Before I Had Time to Think
by "Nancy Anders"
It was May 19, 1973. I was pregnant from a date rape. I had tried to
hide it from my parents but of course they found out. Then the pressure
started. "How are you going to go to college with a baby?" "How are you
going to support it?" "It is only a blob of blood. It's not a baby yet."
Before I had time to think about what I wanted, the abortion was
over.
The abortion itself was like a living hell. I thought my guts were being
pulled out. It was degrading and I was terrified. When it was over, something
made me ask the doctor, "Was it a boy or a girl?" He answered, "I can't
tell. It's in pieces." The counseling consisted of throwing some birth
control pills at me.
Its so hard to put into words how the abortion affected me. Looking
back and knowing what I know now, I realize that I was going through almost
classic Post-Abortion Syndrome. I became a tramp and slept with anyone
and everyone. I engaged in unprotected sex and each month when I wasn't
pregnant I would go into a deep depression. I was rebellious. I wanted
my parents to see what I had become. I dropped out of college. I tried
suicide, but I didn't have the guts to slit my wrists or blow my brains
out. I couldn't get my hands on sleeping pills, so I resorted to over the
counter sleep aids and booze.
When that failed, I then tried to make relationships work with men,
any man. I was driven with a need to have a child and knew if I was married
my parents couldn't do anything about it. Then I married in 1975. While
my husband and I are still together, we have had to work extra hard because
I married him for all the wrong reasons.
Five months after we were married my first child was born. I was in
heaven. I doted on that baby. In three months, I was pregnant again. But
this time we lost our baby at 6 months. Then the depression that I had
conquered came back full force. I can remember thinking: "I deserve this
pain. I killed a baby and now God has taken one from me. I deserve it."
The doctor felt that I had a weak cervix, a common aftereffect of abortion,
and that the weight of the baby was too much for it and she just fell out.
Four months later I was pregnant again.
It is hard to explain this need to keep having babies, but I did. From
1976 with the birth of my first living child, to 1985 at the birth of my
fourth and final living child, I was pregnant a total of eight times. With
the birth of my last child the doctor didn't leave me any choice but to
quit having children if I wanted to live to see the ones I had grow up.
In trying to deal with the abortion, I had to face what I had done and
beg forgiveness from my God. The hardest thing of all is trying to forgive
myself. It is a daily struggle to accept the forgiveness I know the Lord
has given me. And I will never forget it. Only now I don't want to forget
it, because it keeps me from getting complacent. I know if it helps others,
I can talk about it. It always makes me cry, but if it saves just one mom
and baby the pain, it's worth it.
I joined our local Right to Life and crisis pregnancy center. I have
also had to forgive my parents. I can still remember when I walked into
my Mom's house and threw down a picture of an aborted fetus and snarled,
"See what you made me do?" She has since become pro-life herself and has
told me how sorry she is. I still have to fight against my anger at my
Dad, because he still won't admit the abortion was wrong, at least for
me.
Do all these things help? That's a hard one. Sometimes it does and sometimes
the depression is too strong and time has to pass. Not a day goes by that
the abortion doesn't cross my mind. It is a constant struggle trying to
overcome my guilt and depression, even knowing I have been forgiven. I
dread the day when I have to come face to face with my little child and
explain to her why mamma took her life. But I also think I am a softer,
more caring person than I might have been. If not for the abortion, I might
have turned out "pro-choice."
Originally published in The PostAbortion Review 2(1) Winter 1993.
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