I’m posting this super late because procrastination is a terrible thing. As we all remember (or at least hope we do), Lauren Rankin came to our first plenary in Voorhees Chapel and spoke very passionately about abortion. In an ideal world, we would all agree with everything she said; maybe we would all come together as an unstoppable female tidal wave fighting for the reproductive rights of women everywhere. However, that is not how this opinionated world works.
As a supporter of reproductive rights, her talk only came naturally to me. I thought her logic was sound and the numbers made sense. However, it soon became apparent that I was suffering from the False-consensus effect, which is the tendency to believe that the majority of people agree with your opinions or belief, because there was someone seated behind me who was repeatedly making very nasty remarks about the speaker and abortion in general. As aggravating as this was, it really made me think about the emotional side of abortion.
No woman who has made a conscious choice about her body should ever be demonized for doing so. I do not think, in my 23 years of being alive, that I have ever met a woman who was happy that she got an abortion. Many cried for days after the procedure because the guilt was crushing. They ask themselves hurtful questions, such as:
“What would my baby have looked like?”
“Would they have my eyes or my sense of humor?”
These are all very difficult questions to ask yourself after such a consequential decision but it’s something that most women wonder to themselves during the healing process. Yes, healing process. That’s really what it is and what it should be referred to. Majority, not ALL, but majority of women do not go running to the bar or a frat party after an abortion. They do not think of all the fun they can have now that motherhood is not an obligation. Most women mourn and are very hard on themselves for making a very literal life and death decision.
So really, as to not go on a rant, maybe we should not worry so much about the decision a woman makes with her own body. Maybe we should really ask ourselves how we can help anyone who has had to make this life-changing decision. Can we be there for them? Can we understand their pain? Is it really so easy to just “get an abortion”? The answers should be yes, I can try and no, in that order.