Telling My Story

  

by: puzzled

Wed Jan 25, 2012 at 09:00:45 AM EST


(There are none so brave as the women of this nation.... - promoted by Diane Gee)

1 in 3 women

I read this diary yesterday about Trust Women Week and the 1 in 3 Campaign.  I was hoping it would get more traction than it did, because it spoke to me, and because the synchronicity was too much for me to ignore.

Hi, my name is puzzled and I had an abortion.

I had never typed those words, never thought I would, with or without my real name until last night.  However, I have recently been on a very strange journey toward openness and self-examination which has pushed me well out of my comfort zone. (though not so far I'm ready to give up the relative anonymity of my nom de blog)  :-)

I have shared many details of my life with the friend I've referenced in the above links, but had told him I needed to hold back a few parts of myself--that certain things were off-limits. This is one of those things I thought I'd never tell him. I couldn't imagine why I would, because it's a secret I've kept for decades. (insert wry laughter here)

I am finding that in direct contrast to the closed-off person I've always been, by opening up and trusting I am happier, calmer and less fearful.  It makes no logical sense-giving someone information which could later be used to hurt me should make me feel less safe, not more, but life is complicated, and the journey, as well as my evolution, continues.

So I decided to take another giant step and tell him this story on January 22, the 39th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. Circumstances intervened, and Sunday passed without an opportunity to share it.  Last night, the time was right, but I was afraid-my heart was pounding as I blurted out (can one actually blurt while typing?) a short version of what I am about to tell you.  Though he is kind and non-judgmental, I worried that he would not understand.  His politics are much more conservative than mine in some ways, he is a churchgoer, and he is adopted.  All reasons I should just have STFU and kept my secret buried where it has been since I was fifteen.  But I seem compelled to share (or perhaps over-share), so off I went.

puzzled :: Telling My Story
Yes, I said fifteen.  My first boyfriend.  He was sixteen and had a car.  I was younger than all the kids in my group, and thought I would never be cool enough or pretty enough to have a real boyfriend.  I was at that awkward age, and my insecurities ran high.

Well, the relationship progressed through that winter and spring.  Grateful for his attention, I let him go farther than I felt comfortable with, and eventually one of our evenings ended with me being date-raped in his car.  I cried all the way home.  Hurt and confused, I went in to talk to my mom.  I can still picture her, tissuing off her makeup, as I stumbled over the words: "Steve raped me."  She paused for a second, resumed her ablutions, saying only: "Don't tell your father."

I continued dating Steve.  Couldn't really tell you why-who knows exactly what goes on in the mind of a teenage girl?  We continued having unprotected sex.  I was not stupid, I understood the risks, but didn't know how to access birth control, or even condoms.  

Of course, I ended up pregnant.  I was at tennis camp when I first realized I probably was.  I was throwing up all day long, and when one of the counselors confronted me, I shared my suspicions with him.  The look in his eyes told me I should have kept it to myself.

When I got back, Steve took me to Planned Parenthood, where a pregnancy test confirmed what I already knew, and I got a referral to an abortion clinic.  I knew and he knew it was the only option, although he was Catholic and his mother was very active in the pro-life movement.  

The day of the procedure comes back to me in pieces-like a slideshow.  I can remember the waiting room--staring at the pattern in the carpet--hands shaking.  Jumping when the needle which would deliver the anesthetic to my cervix poked me, and the doctor admonished me to keep still.  Most of all I remember the kind nurse who held my hand and spoke softly to me throughout the procedure.  I even remember the shirt I was wearing that day.

The ride home is a blur, as is the rest of that day.  I remember cramping, bleeding, but putting on a brave face to come out of my room and have dinner with my parents, because the lesson my mother had taught me, wittingly or unwittingly, is that we don't talk about things like this. That some things are meant to never be shared with anyone. I got up the next day and went to driver's ed., even though I was told not to drive for 24 hours, because I couldn't think of an excuse and telling the truth wasn't an option.

I never did tell my parents.  For good or ill this was before the days when parental notification became one of the strategies to make it harder for young women to get abortions.  I never told my friends, though years later, after I graduated from college, I volunteered for an abortion referral service, and shared my story with the Director.

But why should I have felt ashamed?  Why, more than 30 years later, am I still reluctant to share my story?  Why should it have power over me?  It should not, and this is another step in my journey.  My friend?  He accepted my story with grace and told me to let go of my shame and not worry about what I cannot change.  Obviously my trust in him was well-placed.

So judge me.  Go ahead.   I can handle it.  I am no longer ashamed.

Crossposted from GOS. A variation appears at firefly-dreaming and My Left Wing

Tags: (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Telling My Story | 6 comments
it's been a while (15.00 / 2)
Hope you don't mind the x-post.

(((puzzled))) (11.00 / 2)
First and foremost?  I love you and am always happy to see you here!

Second, oh how hard it is to be a young girl in love and confused, doubly so when you had to go through this.

How very brave of you to break the code of silence placed upon you, and to in doing so remove the shame you DID NOT deserve.

I have told my abortion story here a few years back, but since soapblox removed the old WWL )they said they'd leave it for archive) I doubt I can find it.

I just hope the hell that our generation having endured this is what stops the next generation from having to do the same.

Hugs, dear huge-ass hugs!

Listen to The Wild Wild Left on internet talk radio



[ Parent ]
thanks (17.00 / 2)
for the promote, and the kind words.  

[ Parent ]
I judge (11.00 / 2)
that you are quite a woman, and one who, as you already know, has nothing to be ashamed of.

Of course, at 45 or so you're still a kid, and there is I suppose still a chance that someday you might do something to be ashamed of a little, like maybe forget somebodies birthday till a day late or something. ;-)

But if any 15 year old girl I ever know ever needs a friend who can understand and empathize with and help and advise her, now at least I know just the woman I would send her to.

You're pretty impressive. And I'm pretty judgmental sometimes...


thank you (9.00 / 2)
for reading and understanding.  I very much appreciate it.

[ Parent ]
Telling My Story | 6 comments
Join Diane Gee on Wild Wild Left Radio 6pm ET Fridays!


Listen to The Wild Wild Left on internet talk radio

Latest Episode:



BEST OF WWL RADIO INTERVIEWS:

Bill Ayers

Noam Chomsky - #1

Noam Chomsky - #2

Ward Churchill - #1

Ward Churchull - #2

Bruce A Dixon

Norman Finkelstein

Frances Fox Piven

Peter Kornbluh

Prof. John Kozy - #1

Prof. John Kozy - #2

Joe Bageant - #1

Joe Bageant - #2 - RIP Joe!

Richard Gage AIA




Recent Comments













YOUR TOOLBOX

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Active Users
Currently 0 user(s) logged on.

Wild Info and Allies!


Diane Gee's Wild, Wild Left is a Multi-authored collaboration of the Best and the Brightest moving the World to a Sane & Equitable Future for the World! Join in!

 Subscribe in a reader


Community Guidelines

Links for the "Wildly Left" on Facebook

DONATIONS NOW TO KEEP WWL & WWL RADIO ALIVE!

DONATE
To support our efforts to be a Voice for the Left!!

*Neither WWL nor its proprietor, Diane G, are a registered charity: NO donations made to WWL or Diane G are tax deductible.

*****

Photobucket OWNING THE AIRWAVES ON FRIDAYS MIC CHECK: (Eastern times)

4pm - Here Be Monster's "Friday MIC Check"

5pm - Dusty's "What is Jerking my Chain This Week"

6pm - Our Very Own "WWL Radio Show"

7pm - "Progress Toward Democracy"

3am - "Up Late With Pinko the Bear"


Contributors' Blogs


Davidseth
- The Dream Antilles

Dusty
- Leftwing Nutjob

Edger
- Antemedius

Elian Maricon
- Queers Against Obama

Gentilly Girl:
- Gentilly Girl

Gwendolyn Holden Barry ~ and ~ Krell
- Roundtree 7

M_A:
- Militant Atheist

Michael Kwiatkowski:
- Progressive Independence

mishima
- Ignoring Asia

Nezua:
- The Unapologetic Mexican
- House of Nezua

Nonpartisan:
- The Crolian Progressive

Phil Rockstroh
- Ebullient Skepticism

Ria D
- firefly-dreaming


Search




Advanced Search


Noble Causes

Wild Wild Left Supports:



JVP Supports BDS to stop Human Rights Violations



Blogroll

*NEWS SOURCES*

- American Chronicle
- Carbon Trade Watch
- Center for Constitutional Rights
- Crooks & Liars
- Democracy Now!
- Democratic Underground
- FARK
- Huffington Post
- Information Clearing House
- Informed Comment ~ Juan Cole
- Just Foreign Policy
- Naomi Klein
- Newsroom-l.net
- News Hounds
- SALON: Glenn Greenwald
- Talking Points Memo
- TED: Technology, Entertainment, Design - The People's Voice
- The Nation

*REAL ISRAEL/PALESTINIAN NEWS SOURCES*

- Promised Land: news & opinion from Israel
- Haaretz
- Israel: The Only Democracy?
- Jewish Voice for Peace
- MuzzleWatch
- Palestinian Monitor

*LIBERALS WE LOVE*

- Antemedius
- Booman Tribune
- Break The Matrix (a new alliance of blogging)
- Cyrano's Journal Online
- Digby's
- Docudharma
- Edgeing
- Enigma Engine
- Fafblog!
- The Field Negro
- Firedoglake
- Happy Jihad's House of Pancakes
- Impeachment and Other Dreams
- Independent Bloggers Alliance
- Joe Bageant
- Lilith News
- My Sister Friends' House
- Native American Netroots
- NOBODY PASSES, Darling
- On the Homefront
- Once Upon a Time...
- Pam's House Blend
- Pretty Bird Woman House
- Skippy the Bush Kangaroo
- Speak Freely, Step Lively
- The Dream Antilles
- The Existentialist Cowboy
- The Fat Lady Sings
- The Tribesman
- Tom Dispatch
_ Ward Churchill Solidarity Network
_ Worldwide Sawdust
- XicanoPwr!!

*INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS*

- Intercontinental Cry
- Survival-International
- Amnesty International
- The First Post
- One News
- The Times of India
- RIA Novosti
- GBC
- The Daily Telegraph
- Uruknet
- MWC News
- Aljazeera
- Le Monde diplomatique
- Green Left
- The Independent
- CBC
- The Japan Times
- Prague Daily Monitor
- Scotsman
- Irish Independent News

*FREEDOM FROM RELIGION*

- Americans United for Separation of Church and State
- Atheist Revolution
- American Atheists
- American Humanist Association
- Atheist Alliance International
- Atheists for Human Rights
- Center for Inquiry
- Center for Naturalism
- Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
- Coalition of Secular Voters
- Council for Secular Humanism
- Freedom From Religion Foundation
- Godless Americans
- Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers
- National Center for Science Education
- Pharyngula
- Secular Coalition for America
- Secular Student Alliance

*ANTI-WAR, ANTI-TORTURE, HUMAN RIGHTS*

- Act Against Torture
- American Torture
- Amnesty International
- ACLU
- Cage Prisoners
- Human Rights First
- Human Rights Watch
- Iraq Body Count
- Iraq Coalition Casualties
- Iraq Moratorium
- Iraq Veterans Against the War
- No More Victims
- Physicians For Human Rights
- Reprieve
- Road2DC
- The Sanctuary
- Torture Survivors Coalition
- Witness Against Torture
- Vet Voice

*LIBERAL DOSES OF HUMOR*

- Dudehisattva (Dood Abides)
- Dunce Upon a Time~Socially Awkward, Sexually Incompetent: The BC Woods Blog
- Pancake City
- The Rude Pundit
- Violent Acres-Like You, But With Poor Impulse Control


The Wild Wild Left Home

The Web The Wild Wild Left


Creative Commons License
This work by http://thewildwildleft.soapblox.net/ is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Powered by: SoapBlox