One afternoon in early 2009, I sat in
the bathroom of my small apartment, holding a pregnancy test and crying. I had
been crying for several days; the pregnancy test was just an additional reason
to do so. All week I had been crying and screaming and smashing things on the
ground like water glasses and eggs. I knew something was wrong with me, for my
usual depressive episodes were usually not this intense and out of control.
I had been going to psych therapy and
taking antidepressant medication for about three weeks. Now, holding the
fateful pregnancy test in one hand, I knew for sure. I was pregnant, and
somehow it was driving me out of my mind. I tearfully reported my findings to
my husband at the time, who had come to wear a permanent scowl on his face due
to pressures from school, work, and now his wife's erratically destructive
behavior. Later we both sat on the bed, his scowl having melted into a look of
weariness.
It was as if the situation had physical
weight on both of us. I had recently left my low paying security guard job as
my condition had rendered me unable to work. He had just been laid off from his
software engineer job. We already had one child, and lived in Los Angeles, in a
roach-infested box of an apartment that one could cross in twelve steps. We
were both tired. And this wasn't supposed to have happened.
"We can't have a baby now," I
remember him saying while staring at the wall. "Just go for the abortion.
I won't hold it against you." And so I did. The following day was
frustrating, and heavy with the weight of the decision. We arrived only to
realize I'd forgotten my ID at home. He yelled at me for it, and I started
crying again. We drove home, and returned again to the clinic. We waited our
turn in the waiting room, along with three or four other women. When I looked
at them I could almost feel their stories, hanging heavy on their shoulders as
we tried to distract ourselves with the soap opera showing on the tiny waiting
room T.V. A part of me sat in judgment of them, as if for a moment I was only
there to observe. Or at least, as if I was in some higher order of abortion recipients.
On the higher level were women like me, who did everything "right." I
was married, and had been using birth control that had simply failed me. On the
lower level were the irresponsible party girls who hadn't bothered to use a
condom. Surely I wasn't in the same ‘class’ as these "others."
For the first two decades of my life, I
had been taught that abortion was wrong (except in the cases of incest or rape,
as I was told when I was older). I was taught that unborn babies were innocent,
and had to be defended from the immoral, scared, and/or confused women who
would abort them. Part of me was leveraging those old thoughts, trying to
somehow give myself morality points in order to ease the learned shame I
felt at being in that office. However, I saw these thoughts for what they were
and kept them subdued the best I could. All of us there, in reality, were in
the same boat, waiting to swallow the same pill.
I at first wanted to share an argument
in favor of a woman's choice to abortion, but then I felt in my spirit that I
should include my own personal story. I was 23 when I got pregnant a second
time. I was in an abusive marriage with a husband I was eager to leave, but
couldn't because I didn't have what I needed to take care of myself and my
child.
I'm now 30 years old, and the past
decade of my life has been characterized by betrayal, divorce, financial
suffering, frequent relocation, abandonment, isolation, and abuse. It would be
another two years after the pregnancy before I would finally leave my husband,
but if we had had a second child, it would have been further leverage against
me. All of the problems I have experienced in my life would be amplified, and
my children would be at the center. I would have spent nine months in mental
suffering, perhaps doing harm to myself and to the people around me. Most of
all, I knew the child would've been born into a very hellish situation from
which I could not protect him.
In recent months, the U.S Republican
party has seemingly strengthened its so-called pro-life efforts (I believe that
term is a misnomer, and I will explain why). Government funding for the Planned
Parenthood organization has been shut down, and states are now trying to pass
legislation that would make it even more difficult for women to obtain an
abortion. Pro-life activists will be quick to call themselves champions of the
unborn, while giving little to no credence to the women who are carrying those
unborn in their wombs. If they do acknowledge the women themselves, they're
painted as depraved, irresponsible, hysterical, or otherwise unreasonable women
who need to be protected from themselves. When in reality, a good many of us
are able to give thoughtful consideration to what the physical, psychological,
emotional, communal, and financial implications of having a baby would be.
"Life" involves more than
just the biological. I've mentioned before that one issue I have with the
pro-life stance is that its advocates will be very quick to call abortion
murder, yet offer no solutions on how a woman is supposed to obtain the
resources to care for another human life. If you've ever been a mother with
little financial or family support, you know that birth and motherhood aren't
something to be take for granted.
Women cannot only die and develop
serious health conditions during pregnancy and childbirth, but they can also
face financial hardships and, depending on the circumstances, rejection and
threat of physical harm from their family and communities. In my case, it would
have cost me my mental stability and an opportunity to escape an abusive
marriage.
No victories are won when a woman has
no choice but to bring a child into the world that she is neither ready nor
able to care for nearly every day for the next eighteen years. It is possible
that she might find it within herself to be a mother to the child after all. It
is possible she may love the child. It is possible she may resent the child.
She may leave the child with a relative. She may injure the child with her drug
or alcohol addiction. She may abandon the child. She may abuse or mistreat the
child. She may surrender it for adoption. There was a time in my life where my
mind was closed to the complex difficulties a pregnant woman may face. However,
once I found myself in such a difficult situation, I was forced to shift my
viewpoint.
Overall, abortion is not a bad thing.
Neither is it a good thing. Like so many things in life, it simply is. There
are so many reasons why a woman might choose not to go on with a pregnancy.
Some of us are mothers, and know that we simply cannot, with soundness of mind,
welcome another child into the world at a certain time in life. I've written
this for any woman out there who finds herself, or has found herself, in a
situation such as mine. Please know that you are not evil. You aren't wrong for
considering it. Please don't allow society to paint you with its brush. And
while shame may battle you on every front, know within yourself that you're not
alone. Know that the decisions that you make today, whether to bring a child
into the world or not, will affect the course of your life. Know that you have
a choice. And may no one ever raise their hand to take it away from you.
Shared by:
Tiffany Howard is a freelance writer
from California, currently living in Accra, Ghana.
Dearest Tiffany,
ReplyDeleteWhen you said you were going to share your story, I didn’t know it will be this soon and also so distressing. Before anything else, I want to say this “you Tiffany, are one brave woman and you did the right thing.” No child deserves to be born into an unstable relationship and a very strained environment. That will just be unfair to the child and to the parents even.
“Overall, abortion is not a bad thing. Neither is it a good thing. Like so many things in life, it simply is. There are so many reasons why a woman might choose not to go on with a pregnancy. Some of us are mothers, and know that we simply cannot, with soundness of mind, welcome another child into the world at a certain time in life.”
This is exactly how I feel about abortion. I do not believe any mother will go through an abortion without a hint of pain and regret but given the circumstances, that might be the only choice they have. We will be quick to judge without knowing what their decisions may be. I have heard many abortion stories and I believe this is justifiable.
Thank you for opening up about this to us all.
hugs
NJB
Thank you Naana, I appreciate your encouragement to share. This has been a very rich experience.
DeleteAnd this experience will help educate many women.
DeleteThis will go to empower all women out there. Loads live with guilt.This will lighten the load for many. Thanks for sharing such a wonderful story.
ReplyDeleteKojo that's just what I wanted to do. Thanks for your words.
ReplyDeletematters. I learned a lot, just as I have learned a lot from yours. God bless you and do stay strong.
ReplyDelete💜💜💜
Most of my views on abortion well articulated in this piece. The question of 'can she truly care for a child' and point of view of the woman is overlooked and the religious/moral factor pushed. Good you spoke about this
ReplyDelete