30
like that will happen, not to you; it just isn‘t
quite real, until it does happen.
The days of waiting for a missed period.
The absolute certainty that my parents
would have nothing to do with me if I
showed up pregnant. The sudden
distancing of ―Jacob.‖ ―What are
YOU
going
to do?‖ Not ―we,‖ just simply, me. Alone
again. The trip to Planned Parenthood to
confirm the test I had done at home, alone.
More shame, more disappointment for my
family. I didn‘t trust my own ability to
parent, didn‘t know about any other option,
other than to do what I knew he wanted....
―I didn‘t trust my own
ability to parent‖
Deep inside, I wanted him to insist that
we get married. Wanted it right up until
the moment it was too late. Wanted with
all my heart for him to bang open the door
and punch out the abortion doctor, drag me
away and make everything all right, for all
three of us.
Prince Charming turned out to be not so
charming, after all. He sat there, in the
waiting room at the hospital, while I was
on that table being lied to, chain smoking
cigarettes and waiting for me to come drive
us home afterwards.
Oh, I had tried to change his mind,
argued long and hard against having the
abortion. He finally told me very bluntly
that if I didn‘t have the abortion, that he
wasn‘t going to be tied down, he wasn‘t
going to be trapped. He would leave town if
he had to, and I would be on my own.
Defeated, numb, feeling like it was all a
bad dream that I couldn‘t wake up and
escape from, I finally gave in. I had no one
to turn to, didn‘t know about places to help
young women in my situation. Didn‘t
know how to even find out. I thought
Planned Parenthood was the modern thing
to do, the only game in town. I had spent
half of life hiding one secret shame of being
fat, it was just automatic for me to hide this
one, too.
56
—Rachel
How would you feel?
Story 4
ow would you feel if at age 15 you
found yourself pregnant and
confused? You didn‘t tell your
parents because you wanted to decide for
yourself, yet when
your boyfriend
threatens you, you decided to go through
with it. Sounds like an unwanted choice to
me!
I didn‘t think that I could tell my
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parents because they had made it very clear
that sex before marriage was a sin and not
an acceptable behavior, let alone to be
pregnant. I figured they would be so upset
and force me to keep the baby and not have
any choice in the matter. I went to friends
for advice and my boyfriend who
threatened me that I had better have an
abortion.
―I was so scared and
confused‖
I was so scared and confused and getting
advice from other teenagers wasn‘t exactly
helpful. I was only 15; I had a hard enough
time deciding what color backpack would
look the best to take to school, let alone
deciding what to do about a child that I was
carrying. I went to Planned Parenthood for
an appointment, and they told me that they
would pay for an abortion if I wanted it and
give me birth control for free afterwards.
I don‘t remember the person at Planned
Parenthood really explaining to me any
after affects from the abortion, risks,
downsides, etc. But after a fight, more
threats about having the baby and a fist in
the gut from my boyfriend, I decided to go
through with the abortion.
—Nicole
How would you feel?
Story 5
ow would you feel if you broke up
with your boyfriend because he
was cheating on you, and then
found out you were pregnant? You were
only age 16 and were starting to use a
wheelchair. You didn‘t want an abortion,
but you didn‘t know what else to do.
Sounds like an unwanted choice to me!
A couple days before Christmas, I found
that my boyfriend had been cheating on
me, so I broke up with him. As time went
on, I got extremely tired, and by Christmas,
I was sleeping all day and the smell of
ANYTHING
made me sick. I still didn't think
I was pregnant because I never vomited. I
thought I had the flu, so I constantly took
cold pills and aspirin. By this time, my
mother kept saying that I was pregnant,
and I responded with "No, I'm not."
In the second week of January, my
mother bought me a pregnancy test. It was
bright pink, and as my mom told me that I
was pregnant, I still refused that we had
had sex. (I thought that she would think
that we were fooling around and his semen
got into my vagina.) For some reason I
thought it would be worse if she knew we
had sex.
The look of hurt and disappointment on
her face killed me. I went to my room and
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cried. As my father walked in from work,
my mother told him. He was so
disappointed he would not speak to me at
all. My mother waited in the living room
for me to get home from school. As I came
through the door she asked me what I
wanted to do. I didn't know. I was 16 and
pregnant, no boyfriend, and I have a disease
called Muscular Dystrophy and was just
starting to use a wheelchair.
―I wanted to keep my
baby.‖
She told me that she called my
neurologist and made sure I could go
through it, and that she made an
appointment for me to have an abortion on
January 17, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
because I had off from school. I could go to
school the next day and no one would ever
know. I was against abortion, "Thou Shalt
Not Kill," you know. The next week I could
think of nothing except that I wanted to
keep my baby. My mother didn't care and
my father would not speak to me.
—Christy
Reason #6
―Abortion is often an unwanted
choice – is this true for you?‖
Reason #7
No one likes
abortion
Not abortionists
urn to…
Reason #61: Abortionists
don‘t enjoy their job.
OK, they do
like the money. See
Reason #60: The
abortion industry is a business.
Not pro-choicers
ven many pro-choicers say abortion
is a "necessary evil." It‘s not
something to be proud of. It‘s not
something you celebrate with a party or a
bottle of wine — except maybe to drown
your sorrows. Abortion does not make you
feel exhilarated, liberated or overjoyed. It is
a somber, serious time. But why?
You might have heard some pro-
choicers say that they do not like abortion
any more than pro-lifers do and that they
object to the label ―pro-abortion.‖ Well, if
that is the case, my question to you is, what
don‘t you like about abortion? What is
wrong with it? Isn‘t it just a simple, safe,
legal procedure on a woman‘s body? That‘s
what we‘re told, isn‘t it?
Let me share a quick story. A pro-lifer
was once being interviewed on air when he
T
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asked the pro-choice interviewer why she
didn‘t like being called pro-abortion. She
said, ―Abortion is tough. It‘s not like
anybody really wants one.‖ The pro-lifer
responded, ―What makes it tough? Why
wouldn‘t someone want one?‖ Without
thinking the pro-choicer responded, ―Well,
it‘s a tough thing to kill your baby.‖ As the
pro-lifer relates, ―The moment she said it,
she caught herself and tried to backtrack.
But it was too late. In an unguarded
moment she had used the ‗B-word‘: baby.‖
57
These next comments come from
pro-
choice
women admitting abortion is a bad
thing:
We think abortion is a bad thing. No
woman wants to have an abortion.
58
—Kate Michelman, president NARAL Pro-Choice
America
Abortion in many ways represents a sad,
even tragic choice to many, many women.
59
—Hillary Clinton, while a senator of NY
Abortion is a heartbreak.
60
—Ginette Paris, The Sacrament of Abortion
The Ambivalence of Abortion,
an older
pro-choice book, speaks very candidly
about abortion. Although the author
believes in abortion, her words betray her.
While she discusses how important and
necessary abortion is, the stories tell a sorry
tale.
The women in her book all describe
these bizarre, unhappy lives leading to
abortion — itself unhappy — then they end
with some statement that they‘re really
okay or why it was the right thing for
them. In some of the stories the women
don‘t make much sense at all, even to
themselves.
For example, one woman who had had
three abortions recalled a conversation
she‘d had with a friend who‘d also had an
abortion. ―It‘s just an embryo, I told her…
It‘s not a being, just a bunch of splitting
cells.‖ Her friend replied that it was killing,
but justifiable. Then she says, ―Now if I
took that as my own philosophy I couldn‘t
follow through with it. I‘d have to have the
baby. I agree with her, of course, but I just
won‘t admit it.‖ Her story ends with
―Maybe I should go to a psychiatrist, but I
don‘t really have the money or the interest.
Truth is hard to take, and I just don‘t know
if I‘m ready for it.‖
61
Another woman has had one living
child and five miscarriages. Although all
her life she had wanted to get pregnant, she
decided this time she didn‘t want to risk
losing the baby again — she was going to
abort him instead and get there first –
―With so many miscarriages, I decided to be
in control of the situation this time.‖ Then
she says, ―Now I‘m getting my tubes tied.
Then I won‘t ever have to go through
34
another abortion.‖
62
This sounds to me like
someone who is so hurt from continually
losing her babies that she mistakenly thinks
she can avoid further hurt by getting rid of
them herself. Then, despite the fact that she
makes out like the abortion is no big deal,
she wants permanent surgery so that she‘ll
never have to go through another abortion.
In some of the stories the
women don‘t make much
sense at all, even to
themselves
Perhaps I‘m just picking the wrong
stories, you say. Well, what about this one,
which shows that ―for some women,
abortion can be a positive experience and a
period of personal growth‖?
63
The woman
in question had had a string of weird
relationships leading to two abortions.
After the abortion she broke up with the
man and is pleased that they are just
friends. During the abortion she said, ―I
couldn‘t stop crying. It was partly the pain
and partly that I was really disgusted at
what I was doing.‖ The story ends with ―So
in a way I feel right now, this abortion‘s
really been a positive one. And maybe it‘s
going to be okay, now.‖
64
And this is the most positive experience
the author can find?
She doesn‘t sound too convinced to me.
―In a way,‖ ―right now,‖ ―maybe,‖ ―okay‖.
These are not words of someone who is
convinced she did the right thing and is
feeling great about it. These are the words
of a woman who has been through a lot and
is hoping that the future will be better than
the past.
What about the woman who claimed,
―The abortion was a positive experience‖?
That all sounds fine and dandy, but the rest
of her story doesn‘t add up. She also said, ―I
never told my family or friends about the
abortion. I didn‘t even like the word …I
didn‘t admit for the longest time that I‘d
had an abortion. It took me thirty years to
say the word and admit it.‖
65
Does she
really sound liberated and happy? Sounds
more like repression and denial to me.
This is just a sample of the stories out
there. There are more in the book and
many online.
66
Not pro-lifers
Um, that‘s kind of obvious, isn‘t it?
Not women
See
Reason #5: Most women want
support not abortion
35
Not men
Ok, irresponsible men do. Honest guys
don‘t. Read
Reason #83: The father might
regret it too.
Not children
Okay, okay, you‘ll have to give me some
creative liberty here, but stay with me, I
have some good reasons:
Reason #87: Your unborn baby is
intelligent
Reason #53: The fetus can feel pain
Reason #16: Do you kill a child for
their own good?
It seems pretty clear that if a fetus is
aware and can feel pain, then no matter
how you choose to regard the unborn child,
he or she would not be enjoying having his
or her life ended. Even if it was for his or
her own good, which is questionable.
Reason #7
―No element of society, not even
pro-choicers, like abortion‖
Reason #8
If only you could see
what she looks like
The power of an image
We insist that visual aid materials not be
presented by either side.
67
—
Abortion Practice
(abortionist‘s training manual,
on high school presentation policies)
n 2009 Abby Johnson, the employee of
a Planned Parenthood clinic in Texas,
saw something that changed her heart
forever. Yes, this clinic director of 8 years
and 2008 ―Employee of the Year‖ changed
sides.
68
Why? She was sick of the way she
was being told to bring up abortion
numbers to increase income. But the main
reason was that while helping with a
procedure, she got to watch it, too. While
not used regularly for early abortions, this
ultrasound was being employed to guide
the 13 week procedure. Abby‘s role was to
help hold the ultrasound probe in place so
the abortionist would have a visual guide.
Abby notes that she could see the side view
of the fetus on the screen. This is what
happened next. ―I saw the probe going into
the woman‘s uterus and at that moment I
saw the baby moving and trying to get
away from the probe …and I thought, it‘s
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fighting for its life…it‘s alive...My mind
was racing, my heart was beating so fast…
and then all of a sudden, I mean, it was just
over, just in the blink of an eye, and I just
saw, I just saw the baby just literally just
crumble…and it was over. And I, I just, I
dropped the ultrasound probe… I was just
thinking, what am I doing, what, what, am
I doing here… I had one hand on this, on
this woman‘s belly, and I was thinking,
there was life in here and now there‘s not.‖
The pregnant woman never saw any of this
either – she had been given sedation.
69
Many things change when you can see
what you‘re looking at. Bernard Nathanson
also quit abortions after a similar
encounter, although pro-choicers denied
his experience (which we discuss in
Reason
#53
).
―I was just thinking, what
am I doing?‖
Do you think there is anything alive in
there? Sure there is! In the past, technology
didn‘t allow us to watch a fetus move, and
we certainly couldn‘t watch her yawn. We
were pretty ignorant but now can see all
these wonderful things and more.
Even pro-choice advocates are having a
―hard time‖ coming to terms with the
―increased visibility of the fetus,‖ as one
prominent pro-choicer recently admitted.
70
Until recently, all ultrasounds were
those fuzzy looking 2D images that made it
hard to figure out which end was the nose
and which were the toes! Many are still like
that. But as newer 3D and 4D technology
emerges, we are beginning to see amazingly
clear images and even video clips (that‘s the
4D part). Where the fetus was once a
hidden presence, many of us are having to
rethink our opinion on abortion.
Confessions from pro-choice
literature
―The need to offer some answers from a
pro-choice perspective is both morally
and politically urgent… There are
scientific advances that affect the way
we think about the fetus… Examples
include 3-D and 4-D pictures of fetuses
in utero that appear to be awake, asleep,
sucking, yawning — engaging in
activities that are related to human
identity.‖
71
—Frances Kissling,
Abortion Under Attack:
Women on the Challenges Facing Choice
Actually observed on
ultrasound!
want to share with you some amazing
things that have all been observed on
ultrasound.
72
As you read the following
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37
list keep in mind these words by one pro-
choicer, who reassured herself following
her abortion that ―It was not that I‘d got rid
of a living creature.‖
73
moving (6-8 weeks)
74
thumb sucking (9-13 weeks)
75
stepping reflex (11-12 weeks)
76
yawning (12-30 weeks)
77
swallowing (18 weeks)
78
opening and closing eyes (18 weeks)
79
hand brushing face (22 weeks)
80
dreaming REM (23 weeks)
81
sticking out her tongue (24 weeks)
82
smiling (26 weeks)
83
crying motions (26-28 weeks)
84
playing with nose (32 weeks)
85
I couldn‘t think of it as a
baby…
―My heart was hardened. Not once did I
think of my baby as a baby. I couldn‘t
allow myself to think that way…The
ultimate truth was hard to face.‖
86
—―Ila,‖
Aborted Women: Silent No More
Pregnant women often change their
mind after an ultrasound.
Ultrasound plays an interesting role. On
one hand it can help pregnant mothers
bond with their babies, while on the other
hand it‘s used by abortionists to locate that
same fetus for ―termination.‖
Many women have had a change of
heart after seeing their baby on ultrasound.
Even though the pictures they see are
usually the fuzzy ones and not the clear
high technology 3D ones, there is
something about listening to the heartbeat
of your baby or seeing movement on the
screen. Somehow, instead of it being about
"my body," it becomes clear that this is
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