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I had an abortion

Forty percent of American women have abortions by the time they're 45. I'm one of them.
By ANONYMOUS  |  September 24, 2008

feat_Abortion_inside.jpg

"Where they stand: McCain and Obama on repro rights," by Deirdre Fulton

"Personally speaking: Abortion and Life tells whole truths," by Deirdre Fulton

Every few months, the abortion debate comes back into focus in the mainstream media — like it did a few weeks ago, when the news broke of Bristol Palin’s pregnancy, and her mother’s stance on abortion rights. That’s when I started feeling guilty, and angry.

The circumstances of my abortion were incredibly mundane. I was 19 years old, a junior at a college in Boston, deeply in love with my boyfriend (J.), and doing well in school. I worked full-time at our school newspaper, heading there daily after class and staying regularly past midnight. I was taking birth-control pills, but my schedule — which forced me to value every last moment of sleep — made me irresponsible about taking the pills at the same time every day. Sometimes I would miss doses entirely and take two in one day to make up for it. Occasionally, I would have (what I didn’t really think of as) unprotected sex; I believed I was protected not only by my inappropriately administered Ortho Tri-Cyclen, but also by young-adult invincibility.

I found out I was pregnant on a Sunday, thanks to a home-pregnancy test that I bought at CVS after discussing with J. that my period was late. I don’t remember being nervous about taking the test. But when I saw the results — positive — I left my dorm suite bathroom and literally crumpled to the floor just outside the door, weeping out of fear and for the decision I knew I would make.

I wasn’t ready to have a child. That’s it. Not financially, not emotionally. There was nothing else to think about. I called J., called Planned Parenthood, and scheduled my abortion for Halloween 2002.

My memories of that day are unformed. They aren’t fuzzy, or hazy, as people describe memories; I believe they literally never took shape. I know that we walked to the Planned Parenthood clinic across the street, and made our way past the protesters who stood — only a few strong — in a cluster outside the state-designated “buffer zone.” Inside, I found out that I was approximately six weeks pregnant. I know that a Planned Parenthood doctor gave me one RU-486 pill at the clinic, and another to take at home. (I’d decided to have a medical abortion, rather than a surgical one, because I thought it would be less physically painful and less invasive — more private. Also, I was within the eight-week time frame when it’s still an option.) She warned me that shortly after taking the second pill, I would experience some pain.

Back at the dorm, hours later, I know that I writhed in my twin bed, suffering from debilitating, convulsing cramps. My roommates, best friend, and boyfriend hovered around; they brought me pain killers, Tiger Balm, hot-water bottles, and applesauce, and all the while they stroked my head and conferenced in the background about how I was doing. I bled profusely as my body rejected the fetus that had been described to me as “the size of a grain of rice.” I threw up. And finally, I fell asleep.

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Related: Obama and McCain: Repro Rights Checklist, Personally speaking, Unveiling the new (old) Planned Parenthood, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Barack Obama, Culture and Lifestyle, Health and Fitness,  More more >
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17 Comments / Add Comment

skybleach

 this story sounds like a friend of mine. Whenever the debate comes up and worst case scenerios come up, I think about her. Her life could have been really hindered.

Posted: September 30 2008 at 2:50 PM

Jakeb64

 A woman's right to choose should not be taken away. I am a Republican, but I still believe in choice. If a woman chooses to have an abortion, it is a decision that she will have to live with the rest of her life. Is that not hard enough? We then have to tell her that it is not ok, that she does not have the right to decide what happens with her own body? As far as no abortions for rape/incest victims, this is insane. I am an overall supported of Sarah Palin, but this is one issue that we definitely do not see eye to eye on. To all of you women out there, take your time. You will have to live with your decision the rest of your life, whichever way you decide. Good luck.

Posted: September 30 2008 at 3:19 PM

namelocbob

 Hindered? Darn it if that would have happened. Good thing your parents chose life for you. My argument is if you wanted to keep the baby and the Father (J) didn't, should he be able to choose aborting child support, emotional, financial and physical? Why are there no laws protecting men's rights on this?

Posted: September 30 2008 at 11:53 PM

Your Baby

You were irresponsible, and didn’t want to have the inconvenience in your life, and so you went and murdered your baby.  Spin it anyway you want, but that is a life and you took it.  I pray for your soul, and your conscience. There are other options available to people that make a mistake and you took the one that would be the most expedient and convenient for you at the detriment of your child. 

Posted: October 01 2008 at 6:53 PM

sMacDonald

The circumstances around my unplanned teenage pregnancy were also "incredibly mundane".  Despite the fact that neither the father nor myself were ready to be the parents this child deserved, I opted to let that rice-sized human being live.  I gave my child up for adoption.  It was the hardest thing I ever did, but I am not ashamed of what I did.  I am proud of my decision and do not have to remain anonymous.

- Sara MacDonald

Posted: October 01 2008 at 10:31 PM

nja123

I think she made the right decision to have an abortion. Yes, she made a preventable mistake, but she was unable at the time to care for the child. Even if the child were put up for adoption, what are the chances that the baby would actually get adopted into a truely loving and caring home? She made the decison about her life and her body. She will learn from her mistake, but it wouldn't be fair to the baby to have a life less than the best without 100% love and devotion. Babies should not grow up knowing that they were a college mistake. 

Posted: October 02 2008 at 10:35 AM

KeegsMom

"You murdered your baby."  Wow. THAT's why women stay anonymous on this topic. How about "You made the best choice for yourself at the time, and undoubtedly the difficuly of the experience will stay with you forever." ?

People who judge others usually do it without walking in the other person's shoes, and they let dogma, closemindedness and self-righteousness prevent them from considering the other person's situation.  

 We certainly don't communicate and dialog the way we used to. It's a shame.

Posted: October 15 2008 at 10:27 AM

Rhonda Keith Stephens

As a woman, I’m surprised that so many feminists despise Palin. There was a time when feminists were sort of in favor of practically any woman in office, no matter what. But as a woman, I’m also not surprised. It’s not exactly about politics, because there are men with similar political views who aren’t hated so violently. There’s some envy in the extreme reactions, but I’m sure it’s mostly because of the abortion issue. It would be interesting to find out who among those who hate her the most have had abortions, and who’ve had them not because the baby had Downs syndrome or some other serious disorder, but because the pregnancy was inconvenient. Statistics say that perhaps one-fourth of all pregnancies in the U.S. are terminated by abortion because the pregnancies were “unintended” and maybe 40% of American women have had abortions. Whatever the number, it’s huge.

What’s changed since the days before abortion was legalized is that now there’s a feeling that abortion is not a painful decision brought on by extreme necessity, but rather it’s what any rational woman should do for any reason or without any reason. From there it's easy to get to the position that someone who doesn’t do it (and who has five kids!) is contemptible (and she makes other women anxious). Why?

            In my experience with friends who've had abortions, it seems that over time the abortion decision made some of them touchy about people with children, particularly if they ultimately never had any. One friend and her husband got angry about a trivial family comedy movie that they said glorified “breeders”.  In a perverse way it’s a kind of Puritanism in new guise: whereas spinsterish types used to have a squeamish contempt for fertile women, as in the movie Cheaper by the Dozen (1950), today the spinsterish types are sexually active but produce no issue, to use an antique phrase. Puritanism is alive in a lot of the quasi-religious fervor of current beliefs about what you should eat and smoke and drive and how many children you should have. And it’s about class too. White trash have children when sophisticated people have abortions (as in the movie Idiocracy).

            But I knew the Palin contempt was also about guilt, and the article by Anonymous in the Boston Phoenix (an “alternative” paper) confirms it. She writes about the abortion had as a 19-year-old college girl in Boston six years ago, when she wasn’t financially or emotionally ready to follow through with the consequences of her decision to have sex, for which she was apparently ready enough. (Why hasn’t sex education fixed all that?) When she learned she was pregnant, “There was nothing else to think about,” she writes. Her guilt isn’t about the abortion per se, she says, but about forgetting to take her birth control pills regularly and about being so privileged that all she had to do was cross the street to get an abortion while other women have to, what, go across town? She had a “medical” abortion rather than a surgical abortion (she took a pill, but surgery is also medical, which I only mention because she meant chemical). The day afterward, she went to an editorial meeting of her school newspaper, where they decided not to print a lucrative pro-life ad because it was against their “principles”. She doesn’t remember if she said anything in the meeting.

Anonymous felt guilty and angry when she read about Palin’s pregnant daughter and Palin’s opposition to abortion. While Anonymous acknowledges that some women face more extreme situations, she thinks her own inconvenience is the equivalent of other motives for abortion. Her highly valuable college life might be hindered temporarily. "Today's society" makes her decision seem somehow less ethically justifiable. People like Sarah Palin make her feel “trite and selfish”. That’s why she’s angry. Her self-esteem has been impinged upon.

      Perhaps in tomorrow's society abortion will be cheerfully encouraged, and even surviving post-abortion, uh, creatures need not live to encroach on the peace of mind of their, um, unintendeds.

Posted: October 23 2008 at 6:13 PM

Rhonda Keith Stephens

As a woman, I’m surprised that so many feminists despise Palin. There was a time when feminists were sort of in favor of practically any woman in office, no matter what. But as a woman, I’m also not surprised. It’s not exactly about politics, because there are men with similar political views who aren’t hated so violently. There’s some envy in the extreme reactions, but I’m sure it’s mostly because of the abortion issue. It would be interesting to find out who among those who hate her the most have had abortions, and who’ve had them not because the baby had Downs syndrome or some other serious disorder, but because the pregnancy was inconvenient. Statistics say that perhaps one-fourth of all pregnancies in the U.S. are terminated by abortion because the pregnancies were “unintended” and maybe 40% of American women have had abortions. Whatever the number, it’s huge.

What’s changed since the days before abortion was legalized is that now there’s a feeling that abortion is not a painful decision brought on by extreme necessity, but rather it’s what any rational woman should do for any reason or without any reason. From there it's easy to get to the position that someone who doesn’t do it (and who has five kids!) is contemptible (and she makes other women anxious). Why?

            In my experience with friends who've had abortions, it seems that over time the abortion decision made some of them touchy about people with children, particularly if they ultimately never had any. One friend and her husband got angry about a trivial family comedy movie that they said glorified “breeders”.  In a perverse way it’s a kind of Puritanism in new guise: whereas spinsterish types used to have a squeamish contempt for fertile women, as in the movie Cheaper by the Dozen (1950), today the spinsterish types are sexually active but produce no issue, to use an antique phrase. Puritanism is alive in a lot of the quasi-religious fervor of current beliefs about what you should eat and smoke and drive and how many children you should have. And it’s about class too. White trash have children when sophisticated people have abortions (as in the movie Idiocracy).

            But I knew the Palin contempt was also about guilt, and the article by Anonymous in the Boston Phoenix (an “alternative” paper) confirms it. She writes about the abortion had as a 19-year-old college girl in Boston six years ago, when she wasn’t financially or emotionally ready to follow through with the consequences of her decision to have sex, for which she was apparently ready enough. (Why hasn’t sex education fixed all that?) When she learned she was pregnant, “There was nothing else to think about,” she writes. Her guilt isn’t about the abortion per se, she says, but about forgetting to take her birth control pills regularly and about being so privileged that all she had to do was cross the street to get an abortion while other women have to, what, go across town? She had a “medical” abortion rather than a surgical abortion (she took a pill, but surgery is also medical, which I only mention because she meant chemical). The day afterward, she went to an editorial meeting of her school newspaper, where they decided not to print a lucrative pro-life ad because it was against their “principles”. She doesn’t remember if she said anything in the meeting.

Anonymous felt guilty and angry when she read about Palin’s pregnant daughter and Palin’s opposition to abortion. While Anonymous acknowledges that some women face more extreme situations, she thinks her own inconvenience is the equivalent of other motives for abortion. Her highly valuable college life might be hindered temporarily. "Today's society" makes her decision seem somehow less ethically justifiable. People like Sarah Palin make her feel “trite and selfish”. That’s why she’s angry. Her self-esteem has been impinged upon.

      Perhaps in tomorrow's society abortion will be cheerfully encouraged, and even surviving post-abortion, uh, creatures need not live to encroach on the peace of mind of their, um, unintendeds.

Posted: October 23 2008 at 6:15 PM

Rhonda Keith Stephens

Perhaps in tomorrow's society abortion will be cheerfully encouraged, and even surviving post-abortion, uh, creatures need not live to encroach on the peace of mind of their, um, unintendeds.
Posted: October 23 2008 at 6:16 PM
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