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mother1 380x550 I wish Id been aborted.

This is a stock image, not Lynn

 

 

 

 

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

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189 Comments so far

  1. Rach

    Geez, that stock image is a bit creepy. I’m not sure if it’s just me, but I’m seeing it like that woman is looking at her daughter and wishing she’d been aborted.

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  2. Renee

    Very important article and so brilliantly written.

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  3. Claire

    I wasn’t going to comment, but after seeing all the negative comments I had to make sure that you know there is another person who read this and thinks it is fantastic.

    You are worth much more than you think you are. :)

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  4. MissV

    Brilliant article Lyn!
    Lots of food for thought!

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  5. Jenna

    I am so glad that I’ve grown out of this “pro/anti life/choice” thing! I’ve been on both sides of the fence & it wasn’t until I stood back & realised that women are way more complicated than a stupid political slogan did I begin to see abortion for what it really is. To see what MY OWN abortion really means!

    So this woman wishes her mother had undergone a medical procedure & then what? Would that really have given her mother this imagined life that such a caring daughter is arguing for?

    Each of us define our own moral boundaries & that includes when a human being is assumed the status of person hood! I get that she believes in this but others will not! I find it hard to understand why she begins by stating her objections to two individual situations/beliefs & then goes on to state her own (somewhat controversial) position with (I’m assuming) the expectation we accept it without question.

    If we are to believe what we are taught with mainstream feminist ideas then we are ALL EQUAL! Regardless of the sex we were assigned at birth or the gender that we identify with we are to expect the same access to the social and political spheres. We have the right to expect employment, education, a means to participate in the political process & a place to voice our opinions & positions! So in reality the two positions in the beginning of this piece have exactly the same merit as the authors free from judgment because we are all equal!

    As a woman who has had an abortion I owuldn’t wish it on my worst enemy let alone my mother!

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    • Erin

      I don’t think the author was saying there was anything wrong with their stories, but that there is something wrong with the emotional blackmail they use to deny to choice to others.

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  6. amyspeak

    This article expresses a perspective that could be considered extremely rational, but does so in such a heartfelt way. To me it is a counterpoint to the view that “keeping a baby is always the best option for that life”…sometimes it may not be in anyone’s best interests.

    I don’t think that means everyone in a similar situation to Lynn Beisner’s mum should have an abortion, but I do think it is a perspective that should be considered in the debate. Whether planned or unplanned, having a baby could be the best thing in the world for many people (and I hope it is!), but in some cases (particularly if the child is resented) it is a valid option. I don’t label myself pro or anti anything, but at least if the information and the choice is there, the chance of regret and resentment is reduced.

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    • Anonymous

      So well said :-) You hear a lot of stories about “I was going to abort but couldn’t and now my child is the most important thing ever and, while it was tough, we all have a great life filled with love”. I am sincerely glad for those people, because that’s what everyone deserves, but it’s also refreshing to hear the counter-point that that’s not always going to be the case with an unplanned or unwanted pregnancy.

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  7. Erin

    Herein lies my whole issue with people who campaign against abortion. When babies are born, where are all those people holding pickets outside the abortion clinics? Probably still there, glowing in pride over their success in controlling someone else’s life while taking no responsibility for the consequences.

    Why is there so much concern from those who are anti-choice about what happens to fetuses but as soon as they are an ex-fetus, it’s like it doesn’t matter.

    I read a story recently about a man who went to jail ‘for saving the lives of unborn babies’. Actually what he went to jail for was refusing to pay fines issued to him for loitering out the front of abortion clinics for the last 10 years. He went to jail like some kind if matyr but he has 6 children at home who won’t have a dad living with them because he is going to jail. He is so concerned about what total strangers are doing with their own bodies, he shows complete disregard for the six children that he has brought into this world and his responsibility for them.

    Seriously, if people want to take the anti-choice thing that far, start by caring for the ex-fetuses that are around us everyday.

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    • gemmadee

      I completely agree, Erin. Why are the anti-abortionists not registered foster carers?

      Too many children are in the state-run system of care because their parents, for whatever reason, are unable to care for them. Many have been in the system since they were babies, born to drug-addicted mothers who should never have gotten pregnant in the first place.

      If you truly care about saving those foetuses, make sure you’re there after the birth when their parents fail them because they were never suitable to raise a child.

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    • Anonymous

      Incredibly well said.

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    • Anonymous

      So true and this is certainly an argument that I have always made. Where are all these people when the baby is born? They want to “save” the child but don’t particularly care what happens once it’s born.

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  8. Anna

    I think this article is inflammatory, sensationalist and utterly awful. It is written with anger, condescension and libertarian claptrap. The writer is declaring that not one thing that ever happened in her life justifies her being born. What utter cods wallop. The alternative is oblivion. Yes, her mothers life was a sad one, and her own upbringing poor. But why should that equate with non- being? Honestly. I think this article is offensive.

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    • Erin

      People should be entitled to feel how they want about their own lives. We are a society that tries to control the feelings of others far too much. Every feeling she expressed here us valid – not because I know her or anything about her but because people are entitled to their own feelings about things that happened to them. I think it is offensive to tell someone else how they should feel and respond to things that happen in their own lives.

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    • Rach

      I think the title- “I wish I’d been aborted”- is a bit dramatic for sure, and if she was really trying to say that it would be quite… just… sad and sensationalist and not really food for thought.

      However, I thought the article itself was more of a rational assessment of the author’s mother’s situation and her upbringing- and acknowledging, yes, it probably would have been a better choice for her to have had an abortion. Difficult thing to say when you’re the fetus in question, but it’s a valid perspective.

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    • Another Anna

      I can’t see why it’s offensive, to be honest. Who is it offensive to? To her mum? To you?

      For me, I thought it was incredibly brave, open, honest and beautifully written.

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  9. Anonymous

    Lynne’s story is exactly why I am against anti-abortion activists. Anti-abortion activists are not there to help those women who feel that their best choice is an abortion; they are not around to help the children born under these difficult circumstances to live a normal life. I am not arguing about whether a foetus is a person or not. But I think every child has a right to born into a loving family (whether that be a singel parent, married couple or same-sex parthership) and to live a life free from abuse and poverty. Anti-abortion activists should spend more of their time looking after those children born into lives like Lynne’s, to help those children live a better life. My heart goes out to Lynne – no-one should have to live like that.

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  10. Tallulah

    Extremely brave and selfless thing to say. I really doubt very many people at all could be so rational and compassionate about their situation.

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  11. Nicole

    If your mother had such a horrendous upbringing (from the details you have outlined) then can it not be said that in fact, maybe she should have been aborted? And her mother commited suicide, I wonder what led her to this? Did she also have a difficult life? Where does the chain end? Should everyone that grows up with a tough life and in poverty be aborted?

    Imagine if you posted this article in a poverty stricken country.

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    • Tallulah

      That is extremely simplistic.

      This article is just about choice, and the possible consequences when people do not have it.

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    • Veronica

      I understand what you are trying to say, Nicole, but…

      No one knows if their life is going to be tough or not. You have to live it first. Lynn’s point was that her mother was already struggling, so adding a baby to the mix made life even more difficult. Lynn’s mom sounds like she was once in a better place…stable enough to become educated and teach others, anyway.

      And poverty does not necessarily equal unhappiness. It sounds like Lynn’s mom did not have social support as well, and several other issues. I do not think Lynn focuses on poverty as the reason her mother should not have had her, but all of her troubles she faced at that time.

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    • Erin

      I know it is not popular, but it is something that ethicists have considered in countries where there are food shortages. Take Africa for example, there has been a lot of discussion about whether offering early abortion would be a better option for many people because it would stop so many dying slow, cruel and painful deaths from hunger and it would also mean that there were less people to make the food go between. Really what is more ethical? I don’t think there are any clear cut answers because I also don’t believe in forced abortion either and even in this situation, I am not sure abortion is the answer – but things are not as black and white as they always appear. And I do think these are issues worth considering.

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  12. Anonymous

    thank you. so very well said. such a mature perspective. I wish you a happy, fulfilled life Lynn.

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  13. Kate

    If you don’t believe in abortion, don’t have one.

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  14. Merri

    Umm, is it just me but how could Lynn’s mother have ever finished high school, gone to collage and become a professor if she had suffered an horrendous brain injury? Abortion or not, that would have been highly unlikely.

    Her grandparents were professors, one of whom committed suicide, they didn’t support a daughter who had suffered the trauma of rape and severe depression, they left their brain injured daughter to raise her daughter alone, in poverty, then …. sorry, something isn’t adding up here.

    Maybe Lynne’s story should be about a privilaged family who abandoned their ill and traumatised daughter and granddaughter?

    I leap from one side of the fence to the other where abortion is concerned. I’ve faced it twice, once as a teenager and once in my 40′s. My surprise baby could say that she wishes I’d aborted her for my own sake because my marriage wouldn’t have broken up, I wouldn’t be raiding piggybanks for money to put petrol in the car, I’d be free as a bird and laying back in Tahiti having my toes sucked but I wouldn’t part with her for all the gold and diamonds and Colin Firths in the universe. Yes, things would have been different but I doubt they’d be better.

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    • Lisa

      The brain is complicated. Not all injuries prevent you from becoming a professor. All injuries to the brain (or the body), do take time to recover from.

      Not sure what you were implying in your second paragraph.

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    • Rihannon

      Merri, I agree with you. It sounds like her problems extended far beyond an unwanted pregnancy and a child she couldn’t look after properly. It would have been one less problem, but I am sure another one would have taken its place.
      Such a tragedy.

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    • jessica

      Ummm did you even read the article? Lynns mother didn’t finish high school or go to college and it was lynns mothers parents and granparents that were professors not lynns mother….read the article properly before you give your opinion on it.

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      • merri

        Which is exactly what I’ve just said, Jessica … reread the comment properly before kicking an own goal again.

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  15. Kadriye

    Although I am pro-life for the most part I can completely understand what you mean. An interesting point of view and so rationally put. It really makes you think.

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    • Erin

      I think you mean you are anti-choice. Even those that are pro-choice are usually pro-life. It’s not that we want to see women having abortions because it is not an easy decision for anyone, but it should be up to each woman individually. And that is what makes the difference. Pro-life insinuated that the other side of the argument is pro-death or anti-life and that is not at all accurate :-)

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      • Shady

        Awesome comment. I was just wondering where all of the anti-lifers were ;)

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      • Kadriye

        Hmmm nope. I’ve always thought of it as Pro-life versus Pro-choice. That’s just the way I view it. Perhaps that terminology doesn’t suit you, but it works for me.

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        • Anonymous

          Terminology is important because of what it indicates. As in the comment by Anon below – making one side pro-life leads to all kinds of misunderstanding about what those who are pro-choice stand for. By getting the terminology correct, at least we are fairly representing both sides. I am pro-choice, but I am also pro-life but just not the same way that you are. I support life, but I support life in the bigger picture – quality of life for the child, the family, the community, for general society. I don’t necessarily think abortion is the answer, but it is not my decision to make in each circumstance and the women who are carrying the babies are the best people to make those decisions. If we want to influence those decisions, we need to provide better support so that quality of life is there. Not just picket outside abortion clinics.

          But I think terminology is important because I think it has to fairly represent both sides of the debate because it gives people the wrong impression.

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      • Anon

        Um, no, that’s just YOUR opinion, and yes, pro-lifers do see abortion as anti life.

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        • Erin

          I would say that if people who are anti-choice think that people who support choice are anti-life, they have completely misunderstood the position. We are not anti-life at all. In fact most people who support choice could probably be described better as pro-quality of life.

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    • Delly

      I think the best thing about Mamamia in general is its ability to make people see a side of the argument that they hadn’t before imagined.

      So congratulations for having the maturity and strength to acknowledge your change, no matter what the rest of your opinions might be.

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      • Anonymous

        Usually with Mamamia I agree. However, when it comes to the abortion issue I have only seen one perspective. (please correct me if I’m wrong) However, I would say that the article is very thought provoking, but actually quite sad. I feel like I want to tell Lynne her life isn’t a waste, although I can understand why she would feel that way.

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  16. Haven Maven

    Thankyou. Such an amazing, though provoking article.

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    • rivkah

      I was about to type these exact words then noticed it had already been done for me!

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  17. Anna p

    This article is extraordinary. I am having a difficult time deciding how to respond, but I feel I need to. I have never heard this perspective before. It is incredibly well written.

    I want to say to Lynn, your story saddens me very much, since you feel even after all of your accomplishments in life, you still result in a ‘net loss’ to society. That is one of the saddest things I have ever read. And I don’t believe it. Your article alone has given me much to think about, my thoughts on abortion and even thoughts about life in general. Not easy to do in a time where many ideas seem repetitive and people seem jaded. Thank you.

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    • Rebafe

      Agree – nobody that can write like that – so eloquently and about such a sensitive topic in such a though provoking way could EVER be described as a net loss.

      Before this article was published? – maybe, I don’t know enough to comment (but I doubt it), but I’m confident that at the very least, this contribution alone adds real value to our world and community. (whether or not you agree with the sentiment….)

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  18. That Girl Fiona

    That is a beautifully written article. Wow. So very eloquent. Thank you.

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  19. Sarah

    “People freak out when you tell an opposing story.”

    This is the reality of the pro-life, pro-choice movements. At the end of the day, we’re never going to see eye to eye. For the record, I am a pro-lifer. Ive just read too much and seen too much to think otherwise. I can’t pass judgement on people who think otherwise, we all have a conscience. I can’t begin to fathom what it would be like to make a decision to terminate a life. I would hate for any person to be in that position. I feel empathy for any woman who has felt that she must go ahead with it, that she does not have any options.

    But the reality is, there are some who will hate you for being pro-life, and others who will hate on those who are pro-choice. I don’t think I am anti-choice, and I don’t think pro-choicers are anti-life. We’re never going to meet in the middle.

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    • pro-lifer (anti-choice to some)

      You said it better than I ever could…. and she bows out of the conversation.

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    • Sarah McM

      So are you pro-life as in “I wouldn’t have an abortion if I got pregnant”, or are you pro-life as in “I think abortion shouldn’t be available (with possible exceptions for rape, incest, etc)”?

      If the former, then I can’t see why anyone pro-choice would have an issue with your views, if the latter, then you want to restrict women’s choices about their pregnancies – which is anti-choice by definition.

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      • amber

        Those aren’t the only two “pro-life” view points. There’s also, “I think it’s a failing society that treats abortion as a viable means of contraception, but I recognize that abortion is a symptom and making it illegal isn’t a cure. I think that any changes to society that result in abortion being a choice less often made are positive changes, and I try to contribute to that.”

        There are probably other shades of grey as well…

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        • Sarah McM

          Generally people who identify as “pro life” think abortion should be restricted, it’s kind of the definition of the term.

          I agree there are shades of grey, but people who have views that are ‘shaded’ do not generally identify themselves as “pro life”.

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          • amber

            I identify as pro-life and mine is the view point I described above. I know many other people who are pro-life with shaded views.

            You’re right that a lot of people who identify that way want abortion to be illegal, but not ALL of them do. Your comment only presented two boxes that someone who is “pro-life” would fit into, and I just wanted to point out that it’s not that simple. Elsewhere in the comments someone pointed out that there are some who identify as pro-choice who don’t think late-term abortions (past the point of viability) should be legal. I think if we label anyone pro-life as feeling all abortions should be illegal and anyone pro-choice as feeling all abortions should be legal, most people wouldn’t be able to subscribe to either one. It’s a very complicated spectrum of greys.

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            • Sarah McM

              Then by any reasonable definition, you’re pro-choice, since you don’t believe in taking women’s right to choose away.

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          • Annonymouse

            Pro choice supporters don’t support abortion without restrictions. We don’t support the termination of a pregnancy based on the gender of a child. Do you know how many girls we’d lose to that?

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  20. Guest

    Unless you have been in the position of having to consider an abortion, or actually having had one, then you should not pass judgement. I had a late stage termination, due to family circumstances. My boyfriend (now husband) & I were young, I had lost my grandfather & a very close cousin (after a horrendous battle with cancer) the day I found out I was pregnant. I was not ready, my boyfriend was not ready. We as a couple were not ready & I honestly don’t think my family would have coped given the recent trauma they had endured. I bled thorugh the pregnancy which is why I only got suspicious when I had noticable weight gain, which initailly i ignored and thought it was stress. It wasn’t an easy decision, however do all those people who are anti-abortion, want to help me raise my child? Help me pay to raise my child? Do they want a child born into a family unit, who at the time, was grief stricken? I look back 5 years later, and I truly believe we made the right decision.

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  21. picardie.girl

    I agree with other posters; this is a sensational article.

    Thank you so much for posting, MM.

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  22. Loz

    Oh dear, sorry about that! Please delete these extraneous posts of mine!! :)

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  23. Anonymous

    Personally believe that abortion should not be done unless the pregnancy is life threatening or is by rape or incest. If you make the decision to have sex willingly, at least take the precautions to avoid pregnancy.

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    • Sarah McM

      Yes, because of course every method of contraception is 100% effective. *headdesk*.

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      • Deb

        Sarah I think Anon is saying that if you have sex – contraception or not – there can still be consequences that happen (children, STD’s, etc). Contraception is not always a guarantee.

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        • Sarah McM

          That might be what she meant, Deb, but it’s not what she said: “If you make the decision to have sex willingly, at least take the precautions to avoid pregnancy.”

          Someone might still end up pregnant, even if they’ve used multiple methods of contraception – I don’t see why anyone thinks it’s a good idea to force them to go through a pregnancy they don’t want.

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          • Shady

            Yes, so every person who does not want a baby should celibate. Of course.

            My partner (and the father of my 3 children) is going to be thrilled to hear that he won’t be having sex again, not even protected sex.

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            • Sarah McM

              Not only would my partner not be thrilled – I’d not be thrilled either!

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    • Alexandra

      I don’t think these cases were necessary ‘willingly’ having sex. I don’t believe abortion should be used as contraception, but I strongly believe women have the right to it in the case of coercive sex.

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      • Deb

        My bad, apparently I’m having a hard time reading today.

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    • Guest

      I have a mental illness. I will not be having children, it is a baaad idea. I don’t want to get my tubes tied (can’t afford it anyway, I don’t think it is on medicare?).

      So. Should I not be allowed to have sex lest my contraception fail? Contraception is not 100% reliable. Am I not allowed to have a relationship? If I fell pregnant the best thing for the baby and me would be an abortion. Of course I try damn hard not have that happen. But if it did…

      Or should I be forced to have a baby that may not threaten my life outright but would severely damage me mentally and result in a terrible life for my baby?

      Life is complex and people for many valid reasons other than life threatening, rape or incest choose abortion. This is just my story. What of the poor married couple with four kids who accidentally fall pregnant again, before Dad got a chance to get the snip? Should they have another child born into poverty, be forced to give it up for adoption or give up having sex altogether?

      The ‘life threatening, rape, incest’ line is a neat one but when you examine the logic of it it doesn’t hold up. This is how abortion law progressed in Australia, it wasn’t made outright legal, the courts recognised that in certain circumstances, which got broader as the years went on (going from say, ‘life threatening’ to ‘financial or social situation’), that abortion may be a reasonable option.

      For those who find abortion cruel, what I find cruel is condemning mother, baby (and father) to a life that may be unbearable. What of quality of life?

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  24. Loz

    Is it just me, but is there a sense of irony in this? If Lynn had not of been born (and subject to being terminated as a fetus), would she have known first hand what it was to suffer and thus use this experience to support the pro-choice movement? Isn’t that an indirect affirmation of pro-life?

    Irony notwithstanding, this a very courageous piece of writing…

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  25. Harriet

    “I love my life, but I wish my mother had aborted me.”

    You need some professional help, please go and see your GP ASAP.

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    • Abby

      Those that throw stones
      I get her view entirely first of all she loves her mother and wishes she had had a better life she may have if she hadnt had a child.

      I wish my mother had never married my father and had three children, why??? Because she destroyed his life and abused his children (me) when you go through something that makes you realise the alternative would have been better it makes it easier for those who don’t know what it’s like to suffer to judge so easily.

      I loved this article it just shows that there are so many other sides to the one debateand she is one brave woman for speaking up and saying so.

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    • Emma

      Lynn is not saying she doesn’t want to continue with her life right now – she is simply acknowledging the fact that if abortion was legal at the time her mother was in need of one, this would have been a much better situation for her mother. She is using a very personal story to explain why abortion is sometimes the most practical and logical solution to an unwanted and unneeded pregnancy.

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    • Faybian

      Without directly saying it, I think she had help. More than what a GP could provide.

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    • Tallulah

      Someone failed at reading the article.

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    • Ems

      As Fabian said, there are intonations in the article that Lynn has had lots of help throughout her life to get her to where she is today – educated, eloquent and highly self-aware. Unfortunately none of these words apply to your flippant response.

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  26. Loz

    Is it just me, but is there a sense of irony in this? If Lynn had not of been born (and subject to being terminated as a fetus), how would she have known first hand what it was to suffer and thus use this experience to support the pro-choice movement? Isn’t that an indirect affirmation of pro-life?

    Irony notwithstanding, this a very courageous piece of writing, and I was very moved reading this…

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  27. AJS

    I recently read a great book called ‘The Purity Myth’ by Jessica Valenti that pointed out that at the heart of the fundamentalist Christian pro-life movement is the desire to infantilise women, essentially treating women as if they can’t make decisions for themselves and need the guidance of (pro life only) counselors when making a decision about abortion. Then you have pro-life activists like Brita Stream being invited to Australia to spread the breast-cancer-and-abortion-are-linked message to impressionable teenage girls at my school. We were taken out of class to listen to her speak. Sure, I went to a Catholic school. But the Catholic Church doesn’t even promote that study. It’s the fundamentalist Protestant Christians that promote it.

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  28. Anon for this one.

    What a sensational article.
    I love my family and I love my life, but my Grandmother should have had an abortion. Carrying the first of numerous pregnancies when she was a teenager lead to an abusive marriage and being a single mother by 25. I adore her, but she was not a good mother. She was young and broke and had no clue what she was doing, had no support. Our extended family is not close, and my grandmother still with holds large truths from us, and refuses to apology to some of her own mistakes.
    I often wonder whether the love that my mother and I have for each other was worth her suffering and a broken family.

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  29. MegsB

    A very brave, selfless, well-written piece.

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  30. AJS

    I just finished reading the book ‘The Purity Myth’ by Jessica Valenti. It analyses the anti-choice movement in the United States and discusses what the anti-choice movement is really about: infantilising women and treating them as children who need guidance (from an pro-life counselor of course) and who can’t make decisions for themselves. The Christian fundamentalist movement in the United States really is so powerful. When I was in one of my senior years at a Catholic school, we had a woman called Brita Stream (yeah, I know), a prominent pro-life activist, come to our school. We were taken out of regular class time to hear her speak about how “there is a link between breast cancer and abortion”. Now, you might be thinking, Catholic school, what do you expect? Here’s the thing: This woman was invited to Australia by a politician from the Liberal party. Therefore, politics played a role in her visit, so I thought it was wrong that we were taken out of class time to go and listen to her speak. I understood that I could expect an anti-choice talk at some point, that’s the view of the church, but the breast cancer link is not even promoted by the church, it’s promoted by Christian (Protestant) fundamentalists in the United States.

    A teacher talked about their experience with dealing with this on a discussion board, she talks about her experience here: http://forums.randi.org/archive/index.php/t-96189.html

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  31. Alice

    What sadness we bring to each other when we force our views on each other. What rot from that guy who said he called out to God as a foetus, let alone the politician who is reported to have said that women can’t get pregnant from rape. Why do we do this to each other?

    I believe in God but I’m not going to attack someone because they’re an atheist. Live and let others live.

    This is a breathtaking piece of writing – brave, obviously well-considered and thought-provoking.

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  32. Claire - Matching Pegs

    I thought that this was a really eloquent article

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  33. pro-lifer

    what makes me see red, is being called “anti-choice”.

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    • Kris2040

      If you don’t want people to have the choice to go ahead with pregnancy or not, then you are anti-choice.

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      • pro-lifer

        I may prefer “pro-right to life” or “pro-options”. You know – descriptions that encourage sound debate, and differences of opinion. (which by the way is a beautiful thing)

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        • Kris2040

          Doesn’t “pro-options” mean “pro-choice”? Or are they only the options that you believe people should have available?

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          • pro-lifer

            question: do people who consider themselves “pro choice” believe in abortion no matter what? Are there ever some instances where a “pro choicer” may not agree. ie: late term abortion for example. Just putting it out there.

            If a prochoice person did not believe in late term abortion are they automatically “anti choice”? Is that what you would call them? How about me? I do not believe in the way society is going in terms of valuing life, and also that I believe in untimely pregnancy, not unwanted babies. I suffered infertility and suffered the wait of trying to adopt.

            I am just asking for the dignity of varying opinions, not to be called “anti-choice” but “pro-life”. It is a very derogatory label, that puts people in a box of varying states of belief in different situations. You must agree that “anti-choice” has a very negative conotation.

            I apologise that wanting to be called “pro-options” was my experience of being on an open adoption waiting list where birth mother’s choose the adoptive family. Many women with untimely pregnacies do not even know about these options.

            See being called “anti-choice”, would just shut me down, preventing me from offering a different perspective that would perhaps be valuable to both mother, child, and waiting families.

            Do not mistake every pro-lifer for militant placard wavers. Another thing that makes me see red.

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            • Wake up

              Also I believe this article was more about a woman’s life story and important contribution to a social and political issue. More so than it was about your insecurities in being labelled anti-choice. When you respect my ability to make my own choices, I’ll respect yours.

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            • Sarah McM

              I don’t “believe in abortion”, I believe that individual women are the best decision-makers about their individual pregnancies.

              Your position says you are in a better position to judge what a woman does with her body than the woman herself is. Calling that “pro options” is so chock-full of irony it hurts.

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            • Shannon

              Pro-choice is about supporting whatever decision is best for the mother in the circumstances. In the same way a woman shouldn’t be pressured into having an abortion, she shouldn’t be pressured into having a baby when she doesn’t want to. It is about what is right for the individual, on a case-by-case basis.

              For me personally, I don’t think I would have an abortion (but I’ve never been in a situation to have had to choose). If my circumstances changed, I would like to have the option.

              In my experience, people who are “pro-life” want to remove abortion as an option, and limiting the options is necessarily anti-choice because they have no choice as to whether or not to put their body through a pregnancy, they only have a choice as to what to do with the baby afterwards.

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            • Shady

              Maybe you would like to be referred to as ‘pro-choices that I agree with’?

              I don’t personally agree with abortion in all circumstances. Specifically, late term abortions for non-medical reasons.

              However, more than I disagree with late term abortions, I support womens rights to bodily autonomy. So I continue to be pro-choice.

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            • Anonymous

              But by your own argument, by calling yourself “pro-life” you are insinuating anyone who believes in a woman’s right to control her body and situation is “anti-life”. When a woman decides to end a pregnancy, it’s all about life – quality of life, for both the potential child and mother.

              I assure you that women in this situation have explored all their options – perhaps they haven’t listed the various adoption processes in their reasoning, but nor have they listed what birthing method they would prefer when considering having a child. It’s not a woman’s obligation to follow through a pregnancy simply because she is physically capable of doing so and others are not.

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            • Faybian

              You still didn’t answer the original question.
              Personally, I think that late term abortions without medical indication are wrong. I think unbiased counselling should be available for every woman wishing to have an abortion and necessary for late term ones. The ones I’ve seen have been medically indicated and counselling is definitely offered then.

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    • Sarah McM

      well, perhaps if you didn’t believing in restricting a woman’s choices about what she does with her body, you wouldn’t be given that label?

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      • Anon

        Is it her body Sarah? Really? Or is it someone else’s body? Idk..

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        • sophie

          I dont get it….. Of course it’s her body?

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          • Sarah McM

            Of course it’s hers – unless you think women aren’t functional adult members of society with the right to bodily autonomy?

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            • Sarah McM

              Trying this again, as my first and second comments disappeared into the ether…

              A fetus may be a potential life, but the woman in question has an actual life. She should not be forced to go through a pregnancy and birth she doesn’t want to go through, any more than we would force an individual to go through surgery and have a kidney removed because someone else needed one and would die without it.

              Would it be a good thing to do to give someone a kidney? Sure, of course it would. Do we force people to go through surgery and have a kidney removed just because someone else needs that kidney? Of course we don’t – because people have a right to say what happens to their bodies, and that would cross that line. So does a forced pregnancy.

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          • Anon

            But it’s not her life she is potentially ending, it’s someone else’s??

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            • Sarah McM

              So would you force someone to have surgery and have a kidney removed because there’s a shortage of organ donors? Why not? Aren’t you ending someone else’s life if they don’t get a kidney?

              People have a right to basic bodily autonomy. We don’t force people to go through surgery if they refuse it. We shouldn’t force women to go through a pregnancy they don’t want. It might end a _potential_ life, but the woman is actually alive and has the right to make decisions about her body – and other people don’t have the right to make those decisions for her.

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            • Kelly

              It’s a POTENTIAL life, not an independant life that exists of its own accord like the mother’s. If she can’t cope for example and kills herself, then the foetus dies too. So it is her body and the foestus is just going to be borrowing it for awhile, if it survives at all. Up to 20% of prgnancies are estimated to end in miscarriage anyway.

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            • Anonymous

              Right word there (whether you intended it or not)….It’s a “potential” life, not an actual life. It *could* become a life, but isn’t yet. Are we going to also start charging people who speed with *potential manslaughter”? Cause they *could* crash……

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            • Jacqui

              I agree with this point actually. When you’re pregnant with a planned baby, you have to eat differently, behave differently as you have to consider the bub. So it’s not really your body only anymore

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            • Sarah McM

              Trying this again, as my first comment disappeared into the ether…

              A fetus may be a potential life, but the woman in question has an actual life. She should not be forced to go through a pregnancy and birth she doesn’t want to go through, any more than we would force an individual to go through surgery and have a kidney removed because someone else needed one and would die without it.

              Would it be a good thing to do to give someone a kidney? Sure, of course it would. Do we force people to go through surgery and have a kidney removed just because someone else needs that kidney? Of course we don’t – because people have a right to say what happens to their bodies, and that would cross that line. So does a forced pregnancy.

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            • Nina Funnell

              “Is it her body?”
              Right there you’ve summed up exactly what is wrong with the anti-choice side of the debate- it’s the assumption that a woman’s body is not her own. That the moment a woman becomes pregnant (or perhaps the moment she herslef is born) she is viewed as The Great Almighty Incubator and her personal agency and autonomy is suspended.

              I read a story this week about a teenager with an unwanted pregancy who had cancer who was DENIED both the aborition and the chemo that could have saved/ prolonged her life because the rights of the foetus came first. Both the foetus and the mother died as a result. Its deaths like those which remind us that anti-choicers have no right to call themselves pro-life since they put women’s lives at risk.

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        • Sarah McM

          Trying this again, as my comments keep disappearing into the ether…

          A fetus may be a potential life, but the woman in question has an actual life. She should not be forced to go through a pregnancy and birth she doesn’t want to go through, any more than we would force an individual to go through surgery and have a kidney removed because someone else needed one and would die without it.

          Would it be a good thing to do to give someone a kidney? Sure, of course it would. Do we force people to go through surgery and have a kidney removed just because someone else needs that kidney? Of course we don’t – because people have a right to say what happens to their bodies, and that would cross that line. So does a forced pregnancy.

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          • NinaFunnell

            Sarah- I wonder if the reason why some in society value the “potential’ life of a foetus over the ‘actual’ life of a woman- is because a ‘potential penis’ is still considered more valuable than an actual vagina. Just a thought :)

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            • Sarah McM

              Yes, there may well be something in that!

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  34. Dave

    What a great piece and especially relevant after hearing about Todd Akin’s “legitimate rape” comments over in the US.

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    • intern

      We’re just working on a story about Akin now – it’ll be up shortly!

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  35. Craig

    ‘Dalbey claims to have recovered a memory of being “delivered” from the abortion because as a fetus he cried out to God’

    Yeah, whatever.

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  36. Stacey

    What a sad being….I hope this author is in therapy. I have empathy for her childhood struggles but I just can’t grasp “I wish she had aborted me because I love her and want what is best for her” (Really?)

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    • Laura

      How dare anyone undermine a woman’s life story by suggesting she just need more therapy to ‘get over it’. 
      This is a raw firsthand autobiographical recount of a situation where a daughter sees her mother could have bettered her life dramatically if she chose abortion.. It therefore sounds as though the author has worked very hard to overcome the traumas she lived through, I don’t believe any amount of therapy will ever erase the memories and hurt, therapy would also not change the rational understanding that a woman could be more easily empowered to better her independence and living situation if she did not yet have the added stressor of a child she is not economically and emotionally ready to nurture. 
      I applaud the author for her strength in sharing her story, she is the voice of both emotional and rational reality that is badly missing from this anti-abortion debate. 
      People very incorrectly assume that because they witness or experience parental love and stability, that all children have access to this. What sad ignorant beings.

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    • Anonymous

      I think you’re confusing pity with empathy. Going by your comment empathy is something you have little of.

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    • Tallulah

      I think it’s sad you can’t understand what she means by that.

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  37. Polly

    Wow. Phenomenally brave and important contribution. Thank you so much for writing this. I wish you only happiness and love for the rest of your life.

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    • Loz

      I couldn’t agree more, but is it just me, but is there a sense of irony in this? If Lynn had not of been born (and subject to being terminated as a fetus), how would she have known first hand what it was to suffer and thus use this experience to support the pro-choice movement? Isn’t that an indirect affirmation of pro-life?

      Irony notwithstanding, this a very courageous piece of writing, and I was very moved reading this too…

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