In 1966 I was 31, married with 2 children (born 1964
and 1965) and 3 months pregnant with my third child in
as many years. I had an IUD in place. I was also
nursing!
I knew I could not have another child so soon. I was
physically and mentally exhausted. I was working,
doing family work, 13 hours a day, seven days a week.
My husband was not one who pitched in, changing
diapers, doing laundry etc. We were an "old fashioned"
couple brought up in the ethos of the fifties that
focused on being in service to your husband, whose
needs trumped everyone’s.
My doctor was sympathetic and with his aid I located
an abortionist in Nevada. He, however, was "on
vacation". The next step was Tijuana. I had the
support of my husband and we went, leaving the other 2
kids with a baby sitter. The abortionist was kind. I
sobbed uncontrollably as soon as we were back on U.S.
soil. It was one of the most difficult and best
decisions of my life.
It is difficult for me now to imagine what I was
willing to put on the line: my life. I was risking
everything. If I died, my two children would have been
without me. My husband would have remarried. My
parents would have blamed him. The entangled
consequences are painful to picture.
Indeed, the Right is making up a syndrome, another
desperate attempt to void Roe vs Wade. I would never
want my daughters-in-law to have to face the balance
that my husband and I faced. And why should they? In
all cultures, in all history and pre-history women
have had to make the decision whether they could
provide for yet another being. They made it alone,
they carried it out alone in the interest of the
survival of those who were living. For the Right to
reserve the right to massacre others in war and at the
same time blithely accuse women of murder is beyond
ludicrous.