Thursday, July 16, 2015
NWF Official Response to Planned Parenthoods Busted Bustedness
And then of course, how could we not....
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Confessions of a Reformed Baby Saver
I
always knew I should've been aborted. No part of my existence made sense. My mother
was 19, and abortion had already been legal for ten years. She was living on
her own in a liberal college town while attending the University of Texas, and
the worst part? My grandparents were ministers.
In
order for her to “have me” she would have to drop out of school, move back home to
Dallas and—perhaps most horrifyingly—let her parents know she wasn’t a virgin.
She
did all of those things. She gave me life and because of that she is and always
will be my hero. Because of that I also always felt very close to the unborn.
For the first decade and a half of my life I was outspokenly anti-abortion. If
you wanted to defend it I’d shove a picture of an aborted fetus in your face
without a second thought. To me these were my brother and sisters in crisis
pregnancies being slaughtered thanks to an apathetic society. I wanted everyone to feel something, anything, about abortion. If you
loved it, then fine. You loved murdering innocent children and I was going to
let you know it.
Then,
at 16, I became pregnant. I was terrified. I was having a baby in nine months
and all I wanted to do was rip my stomach off of my body and die. I had let
everyone down. If anybody knew better than to make this mistake it was me.
Hadn’t I seen, hell, lived the consequences of an
unplanned pregnancy?! It took my mother a decade to finally complete her
degree. I watched her fall prey to men she should’ve never been with just to
provide some sense of normalcy for me. In between classes, I celebrated my
birthday at the restaurants where she waited tables. I. Knew. Better. How had I
gotten myself into the very same predicament…?
I
returned to school for my junior year with a big swollen belly teetering on my
childlike frame. I’d waddle from class to class, deflecting whispers and dirty
looks as I went. My now ex boyfriend wanted nothing to do with the whole thing
and had transferred schools, so there were now rumors that he wasn’t even the
father. I spent most of my lunch periods in the bathroom crying, partially
because of hormones, but mostly because teenagers can be so very cruel. When I
wasn’t broken I was angry. I walked the halls angry because it was the only
defense mechanism I had.
That’s
when it happened. I remember it like it was yesterday.
I’d
known her since 7th grade; we’d gone to the same middle school. She
got boobs before the rest of us and was always smoking over in the woods behind
the school. We weren’t friends really, but once you move to high school those
acquaintances become like relatives you have no choice but to accept because
there’s that familiarity which breeds camaraderie. I was on my way up the
stairs when she stopped me...
“I
was pregnant this summer too.”
It
caught me off guard.
“Was?” The word rolled around in
my head until it finally engaged. “She
was pregnant… but she’s not now.”
“I
had an abortion…” she continued. She kept talking but there was a rage now
taking over my body. I can only describe it as that thing we all saw in
cartoons growing up. The information hit my temporal cortex and everything
caught on fire. Suddenly smoke was shooting out of my ears and a high-pitched
train whistle was drowning out everything she was saying. Could she not tell
obviously I was not cool with that option? Did she not see the looks? Hear the
whispers? If I was okay with abortion wouldn’t I have had one myself to avoid
this hell where I currently dwelt?!
I looked her in the eye and said the following, word for word:
I looked her in the eye and said the following, word for word:
“So
you killed your baby? You’re a baby killer… and you’re proud of it?”
She
spit a few choice profanities at me and I continued up the stairs, honestly
feeling pretty pleased with myself. Funny how that happens when you’re mad. The
rage builds up and finds a release valve through your mouth and for one minute
you feel relieved. Then you realize what you’ve just done.
I wish I could say my regret came that quickly, but it did not. It wasn’t until later that afternoon that I was made aware of the impact of my words.
I wish I could say my regret came that quickly, but it did not. It wasn’t until later that afternoon that I was made aware of the impact of my words.
My
mother had just gotten home and I couldn’t wait to recount the day’s events to
her. Obviously she would be so proud, since she herself had been on this end of
the “crisis”…a hormonal, hot mess.
As soon as I finished telling her what had happened her eyes turned sad. They weren’t full of the pride I’d anticipated. She was so ashamed of me.
“Maybe her next abortion will be in your honor,” she said.
As soon as I finished telling her what had happened her eyes turned sad. They weren’t full of the pride I’d anticipated. She was so ashamed of me.
“Maybe her next abortion will be in your honor,” she said.
Her
words pierced my core and instantaneously transformed me. In that moment, with
that one line, I saw so clearly what I’d done. I hadn’t related to her as a
fellow female going through an incredibly difficult and heart-wrenching time.
I’d attacked her as a former fetus who could’ve just as easily been aborted.
The “baby saver” I was in that moment would guarantee the “woman in crisis” she
was would never confide in me again.
My mother’s words that day softened my heart. I shed the anger and let it take its more vulnerable root form: fear. I decided to show others how scared I was, but let them know it was still possible to choose life amidst all the uncertainties because we females are so much stronger than we realize. I accepted my new identity as a girl who was in the shoes of every girl who was walking through the doors of that abortion clinic, and not the child in their womb. I was clearly on the other side now. I just had the support and information they didn’t. That’s all that separated us.
My mother’s words that day softened my heart. I shed the anger and let it take its more vulnerable root form: fear. I decided to show others how scared I was, but let them know it was still possible to choose life amidst all the uncertainties because we females are so much stronger than we realize. I accepted my new identity as a girl who was in the shoes of every girl who was walking through the doors of that abortion clinic, and not the child in their womb. I was clearly on the other side now. I just had the support and information they didn’t. That’s all that separated us.
The
universe has a funny way of giving us second chances and I’m almost always too
lazy to be prepared when they come along. The very next day an almost identical
situation happened. Another girl who I’d known for years but was never
particularly close to came up to me in the lunchroom.
I
was sitting at a long empty table reading a book by myself. It took me a moment
to notice her standing there, but as I lowered my book the same words left her
lips…
“I
was pregnant this summer too… sucks.”
“Was… was… she used the
same word…”
my brain told me. Unfortunately I hadn’t given much thought to how I would
handle this situation if it ever presented itself, but I knew my silence was
coming off as a form of judgment of its own.
“Oh
yeah,” I asked, “how far a long were you?”
She
stared off for a minute, pretending to do the imaginary math. “Like, 12 weeks
or something…”
“Twelve
weeks… twelve weeks…” my head was buzzing with both appropriate and
inappropriate responses and all I wanted to do was say something non-emotional,
non-condemning. Facts maybe? But what facts did I have? Only those dumb babycenter.com
fetal development ones I was getting emailed to me every other day.
“Twelve
weeks… so that’s like eye lashes and fingernails, right?”
The
second it exited the buzzing in my head and flew out of my mouth I realized
what I’d just done.
I
watched it sting her.
This conversation ended almost identical to the one the day prior, however there was a major change in me. I was not talking to her as a baby saver condemning her choice. I was speaking to her as a woman who had also been in that situation (was currently in that situation) and had vital information made available to me. There was no anger, only facts.
In years since I have tried to go beyond that. I don’t just want to offer women what I had as far as fetal development information… knowledge of which all women should have before they make a decision as significant as abortion. But I want to offer them the resources I was lucky enough to have as well.
There
was never a fear of being kicked out of my home when I found out I was pregnant.
My family was able to afford basic medical care for me and my child, and there
would be diapers and nursery equipment in subsequent months if I chose to
parent rather than place him for adoption.
So
many women do not have these things. Basic facts and practical needs are what
keep them from choosing life, but so is compassion.
They
expect us to yell. They want us to, believe it or not.
I
did.
I
wanted someone to berate me… to tell me what a fool I was for ruining my life
and dragging an innocent child into this mess. If someone would’ve tried to
“baby save” my fetus while treating me like crap I would’ve been all over that
because trust me, there’s not a name they could’ve thrown at me that I hadn’t
already called myself.
But
no one did. Instead they cried with me… not for me. They offered kindness and
support and let me know I was still loved even when I felt so unlovable.
That’s
when I went from a baby saver to an advocate for women, which often times saves
them both.
****************************************************************************
Post by Destiny
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