Woman who had abortion by pills: I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy

From a woman who had two abortions by pills. She said the first abortion wasn’t a terrible experience, but the second was bad:

“I would not want my worst enemy to go through what I had to go through. There was an extreme amount of bleeding from the time it happened to when I had the pessary.… I was wiped out for three or four weeks…”

Miriam Claire The Abortion Dilemma: Personal Views on a Public Issue (New York: Insight Books, 1995) 146

This shows that even if a woman has an abortion by pills that is not a terrible experience, the second one might be much worse.

Read more stories of women who took the abortion pill here.

Note: this is from a pro-choice book

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Woman has an abortion to keep her boyfriend

From a postabortion women:

“I remember thinking before my abortion, “Oh God, don’t let me die because I’m doing this.” I was scared that I was about to have an abortion and that I wouldn’t come out of it. After having the abortion, they couldn’t bring me out of the anesthesia – I had never had a history of problems with anesthesia – I just didn’t seem to want to come back to consciousness, perhaps because I didn’t want to have the abortion. I wanted my boyfriend’s baby, but he said he wouldn’t stay with me if I didn’t have the abortion. I thought that having the abortion would help keep us together. I think the guilt we both felt about the abortion contributed to our eventual divorce three years after we married.”

Miriam Claire The Abortion Dilemma: Personal Views on a Public Issue (New York: Insight Books, 1995) 145

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Woman has “weeping fits” after abortion

From a woman who took abortion pills:

“Physically, taking the pills was a dream. But emotionally, I was very angry… I had weeping fits. Sometimes I’d just look at my kids. My husband was depressed about it too. His way of dealing with it was not talking about it.”

Quoted in Beth Ann Kirier, Los Angeles Times, April 22, 1990

Miriam Claire The Abortion Dilemma: Personal Views on a Public Issue (New York: Insight Books, 1995) 142

Many women have a much more difficult time with the pills and a great deal of physical pain and bleeding. They would definitely not call it a “dream.” Read some of their stories here.

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Woman in recovery room: why are we all crying?

Crystal Pitrois tells the story of Tina Torry (then Tina Huffman) who is in the recovery room after her second abortion.

Girls were walking around the room crying. Not hiding their tears. They couldn’t hide them. Their tears were too real. Their hearts broken. …Had they aborted their babies like she had the first time? In an effort to make everyone happy? To do what everyone wanted them to? Maybe they were 17 and felt they didn’t have another option. Possibly they had fathers who wouldn’t love them if they were pregnant. Perhaps their boyfriends had left them when they found out. Or maybe their husbands had not wanted them to have a child. …Did they have regrets?

[Tina Torry] realized that she, herself, had tears streaming down her face. She wasn’t sure why she was crying. She had wanted an abortion. She and her husband had decided. And still, she was crying.… I’m so relieved. It’s done. I don’t have to worry about having the baby. Those words she kept repeating over and over in her head, but she couldn’t shake the extreme sadness …. She wept without inhibition. The nurse turned to the other nurse and said in a voice filled with pity or annoyance…“She’s crying.”

Tina wanted to scream, “We’re all crying. Why are we all crying?”

Crystal Pitrois Short of a Miracle (Greenville, South Carolina:Ambassador Emerald International, 2002) 55-56

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Man and woman describe abortion

Bob, father of an aborted child:

“I found out on long-distance while she was out of town. She was very elated. She loved the idea of being pregnant. She determined that on approval from me she’d have the baby… I got caught up in the idea from her effervescence. My reaction was conditioned by hers. I had a lot of reservations, but I said, “Why not?”

Was I willing to sacrifice to be a good father? I came from a broken home. I had been denied a lot and I was looking for a lot. As a father I didn’t know if I’d be able to sacrifice my ambitions to give and cater to it. And an absentee father is not my idea of a good one. It is a conundrum for me…

I accept that conception is the beginning of life. Whatever you want to call it. It’s human, of humans. What degree of responsibility do we as a society have to women, to embryos? I believe we have to protect the rights of those who are developed…

I don’t remember who was first, but we began to talk about not going ahead with marriage and children.

It was peace and calm after we reached the decision. It was right and we felt it. I probably felt more at peace than she did. The idea of having a human being inside her was awesome to her. “Little Johnny’s gone,” she’d say in public as a spoof, but there was a cutting sense of loss.”

Rita, his partner, says:

“I don’t know how men feel about pregnancy. My feelings are strong about being pregnant. I was overjoyed. I still want it more than a husband, or a ranch house, or anything…

He had no understanding of what I had been through and what I had to go through right afterward, even though I told him. Bob did all the gesturing, but we never sat down and talked. For him it was over. He went on about his job. I wanted to move out. He showed no emotion about breaking up. I never slept with him again and we never discussed the abortion, although I ran into him several times after I moved out.

I’ve been seeing a new man for a while and he’s pretty nice, but we don’t really talk about sex or birth control. Except one night when we were first going out, he said to me, “If you never want another abortion, you’d better stop playing Russian roulette with your birth control pills, because I have no intention of marrying you.”

Arthur B Shostak, Gary McLouth, Lynn Seng Men and Abortion: Lessons, Losses, and Love (New York, NY: Praeger, 1984) 200-204

This poor woman is on her way to getting pregnant again with another man who does not support her. This is how repeat abortions happen. She seems to want a child, but will face the same pressures as before if she gets pregnant.

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Postabortion woman: the tears never cease

From Teresa L. Fangman, who had an abortion:

“When I was 16 I was shuffled through an assembly-line abortion.  I was number 13 of 17 who went through the morning session at one abortion clinic.  Physically, I had no problems with my abortion, but emotionally, I created a living Hell that continues on a daily basis.  I’m not sure the tears will ever stop.  I’ve been waiting almost eleven years now and they never cease.”

Lynn K. Murphy “Abortion Hurts Women” EWTN

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Post-abortion woman told “it wasn’t a baby yet”

Sue Liljenberg, who was a teenager when she obtained a “safe, legal” abortion:

. . . I’m a victim of abortion and, even if it takes until my last breath, I must be heard.

When I was 17 I found myself in a crisis pregnancy . . . . When I went to the local family planning clinic, I sought guidance and wanted to know what I could do about my situation. I wanted a helping hand. When I walked into the clinic, I trusted the nurses and doctors, and thought they were concerned about my health enough to help me make a decision, not make my decision for me.

Only one solution was strongly recommended that day. When I questioned the development of my baby, I was told it wasn’t a baby yet, and that it looked like a tadpole. Since that day I have learned differently . . . .

I was told that abortion was simple and safe and that I could go and live the rest of my life and have children when I was in a position to provide for them. I heard no scientific facts that day, only biased opinions. I was not told what abortion itself could do to me in the years to come, only that it was “safe and simple.”

I was not told that I would abuse myself with alcohol, try to kill myself, develop an eating disorder, and have terrible dreams. Worst of all, I was not told that I might never have another child. It has been 14 years since my “safe and simple” abortion and I have never been able to have another child.

Letter from Sue Liljenberg to Sen. Gordon Humphrey, dated June 6, 1986

Amicus Brief in Webster v. Reproductive Health Services” by Christine Torre, et al.

BRIEF FOR FEMINISTS FOR LIFE OF AMERICA,
WOMEN EXPLOITED BY ABORTION OF GREATER
KANSAS CITY, THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
PRO-LIFE NURSES, LET ME LIVE, AND ELLIOT
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL SCIENCES RESEARCH,
AS AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANTS

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Woman apologizes to aborted baby

From a woman who had an abortion:

The waiting room was “filled with a true cross-section of the community. No one looked happy. No one was chatting with anyone but their partners. This was not a day to make friends.”

The woman says:

“I tried to concentrate on the physical feelings, not on what was happening. It was over in minutes, and I was overcome with sadness. “I’m so sorry I didn’t want you,” I told the fetus. “I’m so sorry.”

Faith Abbott “A Tale of Two Women” Human Life Review Spring 1993

sonogram of 8 week old preborn baby
sonogram of 8 week old preborn baby
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Post-Abortion woman: “My sorrow was immeasurable”

From a woman who had an abortion:

“My sorrow was immeasurable, penetrating every fiber of my being. I was wracked with sobs, heaving aching sobs, for an hour… After that day I spent 3 months plunged in total emotional darkness – the depths of anguish, anger, and despair. I cried by day and by night for my lost baby. I wanted my child so desperately and could hardly come to terms with the fact that I had been directly responsible for my own child’s death.”

Anonymous

Daily Mail, December 7, 1989

Quoted in Jenny Bryan Abortion (East Sussex, England: Wayland Publishers Limited, 1991) 44

Read more testimonies from post-abortion women

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Pro-Choice woman: my abortions left me bitter and angry

From a woman who had two abortions, who says she is pro-choice, but:

“Why then did both my abortions leave me bitter and angry in ways I could not, at the time, understand or explain… For me there seemed to be a contradiction between everything I had ever read or thought about abortion and the lived experience, an enormous gap between the impassioned rhetoric of the political and moral arguments for and against abortion, and the bloody reality of one scared woman screaming on a table.”

K Kaufmann, Test Tube Women, 1984

Quoted in Jenny Bryan Abortion (East Sussex, England: Wayland Publishers Limited, 1991) 43

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