It all happened so fast and so unexpectedly during my junior
year of college: a new relationship with a young woman, an illness which
turned out to be the morning sickness of a pregnancy, and a hasty abortion
which had a dramatic effect on both our lives. No matter how difficult or
painful an experience or situation is, God always manages to bring something
good out of it. In this particular case, He taught me several valuable
lessons about what it is to be a Catholic.
Though Sharon and I had not known each other for very long, we quickly
developed deep feelings for one another. Apparently, neither I nor my feelings
for Sharon were strong enough for what happened early on in our
relationship. When she needed me most, I was unable to come through for her.
For almost a week, Sharon had been waking up with nausea and vomiting
periodically throughout the day. We were both perplexed and worried because
neither of us knew why this was happening to her and it didn't seem to be
getting any better. So on a Thursday, Sharon went home to see a doctor
and find out why she was getting sick all the time.
In the early hours of the next day I was shocked to learn the cause of
Sharon's nausea. She was pregnant with her ex-boyfriend's child. I was even more
shocked to learn what she intended to do about it; she and her ex-boyfriend had
made an appointment to abort the unborn child for that very afternoon. He was
going to take her to the clinic and pay for the abortion. After telling me her
reasons for having the abortion, she asked me what I thought she should do.
Its four in the morning, and my girlfriend of a couple weeks has just
informed me that she's pregnant with her ex-boyfriend's child and she's having
an abortion in less than twelve hours. Now she wants to know what I think she
should do.
Unfortunately, I was not up to the task. Like many people out there, I
personally found abortion abhorrent but hid behind the shield of "it's your
body-, it's your choice." Though I went to Mass and tried to be a good Catholic,
I did not completely subscribe to my Church's teaching on abortion. I was
against abortion but not against a woman's choice, or so-called "right," to have
one. I was anti-abortion but not pro-life. So when Sharon asked me if she should
have the abortion, I replied with words to the effect of "its not my body or my
child and I don't have the right to tell you what to do with either of them." I
replied with these words even though I knew that she was morally wrong to abort
her unborn child. I remained silent because I mistakenly believed that I did not
have the right to tell her what to do with her unborn child.
Though I had ample time to tell Sharon to reconsider this hasty decision
to abort her child, I remained silent. Early Friday evening she called me to
tell me she had had the abortion. Silence is said to be golden but in this case
it proved fatal to both Sharon's unborn child and our relationship.
When Sharon returned to college a few days later, our whole relationship
had changed dramatically. I would never feel the same way about her or us or
myself again. I never told her that I was appalled at her having an abortion,
even on the few occasions when she asked me. I remained silent again and again.
To this day, I have no idea how the abortion affected her emotionally because we
never spoke about it. As I became more appalled at what she had done and
what I had not said, my feelings for her went away.
Sharon went home at the semester's end and didn't return to our college.
I only saw her one more time after she dropped out. By that time, my feelings
for her had all but evaporated. I told her that I did not want to have a long
distance relationship. That reason was partially true. The other reason, which I
did not tell her, was that I no longer cared for her because of the abortion.
So the final toll, for Sharon's abortion was one aborted child, one
aborted relationship, one aborted college career, and at least two wounded
individuals. Though ultimately the child had suffered and lost the most - his or
her life, Sharon and I both suffered and lost as well. I cannot recall ever
calling upon God for help throughout this whole ordeal.
A year went by and I managed to get on with my life. I buried the
feelings associated with the experience deep inside. I had relationships with
other women and thought that I had put Sharon's abortion behind me. I was wrong
because I had not adequately dealt with it. Eventually, the guilt and pain of
Sharon's abortion resurfaced.
I don't know exactly why these feelings resurfaced or emerged when they
did. Maybe it was because I was beginning to rediscover my faith. Maybe it was
because of the one-year anniversary of Sharon's abortion. Maybe it was because a
priest-friend of mine asked me how I could be opposed to abortion but be
pro-choice at the same time. Maybe I just couldn't contain the emotions any
longer. Maybe it was a combination of the four or maybe God had some other
reason which I don't know about. At any rate, this round was in some ways worse
than the first.
The toughest emotion to deal with was the guilt of having remained silent
while Sharon aborted her unborn child. I was wracked by the intense guilt of not
having spoken out in defense of Sharon's unborn child when they both needed me
most. The child's mother failed him/her. The child's father failed him/her. I
failed him/her. I might have been the last chance that child had for life.
Fortunately, this time I did turn to God for help. With the help
of a priest-friend, I was able to deal with the emotional pain and guilt of
Sharon's abortion. Through him, God helped to heal me of these wounds and to
choose sides in this struggle between life and death. I have come to accept and
embrace my Church's teachings on every person's right to fife. As I learned, you
cannot be for life and be for a woman's "right" to choose the death of her
unborn child.
As part of the healing process and to make amends for my past silence, I
began participating in pro-life events. My first March for Life in Washington
was a tremendous experience for me in that I was able to do penance for
my past silence by marching for the rights of the unborn. I have
since participated in two more marches and several other pro-life events held in
my diocese. I also spoke about my experiences at a retreat led by my
priest-friend. These events have given me an opportunity to speak out for life
and not remain silent. In addition, I frequently pray for Sharon that she will
seek God's forgiveness and healing for having aborted her unborn child.
I learned the hard way that abortion doesn't just kill the baby in the
womb. The forceps and other tools which tear apart the unborn child also tear
apart the hearts and souls of the mother, the father, the friend, the brother,
the sister and so on. It wounds every person who cares for that mother who
aborts her unborn child. An abortion has a ripple effect of pain upon everyone
involved.
One of the most important lessons that God taught me through this ordeal was
that I not only have a right to speak out for life and against abortion, but as
a Catholic, I have an obligation to do so as well. Not only did I have the right
to tell Sharon she shouldn’t abort her unborn child, I had an obligation to do
so as someone who cared for her. I had an obligation to her, to God, and most
importantly to the unborn child, to tell her "You don't have to abort the baby.
There are alternatives. There are people who will help you."
I have learned that silence is deadly. Silence is an acquiescence to the
murder of an innocent unborn child. I have learned to be silent no more.
Neither should you be silent. If someone who you care about it is
contemplating an abortion, you must not remain silent. You must tell her what
she is doing is wrong. You must not stand by silently while she makes the worst
mistake of her life. I know that there's no guarantee that your words will
convince her to reconsider her decision, but by remaining silent, you guarantee
that she won't. You must not remain silent like I once did.