by LYNN BEISNER
If there is one thing that anti-choice activists do that makes me see red, it is when they parade out their poster children: men, women, and children who were “targeted for abortion.” They tell us “these people would not be alive today if abortion had been legal or if their mothers had made a different choice.”
In the past couple of months, I have read two of these abortion deliverance stories that have been particularly offensive. The first story is one propagated by Rebecca Kiessling, the poster child for the no exceptions in cases of rape or incest. On her website Kiessling says that every time we say that abortion should be allowed at least in the case of rape or incest we are saying to her: “If I had my way, you’d be dead right now.” She goes onto say, “I absolutely would have been aborted if it had been legal in Michigan when I was an unborn child, and I can tell you that it hurts [when people say that abortion should be legal.]“
The second story was on the Good Men Project this week. In an article entitled, “Delivered from Abortion: Healing a Forgotten Memory,” Gordon Dalbey tells a highly unlikely story about his mother’s decision to abort him and her eventual change of heart. I say that the story is highly unlikely because the type of abortion he says his mother was about to have was not available until 50 years later.
However, Dalbey claims to have recovered a memory of being “delivered” from the abortion because as a fetus he cried out to God. He claims that the near-abortion experience had caused him psychological suffering throughout his life. Since recovering the memory, he has experienced survivor’s guilt because he was saved when so many other fetuses have been aborted. In explaining how he overcame this guilt, he quotes a Jewish survivor of the Holocaust who says that the purpose of surviving is to testify to the experience.
What makes these stories so infuriating to me is that they are emotional blackmail. As readers or listeners, we are almost forced by these anti-choice versions of A Wonderful Life to say, “Oh, I am so glad you were born.” And then by extension, we are soon forced into saying, “Yes, of course, every blastula of cells should be allowed to develop into a human being.”
Stories like Mr. Dalbey’s are probably effective because they follow the same model. First there is a woman facing the unplanned pregnancy that poses severe problems. In Dalbey’s case, his family is suffering from extreme poverty, and in the case of Kiessling, her mother is dealing with the aftermath of rape. The story shifts so that the mother has a divine or moral enlightenment and knows that she must carry the baby to term. We are left with an adult praising the bravery of their mothers and testifying that their lives were saved for some higher purpose. But the story goes on to tell us how even the contemplation of abortion was horribly scarring for the person. The moral of these stories is clear: Considering abortion is like considering genocide.
Here is why it is so effective: People freak out when you tell an opposing story. I make even my most ardent pro-choice friends and colleagues very uncomfortable when I explain why my mother should have aborted me. Somehow they confuse the well-considered and rational: “The best choice for both my mother and me would have been abortion” with the infamous expression of depression and angst: “I wish I had never been born.” The two are really very different things, and we must draw that distinction clearly.
The narrative that anti-choice crusaders are telling is powerful, moving, and best of all, it has a happy ending. It makes the woman who carries to term a hero, and for narrative purposes, it hides her maternal failing. We cannot argue against heroic, redemptive happy-ending fairy tales using cold statistics. If we want to keep our reproductive rights, we must be willing to tell our stories, to be willing and able to say, “I love my life, but I wish my mother had aborted me.”
An abortion would have absolutely been better for my mother. An abortion would have made it more likely that she would finish high school and get a college education. At college in the late 1960s, it seems likely that she would have found feminism or psychology or something that would have helped her overcome her childhood trauma and pick better partners. She would have been better prepared when she had children. If nothing else, getting an abortion would have saved her from plunging into poverty. She likely would have stayed in the same socioeconomic strata as her parents and grandparents who were professors. I wish she had aborted me because I love her and want what is best for her.
Abortion would have been a better option for me. If you believe what reproductive scientists tell us, that I was nothing more than a conglomeration of cells, then there was nothing lost. I could have experienced no consciousness or pain. But even if you discount science and believe that I had consciousness and could experience pain at six gestational weeks, I would chose the brief pain or fear of an abortion over the decades of suffering I endured.
An abortion would have been best for me because there is no way that my love-starved trauma-addled mother could have ever put me up for adoption. It was either abortion or raising me herself, and she was in no position to raise a child. She had suffered a traumatic brain injury, witnessed and experienced severe domestic violence, and while she was in grade school she was raped by a stranger and her mother committed suicide. She was severely depressed and suicidal, had an extremely poor support system, was experiencing an unplanned pregnancy that resulted from coercive sex, and she was so young that her brain was still undeveloped.
With that constellation of factors, there was a very high statistical probability that my mother would be an abusive parent, that we would spend the rest of our lives in crushing poverty, and that we would both be highly vulnerable to predatory organizations and men. And that is exactly what happened. She abused me, beating me viciously and often. We lived in bone-crushing poverty, and our little family became a magnet for predatory men and organizations. My mother found minimal support in a small church, and became involved with the pastor who was undeniably schizophrenic, narcissistic, and sadistic. The abuse I endured was compounded by deprivation. Before the age of 14, I had never been to a sleep-over, been allowed to talk to a friend on the phone, eaten in a restaurant, watched a television show, listened to the radio, read a non-Christian book, or even worn a pair of jeans.
If this were an anti-choice story, this is the part where I would tell you how I overcame great odds and my life now has special meaning. I would ask you to affirm that, of course, you are happy I was born, and that the world would be a darker, poorer place without me.
It is true that in the past 12 years, I have been able to rise above the circumstances of my birth and build a life that I truly love. But no one should have to make such a Herculean struggle for simple normalcy. Even given the happiness and success I now enjoy, if I could go back in time and make the choice for my mother, it would be abortion.
The world would not be a darker or poorer place without me. Actually, in terms of contributions to the world, I am a net loss. Everything that I have done—including parenting, teaching, researching, and being a loving partner—could have been done as well if not better by other people. Any positive contributions that I have made are completely offset by what it has cost society to help me overcome the disadvantages and injuries of my childhood to become a functional and contributing member of society.
It is not easy to say, “I wish my mother had aborted me.” The Right would have us see abortion as women acting out of cowardice, selfishness, or convenience. But for many women, like my mother, abortion would be an inconvenient act of courage and selflessness. I am sad for both of us that she could not find the courage and selflessness. But my attitude is that as long as I am already here, I might as well do all I can to make the world a better place, to ease the suffering of others, and to experience love and life to its fullest.
This post was originally published on Role/Reboot here and has been republished with full permission.
Lynn Beisner is the pseudonym for a mother, a writer, a feminist, and an academic living somewhere East of the Mississippi. You can find her on Facebook and Twitter.



Comments
189 Comments so far
The problem with trying to tell the reverse story is how is it possible to tell you, or the world, are not better off for having been born? Of course I wouldn’t wish what you have experienced upon anyone, which is likewise something I can barely imagine (I can say I’ve been pretty fortunate in my life so far, perhaps too much so). But to suggest an existence nipped in the bud would be a worthwhile alternative- is that a call any of us can really make? Or indeed have the right to? Could greater good come out of terrible experiences (I mean, it tok the horrors of WW2 to eliminate Nazism and the deeper, older evils which it was rooted in- militaristic nationalism, anti-semetism and so forth- were the violence and hardships of war not worth it for that?) I guess there are no easy answers.
As for “nothing more than a conglomeration of cells”- an embryo could be said to be that, but a grown human being is still a conglomeration of cells, albeit a bigger and more complex one, if you want to be reductionist. When does something start or stop becoming human?
loading...
Here is my story..
My Mother had 2 abortions before finally having me. Her first was when she was 17, in mid 60′s. The child would have been mixed, which would have been a HUGE deal at the time. Her second was after that, and from what she tells me, she wanted the second one, but her finance didn’t. She got one for him, but soon after he dumped her anyway. But I digress.. if my mother did not have any those abortions, if she did not choose to end those abortions, she never would have had me. Am I PRO-CHOICE? YOU BET YOUR HAPPY A** I AM. I am thankful everyday that my mother had those abortions. If they were illegal, I could not imagine what would have happened to my mother. Our white german family would surely have disowned her, not only for being a teen Mom, but for having a mixed baby? Forget about it! She would likely have been poverty stricken, and her and her baby would have had the worst life one could imagine at the that time. However, my mother had the right to choose, and when she did finally have children, me, she was in a much better place to do so. She was married, financially ok, and able to take care of me. No one should have the right to tell a woman what to do with her body including if she carries a baby or not. If YOUR religion doesn’t allow it, then don’t YOU do it. God gave all of us FREE WILL and the right to obey him or not, and only God, NOT MAN OR REPUBLICANS, has the right to take it away, and judge our actions . PERIOD.
loading...
Well my comment has been removed but not before “Suze” sent me an email. So its a pity I cant reply but probably just as well. The word heartless comes to mind! So whatever!
loading...
I am pro-choice. Not Pro-abortion or pro-life. Choice exercised with care.
“Somehow they confuse the well-considered and rational: “The best choice for both my mother and me would have been abortion” with the infamous expression of depression and angst: “I wish I had never been born.” The two are really very different things, and we must draw that distinction clearly.”
Hear hear. And completely agree, a fetus is not capable of memory or feeling at that early stage, it is a collection of cells, the same thing you can grow in a petri dish. We should treasure the people who are already alive (like your mum Lynn) and give them the best opportunity we can, not burden them if they are not prepared to manage it.
I could not put a child up for adoption. I would raise it myself or abort it, depending on whether I felt I could give the child a good start in life or not.
Thanks for writing this. It’s nice to see a reasoned, yet personal article.
loading...
Pingback: On the (Rest of the) Net. « The Early Bird Catches the Worm
Yes Lynn there’s no doubt that in some cases it would be better for a child not to have been born than to go through the kind of pain, suffering & deprivation you endured, it’s a thought that must go through social workers minds every day, but no one has a crystal ball and no one should have the right to predetermine the usefulness or value of someone else’s life or right to it. If they did would countless babies in third world countries be allowed to be born and within a year die horribly of malnutrition, HIV, malaria & other diseases? What about children who are born with life threatening illnesses and spend everyday of their little lives hooked up to machines in hospital, pumped full of drugs, do they have a right to have been born?
Your story is less about abortion and more about the failures of society to protect children born into vulnerable and harmful situations. The abortion angle is always an emotive one but the story you have to tell would be better served and directed towards social care intervention/adoption/fostering…..your early life might have been very different if you had been ‘rescued’ from the horrendous abuse you were subjected to.
Yes you’re right babies do start out as a cluster of cells, but within 5 weeks they have a heatbeat and by the end of the first trimester they are completely formed, anyone who has had a 12 week scan knows that. I’ve miscarried twice at that stage, which was heartbreaking, especially to see close up (I was allowed to take them home) my babies beautiful slender fingers, so perfectly formed. Beyond the first trimester babies obviously have the ability to feel pain, to hear, to suck their thumbs, flinch at bright lights & loud sounds, have hiccups….all the normal things babies do outside the womb. All the pregnancy journals & websites delight in telling you what your unborn baby can ‘do’ week after week. There’s no mystery anymore since the advent of scans…life saving surgeries can be performed on unborn babies….babies born prematurely at 22/23 weeks can survive outside the womb.
Thanks to the miracles of modern day science it is now a redundant argument to wonder whether an unborn child is a fully fledged human being, whether it has a ‘right to life’….it’s already alive and kicking literally…the evidence speaks for itself. The only argument is whether or not a woman has the right to kill her already living child. Without adequate support & factual information some women may continue to choose this, it’s her body, her right…..as it should be…but as a society we shouldn’t keep clutching at straws to find ways to ‘justify’ abortion or sanitise it as some sort of clinical procedure….it’s not…it’s a baby…possibly the first step towards increasing love, forgiveness, awareness and humanity in the world…is finding it in yourself….
loading...
I was pregnant last year. I believe I knew the very moment that it happened, on an intuitive level. For me having an abortion was entirely a selfish decision and I am not ashamed of that, however it is not something taken lightly. I think about it all the time. You cannot try and influence people or predict what might have been either way. I can only hope that the ‘soul’ I denied has found another door into this world.
I am pro life, of my own life. It’s quality over quantity. If you are unfortunate enough to be in this situation you must assess what quality of life means to you, kids or freedom for yourself to learn and grow.
loading...
I personally do not believe in abortion. As a person who would of loved to have had a child, even just one, I didnt think that was too greedy! But after 9 lost angels and all the heartache we went through it wasnt to be, for reasons I will NEVER understand, It just seems so easy for some, then too easy to just abort
there is always adoption.
loading...
How can you say “there is always adoption,” as if that’s not a traumatic experience for a woman. You have no right to impose this view on other women, which is so heavily biased as a result of your own (admittedly tragic) circumstances.
loading...
I seriously doubt having an abortion would have made your mum’s life any better. She sounds like good decision making was not her strong point.
I best she thinks your the best thing to come of her life.
I am pro choice- but I think it is a silly argument to support abortion – You could argue the other way- the lonely women who wants kids now but can’t who regrets the abortion she had 5 years ago.
is their really any point wishing for another reality then the ne you have?
loading...
Why is the debate about pro or anti abortion. Why is CHOICE not the key element? Why should anyone dictate yes or no in such a personal decision? If you have choice you have the ability to weigh up the options and decide what is best – based on all the personal circumstances which are no doubt different from the next person. I speak as someone who had choice and made a decision based on circumstance. 18 years later I have no regrets. Being a mother was part of my plan but not as a 18 year old. Today I am a better parent to my two children than I would have been when still a child myself. I would never expect the next young girl to whom this happens to make the same decision – that is the whole point of choice! Sure, some make a choice and aren’t happy (either way) but at least it was their decision…life is about decisions.
loading...
Thank you for sharing. You have helped me more than you know.
loading...
Brilliant post. So brave.
loading...
I am not pro or anti abortion, I believe people have a choice to decide what is right for them, but I also believe councelling should be offerred first. Not by a church or any one sided organisation but for the benefit of the person involved, psychologically.
If someone is violently raped (and falls pregnant as a result) I can completely understand why they would consider aborting that child as I do believe violent tendencies can be heriditary and it would be horrendous to know your child had committed such an act.
loading...
Counseling was compulsory, prior to deciding on an abortion when i was faced with the decision. I was raped at 15 the place i went insisted on counseling prior to me signing anything to say i was going ahead.
I completely agree that counseling should be offer to ALL woman before they 100% decide what to do. They should know what all of their choices are.
loading...
This was an amazing eye opener to a different point of view.. Fantastic arguments.
However, I have a similar story,Maybe worse. My mum had a change of heart too. I was then witness to all sorts of abuse, and then experienced all forms of abuse. Yes, including sexual. By age 12, I nearly died because I tried to kill my self. I ended up in and out of institution’s for several years and was beaten till age 23.
Life is now amazing. I just do not agree that my mum should have gone through with it.
My mums choice to have me is what its meant to be. And because of that choice, I am now someone that sheds light on many issues for people. I am now someone who’s income tax pays 2 peoples pension.
I have so much love ni my heart that my child is going to benefit. As such, the next generation will benefit.
Everything happens as they are meant. I know some of my friends struggle when I say I found meaning in al the abuse, but that is my truth. An no offence, it is because of that, I am more mentally healthy than some of them. Im more resilient and bounce back really well after major life events.
On the flip side of this whole pro choice debate. I have several friends who aborted and have had trauma from the guilt. NONE are catholic. But then, I have one friend who is glad she did.
I am all for pro choice. As sometimes the scars of aborting last a life time for some people.But on the flip side, the scars for not aborting can last a life time…. That s why it needs to be a choice!
loading...
I love your comment
loading...
I know that i was on the chopping block for an abortion, my parents had split up once more and mum was terrified of being a single mother of two. They got back together in time for me to be born. At 3 months old my mum OD’d and i ended up in orphanage (no family to take us, while mum was in hospital as mums family were overseas and dad’s family are bastards) eventually my parents got us back through the court system. In part thanks to the lady cop who attende the original scene and said we weren’t neglected kids. 38 yrs late rmy parents have just celebrated their 41st anniversary. It all came out in the wash but sometimes i think is she had been smart enough to abort me then she would have gotten less beatings and so would i. Therapy has made us into a working family but wowser it was a long road to hoe
loading...
After reading this article and Stella Young’s piece on The Drum, it make me wonder if life wasn’t simpler before the atheists took over, a time when we put the decision in God’s hands and just got on with it. Too simplistic, I know, but with issues as complex as these how on earth can we know what’s right and what’s wrong.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-08-15/young-case-against-peter-singer/4199120
loading...
Stef, life is what we make of it. It’s not up to ‘God.’ He doesn’t handle anything. Things happen by chance, luck, how hard we work, what we are delivered in life and it’s luck of the draw – or unfortunately – not. If our lives were upto a being called GOD then why do unfortunate things happen.
loading...
Forgot to add my name. Apologies.
loading...
How do you know, Lara? Just because you say so, doesn’t make you right. Since the dawn of time, in every culture, they have believed in a ‘higher being’ of some sort. Your statement is the height of arrogance.
loading...
I never claimed to have know Merri – at all. Everything isn’t up to higher beings though – chance, our decisions, and things occur just because they do. It’s whether you believe or not and I don’t, and that is my belief. I don’t claim to be right, but neither should any one that belives in higher beings. My life has been what I have/haven’t made it, not because of higher beings my love
loading...
Lara I must say i agree with you, If everything was up to god why are there rapists, murderers, pedophiles etc. Surely that higher being that will look after us all would eliminate such horrible monstrosities from our lives?
loading...
But where do you draw the line? We are ‘playing God’ when we intervene with any kind of medical treatment for any kind of illness. There are machines now that keep people alive when they would never have survived years ago. People’s family members don’t just pass away in their own time anymore, often people have to make decisions about when it is right to switch off machines and let them go. Isn’t that playing God also to decide when someone should die by turning off a machine – a machine they were hooked up to because it had the potential to save their life and has saved many lives? Should we just stop abortions and leave that up to God or do we stop all medical intervention everywhere and leave it up to God? Where is the line?
loading...
Great point, Erin.
loading...
Wake up, Stef. This article is written by an actual person, talking about their actual life and feelings, stop trying manipulate the discussion to politicise and polarize – it’s pathetic.
loading...
This is horrible horrible horrible. Gave me chills. You were not meant to be aborted. At all.
loading...
absolutely moving. This article should be printed in the NY Times. well done.
loading...
An amazing article, I thank the author for her honesty. I have a few friends that had babies in less than desirable circumstances when we were younger and I wonder about the ramifications of keeping that baby. In one or two of the particular cases it seems crueler that the baby lived. Certainly in all of the cases the mother has never had an opportunity to aim for her potential.
Where are all the antiabortionists raising money to fund education, health and welfare for mothers and their children?
loading...
I totally agree. On my way to work I walk past a clinic that performs abortions. Most days there are people praying outside with religious icons positioned around the front of the clinic. One man in particular is there often with rosary beads, stopping women trying to go into the clinic. I bet he’s not offering the women any support if they have the baby.
Why don’t these people try to help neglected or abused children, like the author, instead of harassing women going into the clinic? It makes me so angry.
loading...
Great article! I’am pro choice, although I’am unsure if I could ever make the decision to terminate if I fell pregnant. It is something that I often worry about as I don’t want children but I’m still not sure I could abort.
That being said, every woman has the right to choose. No country or government should have the right to force a woman to continue her unwanted pregnancy. I hate that people who are anti-abortion try and force their beliefs on others in the most horrendous ways (seen too many dreadful signs people hold up near clinics that perform abortions) At least people who are pro choice don’t harass people in difficult extremely situations.
No one wants to make that sort of decision, it just happens and they need to deal with the fall out. Sadly, sometimes abortion would have been a better option for the mother/father/family involved and sometimes even the foetus.
loading...
Very thought provoking article. From the conclusion though, I can’t help but think that the author is selling herself short.
I agree that no one should have to make a “Herculean struggle for normalcy”, but when one successfully does, is that not a cause for celebration? Doesn’t the effort the author has obviously put into overcoming her past give her a positive net worth in the same way that any valuable, precious and rare item is so because of the work that has gone into it?
loading...
Extremely rational yet heartfelt. Lynn your writing is thought-provoking. Thank you.
loading...
Best most thought-provoking read I’ve read on MM in year.
Bravo.
loading...
Lynn, I am pro choice… but just want to say you are NOT a net loss. Everyone leaves their stamp on and makes a contribution to the world in some way. It is clear that you have. And you write incredibly well.
I can tell that you are a realist, and it is very sad that you have obviously been through such a terrible struggle. But just remember that your mother made her choice to keep you, despite abortion not being an option, and I am sure she doesn’t regret even despite the mistakes she has made and even if you sometimes felt she did.
I understand your point, but I just hope that you don’t let your feelings about this pertinent issue colour your feelings about yourself as a human being, or make you feel diminished in value. Because while most of us feel insignificant at some point of our lives, I think it is important to remember that regardless of the circumstance of our birth, we are all valuable as people.
loading...
This is a stunning piece. I’m glad to have read it.
loading...
WOW!!! So well written & thought provocating. Let’s have more of this calibre of writing MM!
loading...
Amazing article! What an incredible point of view and an incredibly evolved sense of perspective.
loading...
“Alive” is a vastly different concept to “life” in my opinion.
An interesting and thought-provoking piece of writing that illustrates the complexity of the issue and why there is no right or simple answer.
loading...
My mum should of had one… she was sixteen and it would have been the right thing to do in her circumstances. Just like i had one at 18 then again at 21… I wasnt going to make her mistake and at the age of 30, about to have my first child with a husband, mortgage and secure life for all of us… i dont regret a thing.
loading...
Excellent article! Very thought provoking and certainly brings a new perspective to the ‘abortion debate’.
I think we also have to consider this article and this perspective in the context of the ‘abortion debate’ in the USA and as a valid counter point to the absolutely ridiculous ‘pro-life’ stories like Gordon Dalbey’s.
And I just have to say this about the abortion debate in the USA. I never cease to marvel at the irony that the demographic who are ‘pro-life’ on the abortion debate are also largely the demographic who are advocates of the death penalty.
loading...
And in love with guns!
loading...
I completely understand Lynn Beisner’s point of view. I am pro choice. I love my life and am so very happy. But it is a complete fluke of luck that I am even here. I’m adopted. I was the product of teenage sex. I don’t know who my biological father is. My birth mother was forced to give me up for adoption at 17. She developed mental illness, was in and out of psychiatric hospitals and eventually committed suicide. So if she had of had a termination and I wasn’t born perhaps there is a chance she could have had a better life. Or maybe not. We will never know. I feel very dispassionate when discussing this. It isn’t an emotional issue but just a practical consideration of the facts. If a woman or a girl was raped she should most certainly be able to choose to terminate a resulting pregnancy. I wasn’t the product of a rape but if I was that would be a game changer and very hard to live with.
loading...
Powerful and intelligent writing.
loading...
This article proves that there is no way you would be a “net loss” to society. A touching and inspiring story.
loading...
Wow..all I can say is wow. I never respond to anything but this article really made me just want to say thank you for such an incredible perspective on a heart wretching devisive subject. This should be sent to all of our politicians xx
loading...
This article was phenomenal. And what timing.
Just today I wrote about the 16 year old in the Domincan Republic who doctors did not want to give chemotherapy to as she was pregnant and chemo may result in the death of the fetus, and abortion is against the law.
Both the girl and the baby died in that situation. It is truly heartbreaking to think they might have been able to save one of those lives if they had acted sooner rather than delaying because they were afraid to break the anti-abortion law.
It’s all the many shades of grey that make this such a complex issue.
loading...
Oh she died!? I heard about that story, though not that she had finally passed. That is so sad, and could have been prevented SO easily.
loading...
Food for though: The UN defines forced pregnancy as a grave human rights violation.
‘Pro-life’ sounds so warm and fuzzy. ‘Anti-choice’ is a good comeback from the pro-choice side. But lets really call anti-abortion people what they really are: ‘pro forced pregnancy’. Because that is what they are advocating.
It is nice in the abstract to claim a pro-life view, but think of it in its brutal practice. If you truly believe abortion should be outlawed you are advocating that a woman be forced to continue her pregnancy. Forced. Doesn’t sound so sweet now.
loading...
The problem with the emotive anti-choice abortion-deliverence stories which go along the lines of “but look at me! Are you saying the world would be better off without me in it?” is that aside from being totally emotionally manipulative, pro-choicers could equally point to people like Hitler and point out that had abortions been available at the time of his mother’s pregnancy we might have avoided lots and lots of inexcusable death, torture and suffering.
No doubt, anti-choicers would then point to Mother Theresa and other ‘good’ people and make the same argument in reverse- and on and on it would go- with anti-choicers pointing to all the awesome people in the world and asking “but what if they were never born?” and pro-choicers pointing to all the shit people in the world and asking the exact same thing.
The point is that assessing the virtue of any given person and making an assessment about their social contribution (and whether or not it would be missed) is a pretty lazy and intellectually vapid way to conduct a debate. It’s just a version of personality-Olympics with bio-ethics mangled up and spat by the way side.
loading...
Just as an aside, apparently Hitler’s mother lost many babies before he was born.
loading...
I don’t actually think the author is seeking validation in this article. To me it doesn’t sound like self esteem issues that she is struggling with – it is the idea that she had to endure so much in her life that she could have been spared had her mother felt that abortion was an option.
As with the whole point of having choices, I don’t think we can make generalisations about Hitler or Mother Theresa. It was up to their own mothers what happened and whether they should have been born. We would never have known the difference if neither of them had existed and it seems like a bit of a silly debate to talk about who should or should not have been born. It is not our choice as a society. It is up to individual women.
I do think it is incredibly valid though for the author to reflect on her own life. She is not trying to emotionally manipulate the debate and I don’t think she needs validation that she is a worthwhile human being. I think she is making a point and we need to step back and listen to what she is saying. As she is commenting on her own experiences, her own life, I do believe she is entitled to an opinion about it.
Anti-choice campaigners are constantly putting another side of the story out there – one that is based on emotional manipulation. I think that the author is just trying to give some balance back to the debate.
loading...
I’m not going to remark on the abortion debate because to do so would detract from what I really want to say.
I find it inexpressibly sad that Lynn considers any contributions she has made to result in a net loss because of the history she had to overcome. I know one can’t really compare traumas, but my childhood was as difficult to the point that most people would have said my mother should have chosen abortion or adoption.
I don’t think that matters. I don’t think it’s EVER possible to say that a different decision about anything would have resulted in something better. No one could have accomplished what Lynn has “better.” Her unique experiences bring a unique voice to the world. I believe that every person alive has immeasurable value. Lynn, you can’t see the ripples of everything you’ve ever done or said. You can’t know the “better” choice for your mother would have been abortion. Again, this has nothing to do with whether or not any given person should choose abortion.
In my opinion, people who survive traumatic childhoods have an opportunity to achieve greater depth and insight than those who have a starting point of “normalcy.” The latter would not have brought the same perspective to your accomplishments and that perspective is valuable. I went through a period of grief and anger over the loss of who I might have been without the trauma of my childhood. The song “Life is Wonderful” by Jason Mraz brought me out on the other side. It takes a hole to make a mountain, and the deeper the hole, the taller the mountain. How can I hate the hole that has given me this glorious mountaintop I’m standing on?
Think about it. And I have a feeling there are more people from your life than you realize that are deeply grateful for your presence and feel lucky they’ve had the opportunity to know you. I doubt they’d agree that your contribution to society has been a net loss.
loading...
Beautifully said. Reading her article made me sad as I too have had a traumatic upbringing however reading your words was very comforting, and true as we never know how we have made a difference to someone’s life.
loading...
Awesome article. So powerful and the analysis of the anti-choice tactics is spot on.
loading...
I could go on for hours naming the mothers of some well known individuals who I wish had availed themselves of an abortion.
The world would have certainly been a far safer and more pleasant place.
loading...
Hitler’s mum? As a start.
loading...
Unbelievably powerful. Such a tremendous read.
loading...
Amazing article – thank you for sharing your story.
loading...
Fascinating post, and extremely well written. Thanks mamamia, there’s been some slap-dash stuff on here lately. I love that this was articulate and felt well-considered.
loading...
My personal view is that neither pro- nor anti-choice arguments can be applied to every situation, as such, I’m pro-contraception.
With mankind’s evolutionary desire to procreate and a multitude of systems in place to prevent “survival of the fittest” in modern society, the only answer is contraception.
Teach tweens about it and throw condoms from the rooftops! Make contraception essential and make sure everyone knows where to get advice and help with family planning.
The foster system is heaving with the children born of abusive, addicted or dysfunctional parents and their stories are all heartbreaking.
The only way to make sure that stories such as Lyn’s don’t happen in the future is to make contraception freely available to every sexually active person who is not trying to get pregnant.
loading...
As the saying goes…easier said than done :/
Man kind is not perfect. To err is human.
loading...
Yes, but to err is far harder when you have low-cost, easily available contraception to use!
loading...
2 out of 3 of my children have been concieved while using contraception.
loading...
Does this apply to a rape victim who then becomes pregnant. I think not. There are so many circumstances surrounding conception, wanted or unwanted. Lets hope that you are perfect and that contraception does not fail you, (or you get raped) it might just happen to you one day. Oh, that’s right, your perfect.
loading...
I also had my son while I was using contraception!
On a side note… The foster system is also heaving with abusive and dysfunctional foster parents!!!
loading...
Fantastic article. I don’t agree, in parts – However, because I have no first-hand experience with this issue I don’t believe I (or anyone else) has the right to tell you that you’re right/wrong for feeling the way you do.
loading...
Having read through the comments there seem to be a lot of people making judgments about something they have no FIRST-HAND EXPERIENCE with.
loading...
Yes, and here’s another one – even with no personal experience whatsoever to speak of I won’t bother even listening to an anti-abortion campaigner. They just don’t exist for me I’m afraid.
loading...
Brilliant piece. Love this. Brutally honest and completely novel take on this complex issue.
I have a boy -11 yo- who was a surprise. The abortion idea was thrown around a bit in the early stages of the pregnancy, & after he was born there were times when I wished I had chosen to terminate. I was young. Poor. With a guy who was not husband fodder. Now I feel truly grateful every minute of every day that my son is here. He is all the best parts of myself and a whole lot of unique and special qualities of his own.
I personally doubt I could ever abort. I feel such a bond & a magical connection with my babies from very early in the pregnancy. However, I would never impose my feelings on another woman. What is magic to one is a life sentence to another.
I am so fortunate to live in Australia where poverty is really a decent survival. Perhaps I couldn’t have made it through so well in another place. Sadly it seems first world countries are better at allowing & providing safe abortions than countries that probably need them more.
There is a lot that happens in a lifetime. Births & deaths & love & tragedy. Abortions are not ideal for anyone, but the circumstances which create the need for abortions probably deserve more attention than the traumatic act of terminating the promise of a life. I think the focus of the abortion debate is too much on the abortion & not enough on the helping women avoid the need for one.
loading...
I couldn’t agree more. I think every life is valuable, and that includes the mothers that make the painful choice to abort. Making abortion illegal creates more problems than it solves. Changing the world in ways that make abortions as little needed as possible is the real solution. Asking someone who is suffering how you can help always does more for the world than telling them what they should or shouldn’t do.
loading...
What an amazing read. Very interesting
loading...
Amazing writing. So gritty and honest.
Regardless of how you feel about abortion, you can’t disagree with a persons view of their own experiences.
Well done Lynn, may the years to come be more peaceful for you.
loading...
Great article. I share a similar opinion, for different reasons.
loading...
I read every single word, heard your voice and hope the very best for your future.
loading...