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The Baby I'll Never Forget
Would I ever be able to forgive myself for having an abortion?

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The foil of the pregnancy-test package crinkled between my fingers. While reading through the directions and glancing at the drawings on the box, I couldn't help but think back to eight years earlier, when I was in college.

My then-steady boyfriend had swept me off my feet. So even though I'd been taught that God's Word set premarital sex aside as sin, I'd engaged in inappropriate intimacy with him, seeking love and affection to fill my emptiness from old childhood wounds.

The fears that accompanied a pregnancy test in those days were immense and real. I always feared it would be positive. And one time, it was.

That day I begged my roommate to buy me three more tests. I was humiliated and terrified. The additional tests confirmed the same: I was pregnant. As I crouched in my dorm's empty bathroom, I secretly hoped that if I never came out, it wouldn't be true. It was a moment of ruthless reality.

A Seeming Solution

My roommate consoled me. I told no one else. Not my boyfriend, not my Christian parents. This journey was too shameful to share with them. My roommate guaranteed she knew a way out. A harmless way … almost. And the next thing I knew, I was signing in at the nearest abortion clinic just off our college campus. I held a wad of cash in my hand, hurriedly collected from a dwindling savings account from a part-time job.

Three hours later, it was over. I recuperated over Christmas break at my mom's house, half an hour from campus. She thought I was recovering from the flu. As I lay around on the couch, my mind raged against what I'd done. I realized, with startling clarity, that there was nothing harmless about that procedure. It was just a cruel trade-off, one problem—my unwanted pregnancy—for another—the guilt and shame of taking my baby's life.

Grace and Guilt

Remorse dogged me in the following years. But from the bottom of the pit, the only place I had to look was up. My choice to have an abortion catapulted me into God's arms. What had always been my father's faith now became my own.

Yet, every time a sermon or conversation mentioned the word abortion, I stared a hole in the ground, sure that those around me would suddenly point their fingers at me. A knife stayed in my heart.

I couldn't comprehend ever making peace with this horror in my past. The Enemy was so good at reminding me of his lies that I never felt safe or close to God or anyone else. While I was passionate about my relationship with Christ, I held back my dark secrets. My past was a constant threat to my spiritual life.

Reaching for Help

One morning, two years after my abortion, I finally prayed for help. I asked God to lead me to a volunteer organization where I could help others and hopefully escape some of my pain. I had to get my mind off myself. I marched up to the counter at my church and picked up the only brochure that caught my eye. It was for a pregnancy care center. Ouch.

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Related Topics
Abortion, forgiveness, Guilt, Pregnancy, Redemption

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Nancy Posted: October 04, 2007 12:07 AM
I got pregnant when I was 16 years old. My mom convinced me to get an abortion by threatening to send me away to live with relatives and telling me how angry and disappointed my dad would be if he knew (to this day I don't think he knows and that was 21 years ago). I have lived with the guilt of this for so long now that I don't even know where to begin. I know that God loves me, forgives me and accepts me as I am, but I have carried this guilt for so many years that I don't even know where to begin the process of healing. TINA - I completely understand how you can keep it hidden so well from everyone but yourself. I have been married for almost 15 years and my husband does not even know. Thank you for the encouragement of the article. Stories I hear of women who share my pain are an inspiration.

Tina Posted: August 30, 2007 7:15 PM
I have been carrying such a profound pain for quite some time internally. I can keep it hidden from everyone, but myself. I thank you for the article and am ready to release my guilt and thank God for loving who I am.......ALWAYS.

tashay Posted: October 07, 2007 1:04 AM
I HAD AN ABORITON AT THE AGE OF 19 AND I AM NOW 26 YEARS OLD. I'VE NEVER SPOKEN TO ANYONE ABOUT THE PAIN AND THE BURDEN. NOW THAT I AM OLDER, I FEEL THAT I DON'T DESERVE TO BE MOTHER, BECAUSE I KILLED MY UNBORN CHILD. YOUR STORY HAS GIVEN ME SOME HOPE THAT IT'S OK TO MOVE ON AND NOT TO BE SHAMEFUL. IT'S TOUGH AND HARD TO ADMIT. I LEARNED TO STUFF IT. I WILL PRAY TO GOD AND ASK HIM FOR FORGIVENESS.

 

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