Woman sees aborted baby after taking abortion pill

The following was posted on my site in response to a comment that was made that 10-week-old babies do not look human and are not developed. The woman below had an abortion by pill at 10 weeks, and held her baby in her hand:

Your [sic]wrong. If you want to see that science for yourself, its easy , you don’t care right! So get pregnant, go to a abortion clinic around 9-10 weeks, get the abortion pill. Next day insert the three pills in your cervix area, get some sleep, and wait for you to gush. Deliver in tub, so you can see this so called pile of tissue, that so called pile of tissue, has a nice round head, eyes, developing ears, hand, fingers arms, elbows, legs , feet, toes, mouth, I’ve held my 10 wk baby, have you.

A medical (by pill) abortion after nine weeks or so can result in the expelling of a baby with human parts, arms, legs, etc. These parts developed by about seven weeks after conception. See recognizable body of an aborted baby is one reason why abortions by pill can be so incredibly traumatic to women. It is also not recommended by the FDA that they be given beyond seven weeks, but many clinics do.

9 – 10 weeks
9 – 10 weeks
Share on Facebook

Lack of support drives woman to the abortion clinic

Pamela’s story:

I am 20 years old, and I always thought this would be too young for me to have a child, but when it actually ‘happens’ everything is so different. I’ve been with my ex only a couple of months, before he broke up with me. He started saying I was different, getting so emotional and stuff… A week after he broke up I found out I was pregnant. When I told my friends, it was obvious for them that I’d get an abortion, and for my ex, it was not even a question. He is the only one I eventually told I wanted to keep it, and he was hysterical, telling me he was not ready for a child (can’t forget to mention he’s a 28 year old insecure about anything that resolves around money, even if he’s doing fine). 

Back then, I thought that, since that’s what he wanted, it’d be better for our relationship. Now that I knew my ups and downs were caused by the pregnancy, I thought he’d forgive me for being such an idiot. I eventually told my parents about it, my mom was very supportive, but on the other hand, my dad kept saying ”you know it would not be good for you, you have so much more to live…” I could see he was devastated. I ended up taking an appointment, without even really thinking about it… trying to make the thoughts of wanting to keep the baby go away. 

The fact of me being a single mom is never something that bothered me. I’m independent, I have a good job, and I don’t mind taking care of it myself. But, the only thought of really being all alone, without having my friends and family supporting me was making me feel so insecure. I was so scared of loosing it all, and now I know I would not have ”lost it all”, because my best friend and my dad (the ones I thought would not support me) would have eventually accepted it, and I know it. 

I went to the appointment, with my ex boyfriend, and did it. I laid, closed my eyes, and fell asleep. When I woke up, I was hysterical. I kept crying, feeling like they’ve taken away a huge part of my body. I felt so empty. In 15 mins my whole life changed. I was getting used of having a little baby inside of me, and it felt like they had just taken away the only thing that was keeping me from falling apart. I was going through a lot when my ex left me. I felt so abandoned. On top of that my best friend, who is also my roommate, would not even understand me while I was pregnant. My food cravings, fatigue and nausea were annoying here.. As if she could not associate all of this with my pregnancy because she knew it would soon going to end, so she did not try to realize I WOULD actually still be pregnant until my abortion. Saying ”I’m going to get an abortion” does not mean it all goes away… So, while I felt everyone was just abandoning me, this little thing right inside my belly was the only thing that gave me a reason to try to be ”OK”. At night, when going to bed, I kept crying, but always felt better when thinking I was not alone. 

After a while, the situation with my ex got worse. I felt so mad at myself for caring about his feelings.. He had no right to tell me what to do with my body… and him being that much of an asshole with me after the abortion felt like a slap in the face. Everything I thought I was, I wanted, and also how people were was all flipped upside down. And that made it all worse, I felt like this would all kill me. I wished I could just go to sleep for a couple of months. Felt like this was just too much, too much in a year, too much for a lifetime… I was still grieving (I’ve also lost someone i was really close too only a couple of months before that), and felt like ”this” experience was way too much for me to handle. 

Now that it’s all said and done, I mad at myself for listening to others instead of my own feelings. I cared about people who could not even try to care for me. Now that it’s over, everyone’s acting as if it never even happened, but every night I go to sleep crying, and wake up the next morning, put on my brave face and try to convince myself everything’s gonna be OK. What hurts the most is thinking I’m never going to go back to that person I was before. It is now part of my story and I have to live with it. I’m mad at myself in a way because I always told my self I’d never be that ”person”. I have to carry these regrets on my shoulders, and everyday I wish this has not been a life-changing experience for me, but it was… 

This abortion changed so much in my life, and in my perception of how I want to live it. Now I am being a little more selfish, thinking about my own feelings first, and I guess being that depressed has its reasons… Everything happens for a reason. I guess when I’ll get pregnant again, this feeling of emptiness will go away, but until then, I know I still have a lot to go through. Unfortunately, this experience really did change my life, and now everything seems so blurry. I am slowly going to heal, and I know it, I know I am grieving, and eventually, the guilt will also go away, but I wish I could just fast forward my life, and make it all go away… 
Pamela 

Share on Facebook

Pregnant teen sees baby’s heartbeat on ultrasound, decides not to have abortion

“I went to an abortion clinic in Knoxville, just to talk to them to ask questions to make sure I was pregnant. They did an ultrasound. I think I was three weeks when I went. As soon as I saw her heartbeat I knew then that wasn’t an option. I knew I couldn’t do it.”

Lindsay Dougherty, at the time pregnant at 17

“17-year-old knew decision as soon as she saw baby’s heartbeat” The Tennessean May 19 2012

Share on Facebook

Abortion is “murder” but should be a woman’s choice?

Pro-choice and pro-euthanasia advocate Jim Taylor says that abortion is “murder” but he still thinks it’s wrong to prevent a woman from having one:

“I would consider prohibiting a woman from having an abortion, and forcing a woman to have one, to be equally wrong.

Some local agencies have accused me of being pro-abortion. I’m not. I’m opposed to abortion. I consider it a form of murder. Or of euthanasia, at the other end of life. I would not counsel any woman to terminate a pregnancy by having an abortion.

At the same time, I would not condemn any woman for having had an abortion. Because I cannot, and should not, make that choice for her.”

Jim Taylor “Fundamental right to choose” The Daily Courier January 11, 2015

More and more pro-choicers are saying that yes, abortion is “murder” or “killing” a “baby” (or “life” or “human life”), but that abortion still should not be illegal and that woman have a right to kill their offspring.

Read more statements for pro-choicers admitting that each abortion is killing here.

9 to 10 weeks. is killing this baby "murder"?
9 to 10 weeks. is killing this baby “murder”?
Left over from an abortion at 10 weeks
Left over from an abortion at 10 weeks
Share on Facebook

The Story of Baby Tia

babytia20wkIn a 1992 handout, author Jed White of Operation Rescue National told the story of baby Tia, a little girl who was aborted in the fifth month of pregnancy. Because she had been a victim of an abortion by induced labor, Tia’s little body was intact and unmarred. (See left) A pathologist was given Tia’s body to dispose of by the abortionist who killed her. However, struck with sympathy, the pathologist gave Tia to pro–lifer Rev. Robert Schenck of Buffalo, NY, for proper burial. A mortician offered his services and cared for Tia’s body, but Rev. Schneck was unable to bury the little girl because cemeteries all required a death certificate, and Tia’s life and death were never acknowledged.

While technically New York State at the time required a death certificate to be filled out for each abortion, these laws were not always followed. Tia’s mother most likely paid cash and the records were never made.

This all took place during the time when Operation Rescue was staging large demonstrations outside abortion clinics, and squaring off against vocal, often violent pro-choicers. Rev. Schneck and his brother took Tia to a demonstration in Buffalo, New York and displayed her to the crowd.

Rev. Schneck, who was holding Tia, was attacked by a violent proabortion demonstrator who grabbed Tia and threw her to the ground. The Schneck brothers were then arrested by police at the scene.

When asked what the charges were, the arresting officer said “I don’t know.” Within the next several weeks, charges were amended several times and then dropped. The Schnecks were released.

An Erie County medical examiner had seized Tia’s battered body and refused to give her back to the pro-lifers. In his autopsy report, he pronounced her “a human body” and “a stillborn.” However, he refused to state the cause of death, and never ruled on whether Tia was “stillborn” as a result of an abortion procedure.

All this was recorded in Jed White “Baby Tia” Operation Rescue National, 1992

Share on Facebook

Abortion is “empowering” to me

Abortionist Eric Schaff:

The desire to control one’s destiny is fundamental. The physician’s role is to help our patients have healthier and more productive futures….Simply advocating for abortion services for my patients often left me helpless. Now, the ability to provide this critical health service has been empowering to my patients and to myself as a physician.”

Voices of Choice

Many women do not feel empowered after their abortions, but in fact, regret them.

There is something wrong with a person who is empowered by tearing apart babies like the one below

aborted at 8 weeks
aborted at 8 weeks
Share on Facebook

Abortion Survivor: Nik Hoot

 
Nik Hoot

 

Read about more abortion survivors. 

 

 

Share on Facebook

Father sees ultrasound of his baby for the first time

A pregnant woman talks about what happened when her ambivalent fiancé, the baby’s father, saw an ultrasound of his baby for the first time:

“My fiancé and I were a lot closer before I found out I was pregnant… We kinda drifted apart. I got him to go to the ultrasound with me, and once he saw it moving around and kicking and stuff, he has been involved ever since!!

He has been 100% supportive, and at my last doctor’s appointment he was excited to go! We heard the heartbeat and I will never forget the look on his face! Try to get the father to go to things like that, it will definitely get him going…”

Anonymous, Quoted from the AOL’s Pregnancy Message Boards, and reposted on abortion TV, a pro-life website that is now down.

Below: 3-D ultrasound of a 10 week-old baby. These ultrasounds are amazing, but even the traditional, two-dimensional ultrasounds can be a powerful tool in humanizing unborn babies.

the-thinker

Share on Facebook

Article: Abortion: None of Your Business?

This is from a brochure by Priests for Life’s Father Frank Pavone that can be found here.  Priests for Life has been kind enough to allow me to republish material from their site. The pictures of unborn babies throughout are my addition. All of the babies pictured could be legally aborted in at least one US state. 

Most people admit that abortion is wrong; surveys show, in fact, that half of all Americans are willing to call it “murder.” (See, for example, the January 1998 New York Times/CBS News Poll.)14wk500

Yet a disturbing number of these same people will not do anything to stop it. They say, “I believe abortion is wrong, but I do not want to impose my morality on others.” In other words, it’s wrong, but it’s a private wrong. If I think it’s wrong, I won’t do it. If someone else does it, that’s none of my business.

This attitude has been expressed in a bumper sticker that says, “Against Abortion? Don’t have one!” and in the assertion that the opposing sides in this controversy should simply “Agree to disagree.”

8eyesYet we simply don’t look at most moral problems this way. We do not hear people say, “I would never abuse my child, but if the other person wants to do so, that’s her choice.” Nor do they say, “I would never commit a violent crime, but if someone else chooses to do so, that’s none of my business.”

Many do not want to “interfere” with someone’s choice to have an abortion. Yet it would make perfect sense to “interfere” with that same person’s choice to steal your car, burn your house, or kidnap your child!

The fact is that some choices have victims, and when somebody’s choice destroys somebody else’s life, that’s everybody’s business.  It is, after all, the business of love to intervene to save our brothers and sisters in need.7weeks-image-2-200x200

People need to know that abortion is their business. They need to de-isolate the issue. People understand that we have to intervene to help the poor, the AIDS victim, the drug addict, the victim of crime and war.  Even if we do not know their names, or have never seen the faces of these victims, we know it is our business to help them. There is no reason to isolate abortion in a category of its own, where all the rules of human decency suddenly change. Who is the child scheduled to be aborted today? That child is your sister, your brother.

Some claim they are free to believe that the unborn are not human lives. That’s fine. But to claim the right to destroy them in practice is a different matter, no longer involving only beliefs, but bloodshed, not only viewpoints, but victims.18 weeks a

Abortion is our problem, and the problem of every human being.  We are one human family. Nobody can be neutral on abortion. It involves the destruction of an entire group of human beings!  Just as we cannot be indifferent to the killing of a new born baby, so we cannot be indifferent to the killing of a preborn baby.  We all share the responsibility for people who are in danger.  Injustice to any person in this world is injustice to every person!Even when we understand this, we are often afraid to act. We can gain courage, however, from the story of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37) On the road from Jerusalem to Jericho, a man fell in with robbers.  A priest and a levite came by, but did not stop to help. Despite their knowledge of the Law and Prophets, they walked right by. Why?

18weeksOne of the reasons may be that they were afraid. The road from Jerusalem to Jericho is a dangerous road. Because of its numerous steep curves, it lends itself to attacks by robbers who can easily hide not too far  from their victims. Perhaps the priests and levites who passed by that man asked themselves, “If I stop to help this man, what will happen to me? Maybe the robbers who attacked him are still here.  Maybe they’re hiding just around the bend. This is a dangerous road.  I better keep going.”

Sometimes we ask the same question.  If I speak up too loudly about the victims of abortion, what will happen to me? Will I face persecution, will I encounter opposition, will I lose popularity if I get involved in a cause like this?

And then the Good Samaritan came along, and he reversed the question.  He didn’t ask, “If I help this man, what will happen to me?” The Good Samaritan asked, “If I do not help this man, what will happen to him?”  And that’s the question for us.  If I do not address this evil, what will happen to the unborn? If I do not get involved, what will happen to those who are vulnerable, to those who are marginalized our society, those who are oppressed, those who have no one to speak for them?

unbornbaby20w-01 (1)

The abortion problem involves us all. Its solution must also involve us all. Get involved today!

“I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”

— Elie Weisel, Holocaust survivor

Share on Facebook

Abortionist: performing abortions is my Christian responsibility

“I perform abortions because of my religious belief. I would feel I wasn’t living up to my Christian responsibility if I saw the need to not offer an answer to that need. We have a saying among Presbyterians that God alone is Lord of the conscience.” 

Abortionist James Armstrong, in the 1990’s film Whose Choice?

9 to 10 week old unborn baby
9 to 10 week old unborn baby
From baby aborted at ten weeks
From baby aborted at ten weeks
Share on Facebook