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Category Archive: Mabel’s Voices

  1. My Primary Emotion was Relief

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    Written by Jessy Brainerd

    When I was in eighth grade at Catholic School, in my Religion class, we had to take part in a mock debate project. I felt incredibly lucky to get to argue the “Pro-Life” side of the abortion debate. It was simple to me – abortion is murder, and anyone who had one was a murderer, and, unless they were a cold, hard psychopath, would obviously regret it for the rest of their life. I still have a photo I snapped of the two other kids who were on my side of the debate, grinning and holding this accordion fold pro-life brochure with photos of aborted fetuses.

    Fast forward to my learning to think for myself, becoming a parent at 19, and starting college at 20. By this point, I had definitely become pro-choice, although I still remember very clearly thinking that I was pro-choice for “other” people, and knew it was never a decision I would make for myself.

    At one point, when I was in college, I was visiting with a neighbor, a woman in her forties, and another woman her age was visiting. Somehow we got on the topic of abortion, and the other woman shared that when she had been in her thirties, married with two small children, she had learned she was pregnant, and knowing that her family couldn’t afford it, had made the decision to terminate the pregnancy. I can remember very clearly how uncomfortable her story made me. I made polite and understanding comments, but can remember thinking VERY clearly that she had “taken the easy way out” and wondering how someone who already had children could possibly decide not to have another. It just didn’t make sense to me.

    Fast forward again to the fall of my senior year of college. I had been casually dating someone for a few months – nothing serious, we had been friends for years, and the relationship had evolved. My daughter was four, and I was working part-time in an administrative office on campus, and going to school full time, consistently making the Dean’s list. I have never, in all my life, had a regular menstrual cycle, and it was not at all notable to me if I wouldn’t get my period for months at a time.

    The night of a big winter “semi-formal” party/dance put on by one of the fraternities, I was getting ready with a friend, who was concerned because her period was late, but didn’t want to go to the store to buy a pregnancy test. I ran out to the drug store, and there happened to be a deal on a two-pack, so I decided that since I’d not had my period in a couple of months, and was sexually active, that I might as well take a test with her.

    I can’t describe the level of shock I felt when I saw an almost fully darkened “plus” where I was quite sure a “minus” should have been. I decided that the sign was too ambiguous, and went out, occasionally breaking down in tears between drinks and dancing. The next morning, I went with my Mother and my daughter on a little road trip, and between the stress, and the previous night’s drinking, ended up having to ask my mother to pull over on the side of the road so I could throw up.

    When I returned to my house, my mother taking my daughter out for the afternoon, I ran into the bathroom to take another test. This time the plus sign was unmistakable, fully dark and accusatory. I immediately lit a cigarette and started to sob. Mom came back in, as she had forgotten something, and asked what was wrong. I sputtered out that I was pregnant, and started crying again. She was silent for just a few seconds and then said “It’s going to be fine – you need to either put out that cigarette, or we need to call Mabel Wadsworth.”

    I knew, right away, that I couldn’t continue the pregnancy. I suspected I was probably about eight weeks pregnant, and hadn’t been treating my body in a particularly healthy way. I was working, taking a full load of classes, with the necessary amount of studying and homework, along with taking care of a four-year-old. I was on track to graduate in the spring, and knew that would be impossible with a pregnancy, and with another child to take care of. I was so close to getting out of the need for food stamps, low-income housing, and Medicaid, and the idea of putting my daughter through years more of that struggle was unconscionable; we had struggled enough.

    Before I called to make an appointment at Mabel Wadsworth, I called the guy I had been dating, putting a movie on the TV for my daughter, and taking the phone in the bathroom. I explained the situation, and as soon as I mentioned having an abortion, I could hear the relief in his voice as well. Neither of us was at a place in our lives for a child.

    I made the initial appointment for an exam, and after the pregnancy was confirmed, made the appointment to terminate the pregnancy. Because it was December, and I had no idea how I’d feel afterwards, I bypassed Christmas, and made the appointment for the week of New Year’s Day.

    My sister went along with me to both appointments. I remember being so incredibly grateful that I didn’t have to walk through the awful protesters holding signs like the ones I had used in my “debate” back in eighth grade. My sister held my hand through the entire process, and brushed my tears away when I started crying due to discomfort.

    I remember before I went in for my abortion, being absolutely terrified that I would immediately be filled with regret, and that this would be a pivotal moment in my life, from which I could never bounce back. On the contrary, while I did feel a bit sore afterwards, my primary emotion was relief. I was feeling back to myself by that afternoon, and spent the day with my daughter.

    Since that day, twelve years ago, I have not regretted my decision. There is no doubt in my mind that I made the right decision. This is not to say that I haven’t had those “what if?” moments. Just a couple of months later, the friend I had taken the test with did get pregnant. She continued the pregnancy and has a gorgeous daughter now, she was also engaged to a wonderful man at the time, and they have since had another child.

    I graduated on schedule that spring, and am incredibly happy with the path my life has taken. As my daughter is sixteen now, teetering on the cusp of adulthood, I have shared my story with her, and want her to know that, if she is ever in a situation where she has a difficult choice to make, I will support her.

    I don’t think anyone makes the decision to have an abortion lightly, it’s not like getting a haircut, it’s a decision that affects your life on the basest level. I wish more women felt comfortable sharing their stories, because it can easily feel like you are absolutely alone in making the choice you have, which is pretty crazy considering that one in three women in the US will have an abortion.

  2. Abortion as a Moral Choice

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    Written by The Reverend Anne C. Fowler, Episcopal priest

    In April of 1973 my husband left me, pleading that he had fallen in love with our upstairs tenant and wanted to spend his life with her. I was four months pregnant. Roe v. Wade had been decided three months earlier.
    My obstetrician sent me to see a social worker to help me sort out my feelings and make my plans. She began every one of her questions or suggestions with, “if you want an abortion…”, until I finally shouted at her, “I DON’T want an abortion. ” “Well, ” she observed, “That solves that problem.”

    I had wanted this baby fiercely for some time, and my husband’s defection did nothing to diminish my desire. But that conversation with the social worker, and the knowledge that an abortion would have been legally available had I felt unable to proceed with the pregnancy, added depth and resonance to my desire. This was a most wanted child. I had the choice, and I chose to have a baby.

    My daughter told me recently, in a discussion about her father – who has never figured into her life except as an absence, a question mark – “Mom, when I was a kid and used to ask about my father, you always said, ‘You were a very wanted baby.'” So that knowledge has been central to her sense of her self.

    At another point, a few years later, I did have an abortion. I was a single mother, working and pursuing a path to ordination in the Episcopal Church. The potential father was not someone I would have married; he would have been no better a candidate for fatherhood than my daughter’s absent father. The timing was wrong, the man was wrong, and I easily, though not happily, made the decision to terminate the pregnancy.
    I have not the slightest regret about either of these decisions, nor the slightest guilt. I felt sorrow and loss at the time of my abortion, but less so than when I’d miscarried some years earlier. Both of my choices, I believe, were right for me and my circumstances: morally correct in their context, practical, and fruitful in their outcomes.

    That is, both choices were choices for life: in the first instance, I chose for the life of the unborn child; in the second, I chose for my own vocational life, my economic stability, and my mental and emotional health and wholeness.
    Shortly after my ordination to the priesthood, I was asked to speak at the National Abortion Federation’s annual meeting, on a Clergy Panel, with the theme of “Abortion as a Moral Choice.” I wondered skeptically who would attend such a panel, but to my surprise, the room was packed with people – abortion providers and other clinic workers. Our audience was so eager and grateful to hear their work affirmed, to hear religious authorities assuring them that God was on their side! I understood that I had a responsibility, indeed, a call, as a pro-choice religious professional, to speak out and to advocate publicly for women’s reproductive rights and health, and I have tried to be faithful to that call.

    To talk theologically about women’s right to choose is to talk about justice, equality, health and wholeness, and respect for the full humanity and autonomy of every woman. Typically, as moral theologians, we discuss the value of potential life (the fetus) as against the value of lived life – the mature and relational life of a woman deciding her capacity to continue or terminate a pregnancy. And we believe that, in general, the value of that actual life outweighs the value of the potential.

    I like to talk, as well, in terms of gift and of calling. I believe that all life is a gift – not only potential life, but life developing and ripening with its many challenges, complications, joys and sorrows. When we face difficult reproductive choices we balance many gifts, many goods, and to fail to recognize the gifts of our accomplished lives is to fail to recognize God’s ongoing blessing. I believe as well that God calls us all to particular vocations, and our decisions about whether and when to bear children are part of that larger pattern of our lives’ sacred meanings.

  3. Thank you for being here.

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    I’m a single mom and always have been. My first abortion was when I was 19. The pregnancy was a result of a broken condom. Really! True story. I was living in Seattle, but home visiting my family in Maine when I found out I was pregnant, and I was nearly at 12 weeks before I could get back to Seattle to terminate. It was done in a doctor’s office, and was uncomplicated and fairly painless. His office was near my neighborhood; I walked there and back alone (the man offered to escort me, I declined). A girlfriend met me at home afterward with hot soup and a rented videotape(this was the late 80’s). I suffered no pangs of guilt-the man and I were not in any sort of committed relationship, we split the bill, and remained friendly.

    A few months later, I was madly in love with a Midwestern boy who refused to wear condoms. I had a diaphragm, and I used it…most of the time. Of course I got pregnant. That time, I decided to continue the pregnancy and had lots of romantic notions at first, but ultimately left Seattle, came back to Maine, and had a gorgeous daughter.

    She was almost 4 when I got pregnant again, this time in Michigan. I was living with a very sweet man who was great with my daughter, and adored me, but we just didn’t have a stable economic life, and I was afraid I’d end up raising *2* kids as a single mom. We left my daughter with friends who had kids around her age, and traveled 3 hours south to Ann Arbor, to a big Planned Parenthood facility. There were a few protesters out by the street, keeping the required distance away, but it still was uncomfortable. The staff was as kind as possible, but a little too efficient, and the recovery area was a huge room with little privacy. We left as soon as we could, and tried to enjoy a little of Ann Arbor before returning home. I was sad about having to make that choice, and had some fairly severe mental health issues afterward, some of which stemmed from the sorrow of ending a pregnancy I wished I’d felt able to carry through. I got an I.U.D. as soon as possible after the abortion, and never relied on a diaphragm again!

    My third abortion took place a couple of years ago at the Mabel Wadsworth Women’s Health Center. I can say from experience and without reservation that it was the best abortion I ever had! I was just over 40 and had had my I.U.D. removed because I was tired of long, heavy periods. My partner was in his 50’s and had had a vasectomy-we thought we were safe! There was no real question but that I would have an abortion, although my partner would have supported whatever choice I made, and made sure I knew it.

    I appreciated that the Health Center was tucked away from busy streets, and my choices weren’t being questioned by self-righteous ideologues who had no business messing with women’s health. The staff was kind and unhurried, compassionate and willing to answer any questions we had. The atmosphere was quiet and calming, private and respectful. Abortion is never an easy choice, and I am grateful that facilities like Mabel Wadsworth are available for women and men who need them. Thank you for being here.

  4. Marsha’s Story

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    Thank you, Marsha for sharing your story. You are brave. Thank you to our amazing volunteer, JoAnne Dauphinee, for interviewing, filming and editing this great piece.  Enjoy!