Clinic tells fourteen year old: “Bring your teddy bear” doesn’t tell her parents

A pro-life pamphlet told the following story:

Barbara Murray had to face extremely difficult situation at an early age. Barbara was pregnant and 14 and some of the adults in the community led Barbara to an abortion clinic 3 1/2 hours away. A last-minute phone call saved Barbara and her baby girl from a scheduled abortion.  That phone call was with Barbara’s mother – the one person who knew nothing about her daughter’s pregnancy! Barbara’s experience magnifies the importance of parental consent in teen pregnancy abortion situations. Read why Barbara needed better advice than… “Bring your teddy bear to hold.”

It goes on to present an interview with Barbara. They asked about the counseling she received at the abortion clinic- or lack thereof.

Q.: did you have to go to the abortion clinic for any pre-abortion counseling?

A.: everything was done over the phone. They never talked about any type of counseling. They just said to come for the procedure. She told me what to bring. She said I would go through the procedure and there would be a snack afterwards. I would be sent to a recovery room and then I would go home.

Q.: did the abortion clinic personnel tell you about any abortion alternatives?

A: no. Nobody talked about it. It was like once the seed of abortion had taken root, it was nurtured to the point where they didn’t want to dare hurt it by saying anything to the contrary — which I found everybody doing.

Q.: how did the abortion clinic counselor prepare you for the abortion over the phone? 

A.: the two things she stressed were to make sure I had the maxipads, the heavy kind, a bathrobe and slippers. The thing that sticks in my mind most of all he she asked me again how old I was and then she again asked me if my boyfriend was going to be with me during the procedure or was he coming afterwards. I said. ‘ I will probably go through the procedure by myself and my boyfriend will be there later. ‘ she again asked me how old I was. I said,  ‘14.’ That’s when she said, “if you want to bring a teddy bear to hold onto during the procedure, you could also put that in your bed. “ She then said to bring along three separate bank checks for separate amounts.

Barbara’s mother ended up finding out about the abortion plans and was able to help her daughter and support her. Barbara gave birth to a healthy baby girl. She was asked:

Q.: should clinics be required to notify parents when miners come to obtain an abortion?

A.: parents not only need to be notified, the abortion clinics need to have their consent. I didn’t need a teddy bear. I needed an adult person, my mother, who could be with me. Here I was going to have the abortion because I thought I was going to be disowned or hurt by my mother I thought I had no choice. that’s where parents play a vital role.

Martha Scheiber  “Bring Your Teddy Bear to Hold” East End publishing company 1990

9-10 weeks. Over 40% abortions are done at this time or later  
Share on Facebook

Secret Planned Parenthood document admits that women suffer after their abortions

There is evidence that pro-choice organizations know that abortion can cause serious emotional problems in women, even though they deny this publicly. In the article  “Post-Abortion Trauma:  Learning the Truth, Telling the Truth” Women exploited by abortion/Elliot Institute 1992 it says a document was leaked by Planned Parenthood worker. The document said the following::

” A number of anti-choice studies and surveys (including the Reardon study and the Grant survey) have shown that the incidence of post-procedural trauma for abortion clients may be as high as 91% of all cases.  Recent unpublished reports from the Alan Guttmacher Institute [Planned Parenthood’s research group] indicate that the scope of the problem may have been accurately tabulated in these studies. “

The report was originally published in New Dimensions magazine.

 

Share on Facebook

“My body, my choice” is arrogant, says writer

A woman who had 2 miscarriages saw her third, living child on an ultrasound and said the following:

“I now find the slogan “my body, my choice” amazingly arrogant. If there is one lesson I have learned through this year, it is that I do not create life. Life passes through me….I do not create life, I only house it. I did nothing different with any of my four children, but two lived within my womb and two died there. Life-giving is beyond my power, beyond my body, beyond my choice.”

Lori Stanley Roeleveld “My Turn” (weekly column) Providence Journal Sun. June 27, 1993. E-3

12 weeks sonogram
12 weeks
Share on Facebook

Dr. Michael R. Harrison on ultrasound and unborn babies

Physician Michael R. Harrison  said of ultrasound:

“It was not until the last half of this century that the prying eye of the ultrasound (that is, ultrasound  visualization) rendered the once opaque womb transparent, stripping the veil of mystery from the dark inner sanctum, and letting the light of scientific observation fall on the shy and secretive fetus…The sonographic voyeur, spying on the unwary fetus finds him or her a surprisingly active little creature, not at all the passive parasite we had imagined.”

Valerie Hartouni “Containing Women: Reproductive Discourse in the 1980s” Techonocluture, Constance Penley and Andrew Ross, eds. (Minneapolis: U of Minneapolis Press, 1991) 38

Ultrasound at 18 weeks
3-D ultrasound in the first trimester
Share on Facebook

Abortionist upset by women who get second, third, or fourth abortions

The son of an abortionist describes how his father felt about women who came in for repeat abortions:

“Generally, though, he said seeing patients register sadness did not disturb him- what else could be expected from a decision as weighty and personal as this? What did bother him was seeing a patient (and there were some) for her second, third, or fourth abortion, even after she had been counseled to use contraception, and finding that she still acted blasé about it. “That upsets me,” he said.

Eyal Press “Absolute Convictions: My Father, a City, and the Conflict that Divided America” (New York: Henry Holt & company, 2006) P 246-247

He is not the only abortionist or clinic worker to feel troubled about women who have repeat abortions. Here are some other quotes by clinic workers and doctors about the ambivalence and sometimes outright disgust they feel toward repeat aborters. This raises an interesting question – if abortion is simply a removal of cells, and end of her pregnancy, a simple procedure, why is it troubling to providers when women have multiple abortions? If abortion was not the killing of a baby, why would it matter if a woman had one or 5 or 10? Quotes like the show the clinic workers, who see the bodies of aborted babies daily, know that abortion is much more than simply removing some cells or “terminating a pregnancy.”

Share on Facebook

It’s hard to get younger doctors to do abortions, says clinic worker

Allie Harper, abortion clinic operator:

“Many abortion providers are aging I don’t know who is going to replace them. It’s really hard getting younger doctors to do the procedure.”

The Baltimore Sun, Abortion gets wide protection in Md. law; Procedure likely to remain available if Roe is overturned: 1-15-2006

Share on Facebook

Abortion Clinic Worker; Some Women are “Very Upset” by Abortion Decision

An abortion clinic worker posted on Reddit about her job and answered questions. You can read her post here.

Here is a quote of interest:

“Q: “Has anyone ever instantaneously regretted getting and [sic] abortion right after the procedure?

“A. There have been people who have been very upset by their decision. The importance of seeking post-procedure counseling is stressed to patients, because it is a very hard decision for a lot of people to make and sometimes it’s necessary.”

Studies show that regret after abortion tend to grow with time, and many women who initially felt only relief go on to experience sadness. But even this abortion clinic worker, dedicated to her job, has to admit that abortion is hard for women, and some women feel regret right away.

Share on Facebook

Women were “shaken” and felt “loss” after abortions

From a writer whose father was an abortionist:

“Every day at the Erie Medical Center, women arrived pregnant, and, a few hours later, returned home having decided not to become mothers. As my father would come to appreciate, few did so without some internal conflict. Some cried afterward. Others were deeply shaken. Many years later, after spending a day in my father’s office on a day abortions were performed and coming home emotionally drained, I wondered whether this ever gave him pause. There were few smiles on the faces of the women I saw that day. There was, on the other hand, a palpable sense of loss and sadness. Did this ever make my father question whether perhaps the protestors had a point: that these women might be making a decision they would come to regret? …. When I worked up the nerve to ask him, he admitted that sometimes women did seem unsure afterward whether they’d made the right decision- and less then genial in their feelings toward the staff. On one occasion, he told me, a patient was so distraught after her abortion that she started screaming at him, “How can you do this?” He was unsettled. More often, though, he said what patients expressed was a sense of relief.”

Eyal Press “Absolute Convictions: My Father, a City, and the Conflict that Divided America” (New York: Henry Holt & company, 2006 64

Share on Facebook

Abortion breaks apart baby’s limbs

“If you have a limb that’s on the interior of the — on both sides of the uterus, and you pull on it, it will break off at that point.”

Dr. William Fitzhugh, abortionist, in sworn testimony in Carhart vs. Ashcroft, Lincoln, NE, March 30, 2004.

Share on Facebook

Healing takes time, says head of postabortion ministry

Carla McElhaney, director of Women Exploited by Abortion, talks about the women who come to her organization in search of healing after their abortions:

“If reality hits soon after the abortion a young woman is a bundle of raw emotions.  But she often doesn’t want to hear that healing takes time.  Abortion promised a quick solution to the problem of pregnancy.  Now she’s looking for a quick solution to the pain of having had an abortion.  But there isn’t one.”

Jim  Auer “You Can Save a Life” Liguorian January 1994

Read women’s post abortion stories here.

Read about studies and statistics about mental health after abortion here

Share on Facebook