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...In their own words
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| Cynthia Spring 2001 When
I was 17 years old I found out that I was 8 weeks pregnant.
My boyfriend with whom I was “shacking up” was a 24-year old
physically and emotionally abusive alcoholic.
I decided to keep the pregnancy a secret until I was beyond 12
weeks pregnant knowing that he would want an abortion and I mistakenly
thought that this was the maximum gestation for having one.
When I did tell him, he was furious and insisted that the child be
aborted as soon as possible. I
told him that it was too late to have one and he informed me that the
clinic in fact performs abortions up to 16 weeks of gestation. This
news broke my heart. I did
not want to kill this baby, but my co-dependence and addiction to this man
won out. I finally made an appointment with the abortion clinic.
When the day arrived, a friend picked me up for the drive.
My boyfriend refused to accompany me, telling me it was a “simple
procedure” and I would “be in and out quickly.”
It was a long, terrible drive, I remember crying all the way up.
This was the last thing in the world that I wanted to do, so why
was I going along with it just to keep this man in my life_ Why didn’t I just leave him and stop living this awful life
of sin, completely void of morals and ethics_
All I could think about was the size of the baby, what it must
weigh and the level of development it was at.
I had already begun to feel a bond with this tiny life inside me.
I felt like my whole world was caving in and everybody around me
just wanted to me to get rid of this problem.
I should have said no but I was too weak and dependent. When
we arrived at the abortion clinic, my friend and I were directed to a
waiting room that was packed full of young girls.
Everything seemed surreal. Even
though each of these girls was about to commit the same atrocity as I was,
I couldn’t help thinking, “I don’t belong here.”
I just cried through the whole wait.
As each minute passed, I kept hoping that the medical staff would
run out of time and have to send me away. But,
eventually I was called in and given a small written questionnaire whose
purpose was to ensure that I was certain of this decision.
I slowly checked off the answers, crying and trembling with fear
and horror. I was sure that
my obvious mental state would force them to reject me.
They had told me over the telephone that due to the seriousness of
this act, if they had any indication that I was not prepared to proceed,
they couldn’t allow me to do so. I
remember being so surprised that this wasn’t even considered.
My mental state obviously didn’t matter to them, they were only
interested in one thing. Instead
of counseling me about the procedure and my emotional condition, they gave
me some “pills” that they said would “calm my nerves.”
Then I went into the room where my child’s fate would lie.
There were many horrible looking surgical tools laid out on a table
beside the bed. The doctor
and nurses entered the room and none of them really talked to me at all;
they seemed rather hurried, almost annoyed with me.
One nurse bitterly told me to, “calm down, everything will be
fine.” I felt like a burden
to them. There
was a drape covering my legs, but I could see the doctor moving about
quickly and roughly. I could
feel a lot of cramping in my abdomen and I realized that it was the sharp
tools ripping apart my child. I
imagined them first removing the arms, then the legs and the head.
Then, I watched as a vacuum machine with a tube attached to it
began sucking out the pieces of this little body.
The tube was actually clear so I could see a tremendous amount of
blood and clumpy masses passing through it.
The pain was unspeakable, both physically and emotionally.
The machine was loud and the suction made the most gruesome sound
that I will never forget. I would rather listen to the sound of a dentist’s drill in
my ear for eternity than to hear that sound ever again for even a moment;
the gruesome sound of a baby being sucked from its’ mother’s womb. The
procedure took a significant amount of time, and I found out the reason
why after it was over. With
sarcasm, the apathetic doctor told me, “Well, you were a lot further
along than 16 weeks.” It turns out that I was actually 18 to 20 weeks pregnant. A
nurse then told me that I could use an adjacent bathroom to clean up.
I slid off the bed and felt so weary, in shock and in pain that my
friend had to hold me up. As
I slowly made my way toward the bathroom, I looked down and saw a drop of
my blood about the size of a half-dollar fall to the floor.
Seeing that blood clarified what I had done and I will never forget
it. That was all that was
left of my child. That was
it. I
discarded my baby at a clinic of death that night, brutally murdered and
left to rot in a sink. That
child did not deserve that heinous murder.
They told me the recovery time would be a couple of days with some
mild cramping and light bleeding. Well,
this was totally downplayed, when in fact there were several days
of significant abdominal pain and an extraordinary amount of bleeding, so
much that I had to wear diapers for a week.
It’s funny, they informed me about the cost of the abortion and
the amount of time it should take to be completed, but what they didn’t
tell me about was the nightmares I would have for months afterwards or the
tremendous shame that I would feel. They
didn’t tell me that I would be riddled with guilt and regret for the
rest of my life and fear of being able to give a healthy birth in the
future. The guilt, shame and
fear that I feel are minute compared to the brutality that I condemned my
unborn child to, but it’s odd how the Pro-Choicer’s illustrate this
horror as a simple procedure when the truth is that it is nothing short of
a brutal massacre of a human life. I
will now have to live with the choice I made for the rest of my life.
I allowed a “doctor of death” to enter my womb, literally tear
my child apart and suck it out of my body.
This baby never had a chance to smile, dream, laugh or cry.
His or her life was savagely snuffed out.
Is this what Pro-Choice means_
That you have the choice to have your unborn human baby diced up
and violently sucked out of your body and down a sink drain_ The
sole purpose of that abortion clinic is to murder human babies, herding
women through like cattle, not so far off from what Hitler did in WWII.
They did not halt the procedure upon observing my obvious mental
state proving that there was absolutely no concern for this irreversible
decision that I was about to undertake.
They were cold and ill mannered during the procedure. Women
have been so blessed by God with the most beautiful gift of being the
caretaker of life; unfortunately the world has given them the right
to end life. This should not
be a right of women but rather illegal as it is cold-blooded murder in the
first degree. I am
now 29 years old, married to a loving, devoted husband and have a
beautiful little girl whom I treasure with all my heart.
And on May 21 of this year, I gave my heart to Christ.
I was saved and delivered from evil.
My Lord forgave me of my sins and for the first time in my life, I
am truly happy. It will
continue to be a journey of healing, but now that I have Christ in my
life, everything is possible. He
has given me an Amazing Grace and a new life.
He’s also given me immeasurable strength, love and guidance.
Although the sin I committed on March 15, 1989 remains fresh in my
mind, my old life also seems a distant memory as I embark on my walk with
Jesus. |