatic movement, but
that doesn‘t
discount
pain. If you
accidentally prick a baby with a diaper pin
he‘s going to automatically recoil in the
same way, and yet we don‘t think, ‗Oh, it‘s
alright, he can‘t feel anything, it‘s just a
reflex.‘
573
Besides, if the fetus
could not and was
not
experiencing anything, why would his
brain respond (causing a change in blood
flow or hormones, movement or facial
grimace)?
574
The fetus responds. We know that.
Those responses are what you would expect
from a person. If we can‘t prove the fetus
feels pain, we certainly can‘t prove that she
doesn‘t. In fact, the evidence all points to
her feeling.
Different historical period, same
ignorance
―Many 19th-century doctors believed
blacks were indifferent to pain and
performed surgery on them without
even
that
era‘s
rudimentary
anesthesia.‖
575
—
The New York Times Magazine
, 2008
Pro-choicers perspective on
fetal pain
hat do pro-choicers have to say
about this? At least they do
admit, ―The question of fetal
pain is an unavoidable issue.‖
576
However,
just because they admit it‘s an issue doesn‘t
N
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230
mean they care. ―We don‘t have to
demonstrate that abortion is painless in
order to defend its constitutionality.‖
577
Planned Parenthood‘s defense is quite
ludicrous when you consider that even
premature babies have definite pain
responses. ―It is even possible that a fetus is
unable to perceive pain at any time during
pregnancy.‖
578
A further pro-choice argument is that
the fetus might die before he realizes he‘s
being killed (which is ridiculous, since even
animals
realize
they
are
at
the
slaughterhouse):
Fetuses biochemical responses to painful
events may be delayed due to slower
transmissions of information to the brain. If
so, faster methods of abortion, such as the
D&X procedure, might circumvent the pain
problem by causing the fetus to die more
quickly than its nervous system can
effectively transmit sensory information to
the brain.
579
(D&X refers to partial-birth
abortion.)
Let me respond to that argument for a
moment. Before a D&X abortion, the fetus
is aware, because he is kicking his legs and
clasping and unclasping his little fingers
(remember, those are the bits that get
delivered – that‘s why it‘s called partial-
birth). When the surgical scissors are stuck
into his brain the fetus throws his arms and
legs out ―like a startle reaction, like a
flinch‖
as
one
experienced
nurse
observed.
580
Yes, he knows something‘s
happening, even if he doesn‘t know that in
the next second the abortionist will suck
out his brain and crush his skull. (Ewww,
that‘s gross, isn‘t it?) It would be fair to note
that this procedure has been outlawed —
but also to note that the reason we are
talking about it in the first place is that a
pro-choice book says this method may be
preferable pain-wise. It makes you wonder
what the other procedures are like!
The Silent Scream
emember the ―Silent Scream‖ —
that famous video of a 12-week
abortion taped on ultrasound? After
seeing it the abortionist never performed
another abortion.
581
Remember the open
mouth — hey, I couldn‘t see it but those 2D
ultrasounds never did much for me
anyhow. Anyway, even if he was screaming
his little heart out, you would hear nothing
since there is no air in the womb (or the
fetus‘ lungs for that matter) and air is
required for creating sound.
What would happen if there were air?
You could hear the fetus — and what a
surprising thing that would be!
582
In fact it‘s
not just theory. In the rare case that a
medical procedure has introduced air into
the womb the fetus has actually been heard
wailing.
583
But, back to the Silent Scream. Planned
R
231
Parenthood was correct in pointing out that
a scream cannot be made without air, but
that technicality doesn‘t mean that the
fetus wasn‘t trying to mouth a scream.
584
After all, that‘s why it‘s called the
Silent
Scream.
They also point out that premature
babies can‘t scream
.
585
Now that is true.
They are very often weak and delicate and
their lungs are not fully prepared for air
breathing. But it‘s also true that the fetus
practices breathing movements from week
12 and that he has been seen on modern
ultrasound in the third trimester making all
the correct motions for crying.
586
Planned
Parenthood…says that we
are just witnessing a reflex. I
don‘t buy that.
Despite the fact that I couldn‘t make out
the mouth, the fetus certainly appeared
distressed. I say that because before the
abortion you could see him on the screen
just making these random movements.
Then all of a sudden when the suction tube
comes in range (okay, I did make that out),
he starts moving about violently in what
looks like an attempt to move in the
opposite
direction
to
the
suction
machine.
587
Planned Parenthood, who
claims this is pro-life propaganda, says that
we are just witnessing a reflex.
588
I don‘t
buy that.
Planned Parenthood says, ―At this stage
of pregnancy, all fetal movement is
reflexive in nature‖ and they also cite
thumb sucking as an example. How can
anyone prove that the fetus doesn‘t suck his
thumb for pleasure or that he doesn‘t enjoy
it? Just because it develops a useful
biological function of teaching him to suck
doesn‘t mean it doesn‘t bring him comfort,
as it does after birth. It seems Professor of
Neurology Dr. Richard Restak agrees with
me: ―Even the fetus it seems, requires
comfort, solace, some sense of meaning,
even though that meaning at such an early
stage
may
involve
nothing
more
complicated than the feel of its own
thumb.‖
589
In promoting the view of Planned
Parenthood, a reviewer on Amazon.com
declared that the fetus could not possibly
feel pain at this age because there is ―no
way of getting the signal from still-
developing pain-receptive nerves to the
brain.‖
590
But, I ask, if there is no way
messages could get to the brain, why is he
moving and why did his heart rate shoot
up?
See
also
Reason
#49:
Abortion
procedures are brutal
232
For a clinic worker‘s experience of a
similar experience with watching an
abortion see
Reason #8: If only you
could see what she looks like
What needs to be physically
developed for the fetus to feel
pain?
Thousands of abortions may cause pain to
the unborn child, say doctors preparing to
debate the contentious issue of "fetal
awareness".
591
—―Babies
may
feel
pain
of
abortion,‖
Telegraph.co.uk
he question of reflexes is really the
question of brain. Some people say
that the fetus cannot perceive pain
because his brain is still developing. It‘s
true that the brain is developing, but there
are no agreed-upon timelines for exactly
what has to happen. For the fetus to feel
pain the message must travel from the pain
sensors to the spinal cord and up to the
thalamus, then through to the cortex.
At least, that‘s how we
think
it happens.
Another idea is that the thalamus is able to
process the nerve signals and send a
response back to the muscles.
592
That makes
sense in that the fetus responds before his
cortex has developed — and I say
something
had to send his nerves a message
to move his arm away!
What‘s developed when?
The brain actually is the first organ to
start developing. At 3 weeks the embryo
first looks like a rolled-up zipper mostly
done up. What you are seeing is the
spinal cord — and a future brain on top.
Specifically,
The spinal cord (highway for the
nerves) begins at 3 weeks.
593
The nerve cells (the components of the
brain and nervous system) begin at 4 or
5 weeks and are not finished until 18
weeks.
594
The thalamus (a part of the brain and
bridge between the cortex and sensory
information) begins forming at week
8.
595
The cortex (logical thought center)
begins in week 8.
596
The connections between the thalamus
and cortex occur around week 23.
597
For more on brain development see
Reason #15
.
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233
Let‘s talk about the cortex —
do you need one to feel?
octors have always assumed that
no one could possibly function
without a cortex, yet a recent study
of hydranencephalic children suggests
otherwise.
598
(Children born with this
condition
are
missing
a
part
of
their brain.)
599
Swedish neuroscientist
Bjorn Merker studied a group of
hydranencephalic children at Disney Land,
observing them to be responsive by
laughing, crying, smiling, fussing and
appearing alert and aware — all this,
without a cortex.
600
The
New York Times
commented,
―The
possibility
of
consciousness without a cortex may also
influence our opinion of what a fetus can
feel.‖
601
This, after all, is what people point
to, saying that the fetus is not intelligent
and cannot feel pain..
Parents of hydranencephalic children
also observe that they can still experience
something of life with their limited
faculties.
The
International
Hydra-
nencephaly Support Group says:
It seems that they rely largely on their
brainstems
for
relating
to
their
surroundings, for expressing themselves
and
for
their
various
emotional
reactions….Although it is often thought
that someone has to have a cortex in order
to be aware and interact with their
environment,
children
with
Hydra-
nencephaly prove otherwise.
602
Can pain be experienced without a
cortex? Barb Alemán, parent and founder of
the support group mentioned above, says,
―Yes, in my experience children with
Hydranencephaly feel pain like any other
child. They also have the same emotions as
any other child. Some children are less
responsive than others, but yes, they do
experience pain.‖
603
If children without a cortex can feel and
be aware, then why can‘t a fetus without a
cortex (or without nerve connections to the
cortex)?
So, remember, we‘re responding to
Planned Parenthood‘s arguments and we‘re
talking about what a fetus needs to perceive
pain. We just looked at the possibility of
feeling and awareness without a cortex.
Now let‘s look at just how important it is
that the nerve cells be myelinated. It‘s not
as black and white as you might think.
Does the fetus need
myelinated nerves to feel
pain?
erve
cells
carry
messages.
Myelination is the body‘s way of
insulating part of the nerve cell in
order to make the electrical impulses or
messages more effective and efficient.
604
It‘s
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234
basically insulation for electrical wiring,
inside of you.
You might remember people saying, a
fetus can‘t perceive pain because his nerves
aren‘t myelinated. Well, they are mostly
correct, but here are some points not taken
into account:
1. ―Although myelin is extremely
important, some current gets through
without myelin.‖
605
Wow, I never knew
that.
2. The more impulses are sent the more
the nerves are myelinated.
606
Huh,
interesting.
3. Some unmyelinated cells can still
carry massages, although they are much
slower – about 10 times slower.
607
All along
I thought it was impossible without myelin.
4. Nerves connecting to internal organs
are never myelinated.
608
I guess that makes
sense.
5. Some nerves are myelinated at a few
weeks old, while others are not fully
finished until puberty.
609
It sounds like it
happens gradually.
Language and socialization
not necessary for pain
experience
hose people who can‘t argue that the
fetus doesn‘t respond and can‘t win
the cortex/myelination argument
change their reasoning. They say pain is
something you have to learn to understand.
Do you believe that? I don‘t.
True, it‘s subjective and depends on
your personal pain threshold, but I don‘t
buy that the fetus has no sense of what is
going on. You don‘t need ‗language‘ or
‗interaction‘ to feel pain, as Stuart
Derbyshire suggests.
610
A newborn pricked
with a needle needs no one to inform him
that what he indeed is feeling in the left
heel is to be interpreted as pai,n and that he
should let out a loud wail as a socially
appropriate response to that pain. Nor does
he need language to comprehend or express
his discomfort — he just opens his mouth
and out it comes. Time and experience are
not requirements for feeling pain. While
psychological pain is one thing, physical
pain is another.
611
I debate Derbyshire who says that the
fetus has no language skills and therefore
does not know the difference between ―
‗large or small, hot or cold, red or green‘ or,
Derbyshire argues, painful or pleasant.‖
612
How ridiculous! Certainly, the fetus may
not know the
names
for things. However,
that does not mean that in the absence of
knowing ‗that thing is called green‘ that he
only sees black and white — or just ‗white‘
— but even that is a tone! It is a bit like
saying a tourist trying a new Chinese dish
cannot know the difference between two
dishes or tell them apart, because he does
T
235
not know what they are called in Chinese
or how to pronounce their names.
Now, following this researcher‘s own
logic about the fetus needing experience
and language, he says that babies can‘t feel
pain until they are 1-year-old.
613
The
timeline may be a bit extended, he admits,
but ―who knows when the light finally
switches on?‖
614
Yes, who indeed knows?
Actually, ask any parent of a newborn
child, Derbyshire. Or my husband. As a
baby,
he passed out
while
being
circumcised without anesthetic.
It is claims like this that make you
wonder whether some people ever
switched on the light bulb themselves. It
should be noted, as I later found out, that
this fellow actually worked as a consultant
for Planned Parenthood at one time, which
perhaps his explains his biased viewpoint.
615
He is of all things a psychologist — not a
pediatrician, neuroscientist or medical
doctor — and yet, he‘s quoted in major
newspapers as an expert on fetal pain.
Awareness of pain goes beyond
an intellectual awareness
he main argument against fetal pain
is that the fetus is not aware, and
therefore everything he does —
even if it looks like he‘s in pain — is just an
automatic, non-thinking motion, a reflex.
But this also assumes that we are our brain
and that our brain is our source of
consciousness, something not every truth
seeker will identify with. As we see in
Reason #87
, brain and consciousness is a
complex topic. It‘s a lot more than just gray
matter. There is brain awareness, then
there is body intelligence, and there is also
the mind that is capable of outer body
experiences as well as the soul.
Like consciousness, pain awareness is
not a switch that suddenly turns on one
day, nor is it isolated in a little section of
the brain. Instead, anecdotal stories suggest
that the fetus becomes aware during
pregnancy and, at the very least, has a soul
memory.
For the believers it may be
all that is needed to confirm
that a fetus has memory and
feeling
Take Gianna, who was aborted but
survived the saline abortion. A nurse took
pity on her and she lived. Let me recall for
you an incident from when Gianna was
four years old. Her adopted parents had
taken her to visit some friends at the log
cabin they were staying in. Nobody was
prepared for Gianna‘s reaction.
T
236
After seeing their wood fire she started
screaming, in terror, says the story. She was
hysterical and had to be carried out and
comforted and reassured. When she had
calmed down she was brought back inside,
but again started crying. Her parents had to
leave early.
Gianna became upset around any
campfire, open fire and fire in a fireplace.
Even loud, roaring sounds in movies or
fireworks bothered her and made her upset.
Eventually, the family took her to a
counselor. Two doctors conferred and
concluded, ―She is subconsciously reliving
the abortion. The roaring and crackling
sounds recapitulate the effects of the saline
solution as it burned her in the womb.‖
616
While this is not something I can prove
to you, for the believers it may be all that is
needed to confirm that a fetus has memory
and feeling.
Here is an even more interesting story,
retold in
The Castaways
by Sarah Hinze. A
mother was in therapy for her daughter.
Since birth her daughter had shown an
absolute fear of fires, and so far no one had
been able to help. What happened during
the session surprised her mother as well.
When
the
therapist
hypnotically
regressed the girl she started experiencing
being pulled from her mother‘s belly and
thrown into a fire. At hearing this, the
mother too began crying, as she confessed
how she had indeed gotten pregnant but
had been forced into a brutal abortion by
her drunk boyfriend and his buddies. At
the ‗party‘ she was forced into an abortion,
after which the fetus was thrown into the
fire. She admitted that she had told no one
about this dark day until now. So how
could her daughter possibly know?
The mother explained how, when her
daughter was born, she had felt the same
connection with her as she‘d felt with the
child from the previous pregnancy.
617
The
child had indeed come back to her, but in
her soul, her subconscious or unconscious
she had remembered and retained that fear
of dying in a fire. Truly we carry more
memories than we think.
Again, I cannot prove this story to you
as though it could be tested under a
microscope. I simply offer it as food for
thought.
For more on soul memories turn to
Reason #88: We are self-aware before
birth
.
A final word…does no pain
make it less wrong?
―Is someone who feels little or no pain (a
patient under anesthesia, a cancer
victim
having
undergone
dorsal
rhizotomy, or a chronic invalid on
heavy analgesic medication) somehow
diminished
in
the
personhood
237
sweepstakes?‖
618
-Dr. Bernard Nathanson
Reason #53
―There is evidence to suggest
that the fetus does feel pain‖
Reason #54
You can begin
bonding with your
baby now!
What has this got to do with
abortion?
any times we see an unplanned
pregnancy as a difficult thing,
but it can also be a joy. Instead of
contemplating how to abort your baby‘s
life, why not take the same time to begin
bonding. Yes, right now before she‘s even
born! Doesn‘t that sound more pleasant?
Take time to feel close
hroughout history mothers and their
children have shared a special bond.
As a pregnant female you carry
inside yourself a growing child – you are a
mother! You can start bonding with your
growing child today. Here are a few ideas to
get you started:
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