Pro-Abortionists Try to
Silence the Voice of Women Who Have Aborted
Part Four of Four
By Olivia Gans
Editor's note. Last
week we talked about an op-ed written by pro-abortion Dr. Brenda
Major for the Sunday Washington Post. Dr. Major occupies a key
position, having chaired an American Psychological Association
Task Force that concluded "There is no credible evidence that a
single elective abortion of an unwanted pregnancy in and of
itself causes mental health problems for adult women." Dr. Major
continued that mantra in her op-ed piece. I asked Dr. Priscilla
Coleman and Olivia Gans, director of American Victims of
Abortion, to respond. Below is Olivia's powerful response.
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Olivia
Gans |
Since 1982 women from
across the United States have been privately and quietly meeting
and sharing the stories and sadness that they associate with
memories of their own abortions. While the mainstream social
structures and medical institutions continued to mouth the party
line that abortion does not have any long-term negative effects
for women, the mothers themselves have different stories to
tell.
Since those early meetings
in the 80s we have continued to meet to share our painful and
tragic stories.
The medical community
continues to bury their heads about the long-term effects of
abortion, even though abortion is the most common
medical/surgical procedure performed on American women. Abortion
remains the most under-reported, unregulated, and
under-investigated medical "procedure"!
Fortunately, there is now
a groundswell of peer-reviewed studies that demonstrate that
approximately 20–30% of women who have abortions will have
serious mental health problems.
Pro-abortionists cling to
the sad truth that often when faced with the fear and stress of
a troubled pregnancy, women do feel a kind of relief in the
first days after the abortion. But what worries those of us that
have lived beyond those first illusory feelings of relief is
what happens as time goes by.
What those of us that have
spent countless hours compassionately listening to our peers
know is that abortion does hurt!
Abortion does leave scars
that may never go away.
Take away all the jargon
that the abortion industry and their apologists use to dissemble
the reality and you are still left with the story of a mother
making a life and death decision about her child.
Abortion providers don't
like it when women that have had abortions try to talk about our
pain. According to them we were already troubled before the
abortion, so our voices ought not to count.
This is not true, as
carefully-controlled studies have demonstrated. My pain is real,
and I would ask those who deny that abortion not only kills
babies but hurts their mothers to show some true concern
The pain I have heard
voiced from thousands of women since I helped form the first
post- abortion support group in America in 1982 must not be
dismissed as irrelevant to this vital debate.
Women deserve the truth
about abortion. Good medicine should want to know!
Part One
Part Two
Part Three |