Silent Rain
Drops
“I don’t want to do this.” It had become a mantra, over and over again
in my mind, during the forty days of Lent.
I made myself promise to write this story as part of my penance, and I offer
the suffering the retelling entails to the fight to end abortion. I pray to God to make something good come out
of this evil.
“I don’t
want to do this.” These are also the
words I said to my mother in the days before she took me to
I know I
agreed, at first. I was only sixteen
years old, what did I know? The father
was in favor of the abortion, claiming it would drive him mad (I think he even
used that melodramatic phrase) to know he had a child somewhere in the world
that he couldn’t see. I asked him once
how happy he would live knowing his child was dead. He said it would be better off that way. Prophetically, this discussion took place
long before it was necessary. I don’t
remember the exact details, because it didn’t matter at the time. It was all theory. We resolved that I should not get
pregnant. We didn’t, however, resolve
just how we were going to prevent that.
So there I was, pregnant, and trying to withdraw my assent to an
abortion. I had been rehearsing the
speech, and had prayed to God. I knew it
was the right thing to do. All I had to
do was tell my mother how I felt, and she would help me tell everyone we were
going to do something else. She was a
mother, so she would understand why I couldn’t do go through with it. I would tell her I loved my child the way she
loved me.
I’d
barely spoken when, with a huge outburst of air, as if she’d been holding her
breath for just this exercise, she started, “You don’t know what you want. You’re only upset because you’re thinking
about David, that it’s….well that it’s like David.” David is my little brother, who would have
been about eight months old, riding in the backseat during this exchange. It had been a difficult birth for her, so
while she recovered I spent his infancy getting up with him in the night,
feeding him, doing his laundry, and essentially acting as a surrogate
mother. I was still shouldering most of
the load, because my mother had to work.
So, of course I was thinking “it” was like my little brother. In fact, I was starting to feel very fond of
“it.” “It,” who I have since renamed
Michael, (after Saint Michael the
She may
not have had energy enough to care for David, but she had energy enough to deny
my appeal, in spite of tears, anger, begging:
all of the limited tools at my disposal.
I was never an assertive girl.
She told me she knew what was best for me, and while I don’t remember
the exact words, I believe she told me the proverbial, “some day you’ll thank
me for this.” [We had a conversation
once, as adults, and she was actually surprised that, not only wasn’t I
grateful, but I refused to agree that my life had been better because of it.]
The
child’s father and I had broken up before I learned I was pregnant. When I
began to get sick in the mornings, well....duh, again. I had just finished witnessing a textbook
pregnancy. One day at school, I
confronted the ex-boyfriend, and insisted he obtain a home pregnancy test for
me. I had no driver’s license, no car,
no way to get this on my own. I remember
he complained about the cost when he finally brought it to school. Why do we remember the most inane things?
I took
the test, and failed miserably. There
was the perfect little circle at the bottom of the test tube. For the young reader, the first home
pregnancy tests were like little chemistry experiments for the bathroom. The tube of urine and test chemical had to
sit undisturbed for a lengthy period of time while the results evolved. I had to scheme to find a place to keep it
undiscovered. If there was a perfect
circle in the bottom of the tube, the test was positive, and my circle was
perfection. I told the father in school
the day after I read the results. I
don’t remember much of his response, except that he went home that night and
confessed all to his parents, who apparently forgave him for his indiscretion
(“boys will be boys”), and immediately began to make plans to ensure his future
freedom. His mother questioned whether I
had performed the test properly. I
recall being offended by that, of all things.
I had never even met her before, but I suppose she had reason to assume
I wasn’t very bright. Anyway, I could
only have erred on the negative side – the perfect circle couldn’t be a
mistake. Abortion was the only option
they would consider. I don’t remember if
this is where I agreed or not. I know I
needed their help, because I was afraid to tell my own parents.
His
parents knew my mother’s physician, so they scheduled an appointment for me and
the baby’s father to talk to him. We
discussed the options, options I had gone over in my own mind over and over
again. I am convinced the doctor was
motivated by kindness, but in hindsight, I wish he had been less neutral.
Even
before the positive test, I knew I was pregnant, so I had been scanning the
It was a
scene from one of the books I loved to read, and just as fictional. Within days of getting off the bus, I would
meet this benevolent family who would fall in love with me before they knew I
was pregnant. Then when they found out,
it would be too late to kick me out because they would love me too much, so
they would love my child. A kind of Nanny & The Professor scenario with
Donna Reed as the kind woman of the house played out in my mind. I could get a GED, enter state college, and
life would be wonderful. Then the splash
of the deep fryer would wake me up, and I would look around that dingy little
restaurant kitchen and realize that I was much more likely to end up dead in a
desert wash or strolling Van Buren Street, which was renowned throughout the state
as the capitol’s red light district. Where would I really go? I had no family
who would take me in. My father had
abandoned me years ago, when I was eight.
My mother’s family was in the
It
should be clear that I did not believe that continuing to live at home was
going to be possible while I was pregnant.
My stepfather had a good buddy whose daughter had become pregnant. I knew her by sight at school, but we weren’t
close friends. So I was shocked when the
rumor hit my end of the schoolyard. When
I told my parents, I learned that they had known about it for some time. It was such a shameful thing that they had
never intended to discuss it in front of me.
My stepfather looked embarrassed for his friend, and whether they
verbalized it or not, I remember feeling I’d better never do anything like that
to them.
I also
knew what happened to kids in my family who were difficult. I have an older brother who suffers from
schizophrenia. He is two years older
than me. When my parents divorced, they
bounced him back and forth between them because of his behavioral problems,
until he was thirteen, when my stepfather decided my brother was no longer
allowed to live in his house. I don’t
remember his offense. I’m sure he was
guilty of it, but I’m equally sure he deserved more mercy than he was shown. By the time I was 16 and about to be a
difficulty, myself, my brother Steve was already living on the streets which
are his home to this day.
As I
said, the family physician probably thought he was being very wise by
conducting an interview with these two wayward teens to help them resolve their
adult problem. He asked me how I would
feel about having had this abortion say, in ten years, if I suddenly learned I
would never be able to have children. I
have to say that was a stupid question to ask a teenager. I hadn’t been able to plan ahead enough to
prevent a pregnancy, even though I was one of the “gifted” kids [and I knew Everything You Always Wanted to Know About
Sex* because I had read it cover to cover at the age of eight. Obviously, knowledge was not power in this
case, because even knowing exactly how reproduction worked, I had carried on
with the usual adolescent oblivion, “this will never happen to me.”]
I was
devastated by this unplanned pregnancy, and knew I had failed everyone. How was I going to decide how I would
hypothetically feel in a decade or even two?
I needed help at that moment. I
answered him by saying I was going to have to live with the consequences of my
decision regardless of my age or fertility, and it was the present time with
which I had to contend. There might have
been enough maturity in my answer to mislead the physician, but I was really
too young to know just what those consequences would be. The father recited his “my child is out there
somewhere and I’d go mad” story, and the doctor agreed to call my parents in to
tell them the awful news, and discuss the solution. At this point, the solution was an abortion,
so I must have given my assent. He was
removing a burden from me by breaking the news to them in my place. I needed that help.
I don’t
know what my mother and stepfather expected, but they went when called without
questioning me. My mother later told me
that they were “floored,” particularly because my stepfather didn’t even know I
was dating anyone. He had forbidden me
to date, probably hoping to prevent just such a tragedy. The doctor was not nice to my stepfather,
which made me feel guilty. My mother
later told me the doctor told him that girls who have a loving home don’t need
to look outside of it for love. I still
feel bad that he had to hear that, but it was probably accurate.
There
were no abortion clinics in
My
parents insisted the ex-boyfriend accompany us.
I think they actually had the idea that it would be a “just”
punishment. He slept in the back seat, my
mother drove, and I sat in silence, as the thought, “I don’t want to do this,”
kept rolling through my head over and over again. Please God, I can’t do this. Please God, make it stop. Please God, make it stop. But it didn’t stop. The
I don’t
remember the clinic, except that it was a large brown building. I think I would have remembered seeing
protesters, though, so I’m pretty sure there weren’t any. If they were there, they weren’t holding any
signs that would have been helpful to me, like “come to us, we can help
you.” I already knew that abortion was
murder, so signs of that nature would have been no help. I’m pretty sure I would have remembered a face
in a habit or wearing a white collar, showing any sign that he or she could
offer safe haven. It was close to what I
was praying for, anyway. Where were
they, I wonder? It was six years after
Roe v. Wade, so very close. So close, in
fact, that there were no clinics allowed in the state of
The
waiting room was large and crowded, and the staff perfunctory. I was now in a state of panic, because I was
reaching the point of no return. What
was I going to do? Could I tell them
both to forget it, and take me home?
They would want to know what I was going to do instead. They would refuse to help me do it. They might even leave me in
I took
the clipboard, and filled out the unfamiliar forms. I don’t remember what they were. I read the paragraph about complications out
loud with a severe tone and side-glances.
Neither one responded, although for the most part I was ignoring the
baby’s father. I had already, correctly,
concluded that he was useless. I kept
shooting looks at my mother, looks that I prayed she would understand, looks
that said, “I don’t want to do this, you know I don’t want to do this.” She avoided my eyes entirely. I signed the consent form and returned it to
the desk.
I don’t
know what anyone else in the place looked like.
I couldn’t see faces at all. I
was scared. When the door opened and the
white-clad nurse called my name, I stood up and that moment in time froze, just
like you read about. I looked at my
mother, and in desperation, I even looked at the baby’s father. He wouldn’t meet my eyes, and had actually
turned to face the wall. My mother gave
me a familiar, closed look that said, “You don’t know what pain is. You deserve to suffer for what you’ve done to
me, look at MY pain! Get in there.” I turned away from them both, and I was
blinded by the darkness from that moment on.
I thought I died, then. I thought
that was death. I didn’t really know
what death was, not yet. She was right;
I didn’t know what pain was, either – but I was getting closer.
I
followed the white dress. I was entirely
“blind” now, and there were only blurry shapes crossing my field of
vision. They pricked my finger to type
my blood. Someone told me what it was, I
didn’t notice, and for years couldn’t remember my blood type no matter how many
times I was told. I finally had to write it on a card in my wallet. The ghastly white female told me I was
anemic. She said it with an accusing
tone, as if I should have told her about that.
“Didn’t you know you’re anemic?”
What did she think, that I had had a prenatal consultation? Of course, I’d been tired, but it wasn’t
exactly at the forefront of my mind.
They did a pregnancy test. I
remember wondering if they thought I was that stupid, but I suppose it
happens. They asked me again how far
along I was. I had guessed that I was in
my third month. I actually didn’t know
how many periods I had missed, because I never kept track of them. This haunts me now. I had morning sickness for two months, and in
fact it had leveled off. As time went
by, I realized, too late, that I had to have been in my second trimester. But there was no ultrasound or pelvic exam to
confirm it. They would not have
performed a second trimester abortion, whether it was because of the law, or
their own rules – I don’t know which. I
wonder if some dark and evil part of me made sure I would “qualify,” although
it could have been an honest mistake, and I am only indulging in self-hatred
when I attribute ulterior motives to my miscalculation.
Beforehand,
while I was still awake, they gave me birth control pills and iron
tablets. They hadn’t asked me if I
wanted birth control pills. I told her I
didn’t want them, because I wasn’t having sex anymore, but she told me I had to
take them with me anyway – it was a Rule.
The details are gray now, because from the moment I had turned my back
on my mother’s stony face in the waiting room, I had started praying to God to
do something. He was all I had
left. Please God, make the building fall
down. Make the lights go out. Set the place on fire. Strike me dead. Make this ghostly-ghastly woman notice that I
DON’T WANT TO DO THIS. I waited, and did
everything I was told, but there was no reply from God. The earth didn’t move in the slightest, and
the machines kept rolling on.
So, God,
where were You? No, don’t get me wrong – I don’t blame You. You aren’t required to supply me with
miracles-on-demand. I have spent the
last two and a half decades overcompensating for the weakness in my character
that allowed me to be coerced into murdering my child. Instead of strength of character, though, all
I truly cultivated for years was self-hatred, hardness, and the ability to shut
people out. I steeled myself with rage
for years.
They
started the IV, and gave me sodium pentothal for the “procedure.” The doctor came in, and a cart was rattled
into the room. I was grateful when the
drug hit me in a wave and I drifted away.
The next thing I remember is hearing the doctor talking to the nurse in
a strained voice. Something was
wrong. I began to move my head, and she
pushed me down. I felt high again, and
drifted back under. I suspect she gave
me more IV sedation at that moment. As
time passed, I would hear details about abortions in spite of my best efforts to
avoid the subject entirely (outside of a flat “against” if asked my
opinion). There was a problem, and
surely it was because I was much further along in my pregnancy than
expected. Recently, I heard details
about partial birth abortion procedures. Without God, I could not live with
myself today.
Back in
1979, at some point the noise was over, the excruciating and pinching pain had
stopped, and the white-clad nurse was shaking me into a more wakeful
state. I was groggy, but all I wanted
was OUT. I sat up and started pulling my
feet out of the stirrups. The nurse was
standing in front of my spread legs, with her back to me. She turned around just as I saw the cart to
her left. There, finally, was some sign
of humanity in her face, too little, too late.
Yes, it was much too late.
I
thought of iced tea in big jars. Sun
tea. We made sun tea at the restaurant
in glass gallon pickle jars. That’s what
they looked like, but that wasn’t iced tea.
No, not iced tea. It was a blood
bath. It wasn’t entirely liquid. I was drugged, but I remember thinking,
“there’s so much blood….someone has to be dead.” There was a hose, like a vacuum cleaner
attachment, and some metal instruments, all clotted with blood, but I couldn’t
take my eyes off the jars: two of them,
over half-filled. Blood isn’t just red,
and it wasn’t all just blood. Blood is
bright, and compellingly deep, like a ruby, I suppose, but I wasn’t reminded of
gemstones then. Is there a biological
hardwire for recognition of real blood?
It was an obscenity. My heart
races just in recalling the evidence of violence all over that cart, and all
over me, the blood was also on me: on
me, and in me. Here was the pain my
mother had promised, and the death she hadn’t wanted to consider. The death was in the jars, and now it was in
my soul, where it has stayed.
The
nurse rushed at me in a whir of white, and I smelled her perfume for the first
time. She pressed my shoulders down to
the table, and covered me with blankets.
“You’re not supposed to be up yet.”
It did feel better to lie down, and I started what would be years of
repression. My mind could not absorb
this. What was it I had seen? I was starting to feel sleepy again, but I
mumbled to the nurse, who seemed suddenly like all of the other nurses I had
known, solicitous and kind, “what was that…..?”
I heard her move the cart out of the room, and she gave no reply. I didn’t deserve it, but I was grateful for
the drug pulling me back into oblivion at that moment. Somehow, I was cleaned up and
discharged. I don’t remember any of it.
I
remember two things about the drive home:
the look on their faces when I was wheeled out (and thinking,
“Good. I hope I die from it, and then you’ll
look even worse”); and the fact that I slept or hovered in that half-waking
state the entire way stretched out on the back seat. Someone at the clinic had let me keep a
blanket. I threw it away the next day,
with the birth control pills. In the car,
I woke several times to hear whispers, “is she asleep….” “Why did she look
like….?” Deliberately, I shut them out,
for the duration of the ride, and then some.
I spent
the next week at home on the couch, taking pain killers, drinking chocolate milk
to stave off the violent nausea caused by the iron supplements, and the pain
killers, and trying very hard to die to the world. I needed to die to the world. My mother took me to her OB-GYN, as required,
at the end of two weeks. He was a short,
bald little man who had overseen my mother’s pregnancy. His hands were rough, and his voice was sharp
and short. He hated me for what I had
done, I could tell from the way he looked at me, the way he treated me. He thought my mother was a delightful person,
and I had done a terrible thing to her.
I wanted to die to him, too. He
didn’t have to treat me that way, even if I knew I deserved it.
Before
that summer was out, I was sent away anyway, to live with my great aunt. She knew why, but no one else in the family
was allowed to know my shame. One day
shortly after I moved in, she asked me what had happened to change me so
much. I said, “What do you mean?” She said, “I’m not exactly sure what it is,
honey, but you have a hard look about you.
It’s as if something inside of you died.” What did we say before the word “Duh?” I didn’t answer, of course. Something in me did die, and not just my child. I died as a mother forever. I won’t fault her for the question,
though. She knew what she said as soon
as it left her lips, and she did the only thing she could think of: she took me to the Church as soon as
possible. There, I made my first
Confession and told this story for the first time. God blessed me with Fr. Clare, a “cookie-jar”
Franciscan, round in stature, and a most compassionate man. At some point, I collapsed to the floor on my
knees. The tears flowed non-stop, out of
control, unnoticed. I keened, wailed,
and rocked myself. I asked him if my
child would go to hell because there had been no Baptism. I don’t think I’d seen a grown man cry
before, either, but he wept freely as he did his best to comfort me.
Unfortunately,
the abortion never really ended.
Eventually, I earned my college degree, the “future” for which my child
was sacrificed. I also got married and
divorced twice, because I longed for punishment and often entered into abusive
relationships. I abused alcohol and
flirted with promiscuity in between husbands.
I was a “cutter” for awhile, slashing at my arms and legs with glass
broken in uncontrollable rage that was directed inward. The scars trail up and down my left arm and
leg. The inside of my left forearm is a
battlefield. There is one substantial
scar underscored by a cigarette burn that looks very much like an exclamation
mark, for emphasis, I imagine. For some
reason, during that dark time of drinking and cutting, I had to wear my pain on
the outside, to show my scarred and ruined soul. Yet I could never bleed enough, not enough to
even line the bottom of a small jar. I
could never bleed enough to stem the anger and self-hatred.
I fell
away from my faith. Regardless of the
absolution I was given in the Sacrament of Penance, I was convinced I was not
good enough to be a Catholic. I had
ruined my chances with God. Sinners like
me could never be good Christians, and if I had already ruined it, there was no
point in going through the motions.
Being ignorant of Scripture, I was pretty sure Jesus hadn’t forgiven any
murderers in the New Testament.
I
miscarried a second child very early on in pregnancy because I was using birth
control pills. I was terrified of
unplanned pregnancy, but resolved to have the child if it occurred. Did it keep me celibate? Of course not, because celibacy is for those
who respect themselves. It is possible I
miscarried because my then-husband had thrown me down on the bed and crushed me
with his 240 pounds of dead, drunken weight the day before, trying to smother
the fight out of me during an argument.
Sometimes I think God allowed this tiny child to go home early, because
she did not want to be born into that scene.
I don’t blame her one bit. When I
discovered her, I keened and wailed again, crying over her tiny but
unmistakably human form, and apologizing to her for having failed again. I told her I would have cherished her, and
that I would have taken care of her future.
But I knew I did not deserve to be her mother, or anyone’s mother, and
that is the way it is today.
Now I am
41 years old, childless, and likely to remain so for the rest of my life. Mother’s Day is approaching, and I will never
know what it’s like to be on the receiving end of that day. I don’t know how many times I have been told
by other women that there are things I will never understand because I’m not a
mother. They often treat me like a child
myself, as if I haven’t gone through the proper rites of initiation into adult
womanhood. Women who have borne children
have a private club, and we childless freaks are not allowed to enter into the
inner sanctum. I will hear this, and
similarly unkind remarks, for the rest of my life. I will grow old and die alone, with no
progeny, and no one to visit me (or even slight me by neglect) if I live that
long.
This was
my “choice,” and these are my consequences.
When I dare to visit this memory, which isn’t often, I think about how I
would answer the doctor’s question from today’s perspective. Every moment, I fight the urge to despair of
God’s forgiveness, and I fight the urge to scourge myself for having been weak
and selfish. I am disgusted that I still
have no courage. Knowing what I know, I
should be screaming to the rooftops to stop this abuse of women, and this
bloodbath of the innocent. But I am
still immobilized by my shame, and find it so difficult to approach the subject
of children at all stages of life.
They do
surgery in utero these days on babies
as developed as was my poor aborted child, to save their lives, but only if the
child is wanted, loved, and from a financially secure family. If a mother kills her child at any age after
birth, or allows it to die upon its birth, she will be prosecuted for murder,
particularly in my conservative home state.
That same mother, though, could have paid someone else to deliver and
murder the child at an earlier point in time, and she would have been
exercising her freedom of choice.
It is
past time for me to make an attempt to stop the horror. All I need is one woman to read my story and
find the courage to avoid these consequences for herself and her child, and
this retelling would have been worthwhile.
If they aren’t already doing so, I also hope to compel even one pro-life
protester to change a sign from “Abortion is Murder!” which is something we all
know, to read, “Come to us, we will help you.”
For all I know, they do, and I have just been too weak to look. I am in no position to criticize these
pro-life crusaders. They do my work, for
which I am insufficient. And there are
many of them out there trying to embrace women in need with God’s love and
compassion. I would give my life, and
everything in it, if there had been one caring and trustworthy face penetrating
the darkness and blindness that covered me the day I aborted my child.
Michael
Do you know that I love you?
Do you know that I grieve?
Did you see that I mourned you,
A loss disbelieved?
The morning I met you we smiled a “Hello”
Dreaming in secret of a life yet unknown
You laughed in me and I laughed while I cried
Warmed with a love we will never describe
I was filled with your joy and your wanting to
be
The heart of my life to walk through it with
me
Each of us children, Earth’s unfulfilled hope
And dreams, still undying, of all the world’s
lost
An unlooked for gift, you were His work, not
mine
Torn up and broken, with no chance in time
Ripped from love’s safety, the warmth of your
home
A lifetime of pain found in your still form
Love’s pain isn’t wanted, it can’t be a choice
A life that’s spent yearning to once hold you
close
Turning that corner, one moment in time
A lifetime of failing the gift that was mine
I can’t find the words if they don’t come from
me
I can’t hear your voice while my soul isn’t
free
Free from the anger, the fear, and the pride
Free from the grief for what once was our life
Julie
8/5/2004