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The other half of the story: men and abortion.

"The clinic was a very cold place. We spoke to a counselor who asked us if we felt that we knew what we were doing. They told me it would be better if I left and came back to pick her up later. So I went out to get some air. I found out later that she'd had second thoughts and come out looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 me. But I wasn't there. So she went ahead with the abortion. That was the hardest thing because I wasn't there when she needed me."

Ryan Hunter was 24 when his girlfriend, Kathy, told him she was pregnant. At the time they were both students at a technical college and had been dating a few months. Although Hunter felt secure in the relationship, he didn't feel ready to be a parent, and he worried that if Kathy's parents found out about the pregnancy they might force her to stop seeing him.

"We chose the easy way out, but it didn't seem easy at the time," says Hunter. "We had many deep discussions. There were a lot of tears. Both of us were fully involved in the decision, and neither one of us pushed the other."

The Hunters hoped the abortion would bring an end to the crisis caused by the pregnancy. But instead of a sense of peace, they found it had brought a different kind of pain into their lives. Ryan was haunted by the fact that he had not been in the waiting room when Kathy had come out looking for him. Kathy remained emotionally fragile, occasionally tearing up when she saw pictures of babies and children. Although they remained together, they had a hard time communicating their feelings to each other.

"We never talked about it," recalls Hunter. "We would drive along the highway and I'd see one of those big pro-life billboards and try to distract her so she wouldn't see it. I was trying to protect her. I didn't realize at that point that I'd been affected, too."

Ryan and Kathy married two years later, but the abortion continued to cast a shadow over their relationship, particularly around the issue of children. "We never talked about having kids. I think we both felt that we had sinned seriously and didn't deserve to be forgiven. There was always this idea in the back of my head that God would punish us by not allowing us to have children."

Delayed reaction delayed reaction
n.
An allergic or immune response that begins 24 to 48 hours after exposure to an antigen to which the individual has been sensitized.
 

It is estimated that almost 40 percent of women between the ages of 18 and 45 have had at least one abortion. Rarely, though, does one hear the obvious corollary corollary: see theorem.  that a similar proportion of men have fathered a child who has been lost to abortion. Some of these men encouraged or pressured their partners to abort (1) To exit a function or application without saving any data that has been changed.

(2) To stop a transmission.

(programming) abort - To terminate a program or process abnormally and usually suddenly, with or without diagnostic information.
. Others strongly opposed the abortion. Many submerged their own feelings and took refuge in the idea that their role was to support their partners' decision.

There is increasing recognition that abortion can have an emotional impact on women that is serious and in some cases long-lasting. While there continues to be debate about the prevalence and intensity of psychological symptoms, a growing number of therapists recognize that abortion--like other forms of pregnancy loss--can have long-term emotional consequences.

What is less well known is that men, too, can suffer emotionally and spiritually as a result of abortion. "So often the man's reactions are delayed," says Randall Wyatt, a psychotherapist psy·cho·ther·a·pist
n.
An individual, such as a psychiatrist, psychologist, psychiatric nurse, or psychiatric social worker, who practices psychotherapy.
 and director of the Crosswinds Counseling Center in Dublin, California Dublin is a city in Alameda County, California, United States. The population was 29,973 at the 2000 census. Dublin is home to the headquarters of Sybase, Inc. Government
The city government is headed by a mayor.
. "He may think he is supposed to be supportive of the woman and may not offer his own opinions. So his feelings--whether they are relief, grief, anger, resentment, or shame--don't get processed, and that can come out later."

Wyatt's practice involves work with couples and post-traumatic stress counseling, and he has encountered abortion in both contexts. "I've never met a person who went through it who thought it was easy or who didn't have at least some sense of regret," he says. "But it's not always traumatizing. It depends on the person and their experience."

There is limited literature on the psychological impact of abortion on men. The most wall-known study was conducted by sociologist Arthur Shostak and is featured in his 1984 book Men and Abortion: Lessons, Losses, and Loves (Praeger). Shostak interviewed 1,000 men who had accompanied their partners to an abortion clinic An abortion clinic is a medical facility that performs or specializes in abortions. Such clinics may be public medical centers or private medical practices.

Planned Parenthood, whose clinics offer abortions as well as other reproductive care and counseling, is the largest
. He found that a large number of them had thoughts about the child, had dreamed about it, and anticipated misgivings after the abortion.

Some studies suggest men may actually be more likely to have an adverse psychological reaction to an abortion than women. A 1989 Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
 survey of men and women who had an abortion in their past found that two thirds of the men regretted the choice compared to one quarter of the women. A 1993 study by sociologists Eileen Nelson and Priscilla Coleman found that 33 percent of women and 52 percent of men reported a sense of regret following the abortion.

Finding forgiveness

Most post-abortion counseling programs have been designed, for obvious reasons, to meet the needs of women. The most well-known Catholic ministry of this type is Project Rachel, which was developed in 1984 by Vicki Thorn thorn, in botany
thorn, sharp-pointed projection on some plants, usually protective in function. Botanically, thorns are distinguished as modified stems (as in the honey locust and hawthorn) from spines, which are modified leaves (as in the barberry), and
 in the Archdiocese arch·di·o·cese  
n.
The district under an archbishop's jurisdiction.



archdi·oc
 of Milwaukee and has spread to a large number of dioceses around the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . Although her program was aimed at women, Thorn found she was getting calls from men as well. "The pain of fathers is so incredibly desperate," she says.

In Thorn's experience men's emotional reactions following abortion vary widely. Men who opposed the abortion might feel anger and helplessness immediately. Those who may have encouraged the woman to have an abortion or at least supported her decision might not feel the impact until years later when an event--marriage, pregnancy, the birth of a child--brings the emotions to the surface. Thorn has also noticed that men with unresolved issues about abortion often act out, engaging in risky behavior such as using drugs or alcohol.

There is also a spiritual dimension to the pain many men feel about abortion. A man who encouraged or pressured his partner to have an abortion--or failed to convince her not to--may experience a crisis of faith and feel estranged es·trange  
tr.v. es·tranged, es·trang·ing, es·trang·es
1. To make hostile, unsympathetic, or indifferent; alienate.

2. To remove from an accustomed place or set of associations.
 from God. On the other hand, there are men who were not particularly religious prior to the abortion who find consolation and healing by returning to an old religious tradition or embracing a new one.

Father Mike Mannion, rector RECTOR, Eccl. law. One who rules or governs a name given to certain officers of the Roman church. Dict. Canonique, h.v.  of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Camden The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Camden, New Jersey. It is located at 642 Market Street in Camden.

Built in 1864, it was officially designated as a cathedral in 1937. External links
  • Official Web Site
, New Jersey and author of Abortion and Healiny,: The Cry to Be Whole (Sheed and Ward), has found that for Catholic men struggling with abortion the sacrament sacrament [Lat.,=something holy], an outward sign of something sacred. In Christianity, a sacrament is commonly defined as having been instituted by Jesus and consisting of a visible sign of invisible grace.  of Reconciliation can have particular power. "The timing of the sacrament is important," says Mannion. "If it's too early, the person may not feel forgiven."

Mannion suggests readings to the men he counsels so that they better understand the sacrament and can come to believe they really will be forgiven. "The ultimate issue is how much the individual believes in God as creator with the power to heal."

End of loss

Even some abortion clinics are recognizing the need to provide better emotional support to the male partners of their clients. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a recent article in Psychology Today, Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood

A service mark used for an organization that provides family planning services.
 in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 found that the response to a trial run for male-targeted counseling services was overwhelming.

Since 2002 abortion clinics in the San Francisco Bay Area “Bay Area” redirects here. For other uses, see Bay Area (disambiguation).

The San Francisco Bay Area, colloquially known as the Bay Area or The Bay
 have been making referrals to Project Exhale exhale /ex·hale/ (eks´hal) to breathe out.

ex·hale
v.
1. To breathe out.

2. To emit a gas, vapor, or odor.
, a post-abortion counseling service with a pro-choice philosophy. Executive director Aspen aspen, in botany
aspen: see willow.
Aspen, city, United States
Aspen (ăs`pən), city (1990 pop. 5,049), alt. 7,850 ft (2,390 m), seat of Pitkin co., S central Colo.
 Baker runs a hotline aimed primarily at providing emotional support to women who have had abortions. But about 10 percent of the 200 calls she receives every year are from men.

Baker's experience is that men tend to avoid dealing with their own feelings and focus on their partner. "They ask questions like 'She cries all the time, shouldn't she be over it by now?' or 'She doesn't want to talk about it, what should I do?'" says Baker. "I've had men say to me, 'I wish I could have had the abortion for her.'"

A large number of Exhale's male callers are pro-choice. While one might think such men would be less likely to suffer emotional distress emotional distress n. an increasingly popular basis for a claim of damages in lawsuits for injury due to the negligence or intentional acts of another. Originally damages for emotional distress were only awardable in conjunction with damages for actual physical harm.  as a result of the abortion, that may not always be the case, says Wyatt. "Some of these guys want to be so supportive of the woman's choice that they neglect their own experience. They don't feel they have a right to their own emotions."

Despite his pro-choice convictions, Tony Cantalamessa found that abortion brought more emotional consequences than he had expected. Cantalamessa, who lives in New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt. , has faced the abortion decision twice, both times involving the woman to whom he is now married. The first time he and his then-girlfriend, Beth, were in college. She was overseas when she discovered she was pregnant with his child. After some phone conversations they agreed she should have the abortion.

"It was mainly her decision," says Cantalamessa. "I was in support of whatever she wanted to do. We were young, and we didn't think we were going to spend the rest of our lives together."

But Tony and Beth ended up getting married after all. Realizing the abortion could create issues in their marriage, they worked with a supportive minister on a ritual they hoped would bring closure to that chapter of their lives. They placed some writings and photographs in a vase, corked corked  
adj.
1. Sealed with or as if with a cork.

2. Tainted in flavor by an unsound cork: corked port.

3. Blackened by burnt cork.
 it, and cast it into the ocean.

While they had worked hard to put the past behind them, there were signs that some emotional issues remained unresolved. When their first child was born they delayed naming him. "We thought about names but didn't name him until after a week," says Cantalamessa. "I never thought about why we didn't name the baby."

Tony and Beth's spiritual paths diverged somewhat in the years after the abortion. Tony, a self-described agnostic ag·nos·tic  
n.
1.
a. One who believes that it is impossible to know whether there is a God.

b. One who is skeptical about the existence of God but does not profess true atheism.

2.
 before the abortion, did not find that the experience led him to reconsider his religious beliefs in any significant way. Beth, however, found the experience deepened a call to Christian ministry that she had already been feeling. She decided to focus part of her thesis for her master of divinity Noun 1. Master of Divinity - a master's degree in religion
MDiv

master's degree - an academic degree higher than a bachelor's degree but lower than a doctor's degree
 degree on the topic of abortion. Tony supported his wife's decision to pursue a career in ministry, and he participates in the life of the congregation where she ministers. But he does not consider himself a strong believer.

Two years after their son was born, Beth became pregnant again unexpectedly. With Beth working in ministry and Tony home full-time with their son, their financial situation was precarious. They discussed the possibility of abortion. This time Tony was more strongly in favor of the abortion, but Beth was much more ambivalent am·biv·a·lent  
adj.
Exhibiting or feeling ambivalence.



am·biva·lent·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
. In the end they decided to go ahead with the abortion.

Afterward af·ter·ward   also af·ter·wards
adv.
At a later time; subsequently.

Adv. 1. afterward - happening at a time subsequent to a reference time; "he apologized subsequently"; "he's going to the store but he'll be back here
 Tony recalls feeling a jumble of emotions. "I was relieved, but my wife wasn't, so in some ways I didn't want to feel what I was feeling. I was confused about whether I was feeling the right thing."

Tony remains strongly pro-choice, but he does not dispute that there have been emotional consequences for him and for his family. "It's definitely left some sort of mark. There is a sense of loss. There needs to be more support for people who go through this."

Finding forgiveness

One of the most successful post-abortion ministry programs in the United States is Rachel's Vineyard vineyard, land on which cultivation of the grape—known as viticulture—takes place. As many as 40 varieties of grape, Vitis vinifera, are known. , developed by Theresa Burke
For the article about Theresa Burke the psychologist, see Theresa Karminski Burke.


Theresa Frances Veronica Burke (born Amy Lauren Gardner
, a Catholic psychologist and author of Forbidden Grief." The Unspoken Pain of Abortion (Acorn). Burke initially designed the program as a curriculum for support groups of women who were grieving grieving Mourning, see there  the loss of their children through abortion.

In 1995 Burke expanded and adapted the curriculum into a format for weekend retreats. Despite the fact that Rachel's Vineyard did not have an office, budget, or staff other than Burke and her husband, Kevin, the retreat format spread rapidly by word of mouth and through the support it received from the organization Priests for Life Priests for Life (PFL) is a Roman Catholic pro-life organization based in New York. It functions as a network to promote and coordinate pro-life activism with the primary strategic goal of ending abortion and euthanasia and to spread the Gospel of Life according to the encyclical . In 1999 there were 18 Rachel's Vineyard retreats. By 2004 the number had grown to 250, and retreats were being held in 45 states and 11 countries. Although not officially affiliated with the Catholic Church, the program has been adopted by a large number of Catholic dioceses.

One change the Burkes made when they developed the weekend retreat was to welcome men as participants. "For many years post-abortion outreach was mostly geared to women, which makes perfect sense," says Kevin. "But I think over the last two or three years, there has been increasing recognition that men need healing, too."

The Burkes at first had some concerns about opening the retreat up to men. "We wondered how the women would react, because so many of them feel that they were abandoned by their male partners when they became pregnant," says Burke. "What we found was that it was a powerful moment of healing for these women to see men grieving the loss of their children."

The presence of women can also heal some of the pain men bring to a weekend. Scott Miller Scott Miller may refer to:
  • Scott Miller, musical theatre scholar, writer, composer, and director; also founder of New Line Theatre, an alternative musical theatre company in St.
 attended a Rachet's Vineyard retreat in British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography
 in late 2003. For many years, says Miller, he felt anger toward women because of his own experience of abortion 25 years ago.

"I was 20 years old, my parents had just divorced, and I had turned to alcohol. In the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of all this my girlfriend announced she was pregnant. I thought 'Oh my God, I have to get a job, I have to deal with this, I have to tell my friends, I'm a bad person, I'm ashamed,'" says Miller.

His girlfriend told him she was going to have an abortion. "It kind of stopped me in my tracks," says Miller. "I didn't know what to think. I thought it would take care of all these problems. But it didn't feel right to me." Miller's mother, who strongly supported the abortion, ended up accompanying his girlfriend to the abortion clinic.

"After it was all over I felt terrible," he says. "The shame and guilt hadn't gone away, and now there was something else--murder, I guess. All I did was add coals to the fire. I made it a hundred times worse. I couldn't face my girlfriend, and I felt angry at my mother." His relationship with his girlfriend deteriorated and they eventually separated.

As part of his journey toward healing, Miller would go on to experience a profound religious conversion. He eventually sought out an Anglican priest whom he trusted.

"I told him I wanted to do a Confession A Confession is a short work on questions of religion by Leo Tolstoy. It was first distributed in Russia in 1882.

Consisting of autobiographical notes on the development of the author's belief, A Confession
, though I didn't really know what it was," says Miller. "He read Psalm 51 to me and talked about how God had forgiven David for committing adultery adultery

Sexual relations between a married person and someone other than his or her spouse. Prohibitions against adultery are found in virtually every society; Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions all condemn it, and in some Islamic countries it is still punishable by
 and murder. I didn't realize God was like that. I couldn't accept that I had done this. But God was bigger than me. He had more room for love, mercy, and forgiveness than I had for myself."

Miller ended up going to seminary seminary

Educational institution, usually for training in theology. In the U.S. the term was formerly also used to refer to institutions of higher learning for women, often teachers' colleges.
, and is now an ordained or·dain  
tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains
1.
a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on.

b. To authorize as a rabbi.

2.
 minister with the Assemblies of God. He is married with a 5-year-old daughter. But he says the anger he felt toward women remained with him at some level until he attended the Rachel's Vineyard weekend.

"I saw the hurt in those women, and it really surprised me. They felt like I did. To see them grieving and crying like me gave me a whole new perspective," he says.

Miller now serves as a resource person at Rachel's Vineyard retreats. He recently helped with a retreat in Minneapolis, the city where his mother had taken his girlfriend to have the abortion 25 years ago. "This time, rather than sending my girlfriend to have an abortion, I went there to serve other women," says Miller.

Burke has found that experiences like Miller's are common on Rachel's Vineyard retreats. "We never have an agenda to convert people or demand that they become prolife," says Burke. "We've had atheists come on the retreat. But I can't remember anyone who has come who has not had an encounter with a loving, compassionate, and forgiving God. What they do with that is up to them."

Lost fatherhood

Ryan Hunter, who had been haunted by leaving his wife in the waiting room, also eventually found healing at a Rachel's Vineyard retreat. He and his wife, Kathy, were sitting at Mass one day when Monika Rodman, the Respect Life coordinator for the Catholic Diocese of Oakland, California “Oakland” redirects here. For other uses, see Oakland (disambiguation).
Oakland (IPA: /ˈoʊklənd/), founded in 1852, is the eighth-largest city in the U.S.
, invited women and men affected by abortion to a retreat.

"We spent a lot of time talking about it and decided to go," he says. "But at that point I was doing it for Kathy. I didn't think I needed it. I thought I had moved on."

The retreat proved cathartic cathartic (kəthär`tĭk): see laxative.  for Hunter as well. "I had shoved it into a corner and never dealt with it. As the weekend went on, all this emotion came out. My wife never realized how much pain I was in because I had never shared it. I felt it was a mistake that we had gone through with the abortion, but I had never told her."

During the course of the weekend, the Hunters decided to name the child they had lost to abortion. They named her Ryanna. "We always had a feeling she would have been a girl," Hunter says. "We talk about her and speak of her by name now. We consider her a child that we lost. But we know that the Lord is taking care of her now."

Rodman believes naming the child lost to abortion is often important to men. "One of the things we try to do with men is help them to reclaim their lost fatherhood," he says. "Facing an unplanned pregnancy, couples often think of the child as a 'problem' and abortion as the solution. We are helping people understand that this was a child, a child they were unable to welcome into their lives because of the pressures they faced at the time. But that child can still be part of their family tree."

Hunter feels the retreat saved his marriage. If we hadn't gone on the weekend, I don't think we would have been able to keep it together. The communication and openness just weren't there."

Freedom to grieve grieve  
v. grieved, griev·ing, grieves

v.tr.
1. To cause to be sorrowful; distress: It grieves me to see you in such pain.

2.
 and a stronger marriage may not be the only gifts the Hunters obtained from the weekend. Two years later, Kathy gave birth to a son. "He's definitely the Lord's child," says Hunter, his joy mixed with a fatigue every father of a young child can recognize. "We've been blessed."

Hope for healing

These stories are all the more poignant for the fact that they have been shared with so few. While they may struggle internally, men continue to face barriers to the help they need to deal with the emotional fallout fallout, minute particles of radioactive material produced by nuclear explosions (see atomic bomb; hydrogen bomb; Chernobyl) or by discharge from nuclear-power or atomic installations and scattered throughout the earth's atmosphere by winds and convection currents.  of abortion. First among them may be a tendency to minimize their own feelings.

"With men, the first step is giving them the right to talk about it because they don't feel they have the right to do that," says psychotherapist Wyatt. "Giving them permission to discuss it and explore it is important."

Men who decide to seek professional help must contend with the fact that the therapeutic community is hardly untouched by the nation's cultural war over abortion. In March 2004 the American Psychological Association The American Psychological Association (APA) is a professional organization representing psychology in the US. Description and history
The association has around 150,000 members and an annual budget of around $70m.
 issued a position paper on the psychological impact of abortion stating, "Abortion is a safe medical procedure that carries relatively few physical or psychological risks." The tone of the statement seems calculated to dismiss rather than validate claims of psychological pain related to abortion.

"I think most therapists want to do the right thing for the client," says Wyatt. "But you could certainly see if a therapist had strong pro-choice convictions, they might want to deny the reaction and minimize the emotional impact. On the other hand, a therapist who was strongly prolife could have a problem in the other direction. You need to listen to what the client is saying."

"The professional therapeutic community is so essential," says Burke. "They are on the front lines. They are seeing the symptoms, and abortion may be the source of those symptoms. If they are unable to get beyond the politics of the issue and to look honestly at what their client is wrestling with, healing can't take place."

Men who turn to their religious communities for help may face a different set of challenges, particularly if the community--like the Catholic Church--is strongly prolife. While the pope and many bishops have issued statements encouraging men and women who have experienced abortion to seek both spiritual reconciliation and emotional healing, attitudes toward post-abortion ministry can vary widely between parishes.

While Hunter's own journey to reconciliation after abortion brought him into the Catholic Church, he has encountered attitudes that have given him pause.

"I was in RCIA RCIA Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults
RCIA Rite of Catholic Initiation for Adults
RCIA Retail Clerks International Association
RCIA Richmond Creative Investors Association
RCIA Request for Clarity, Information & Assistance
 one night, and the subject was forgiveness," he says. "One person asked if there were any sins that couldn't be forgiven. The teacher said, 'Well, maybe abortion.' I challenged him because I felt the message of Jesus was that if you really are sincere in your repentance, you will be forgiven. He backed off, but I wish I'd had the courage to share my story at that moment."

Rodman believes a greater recognition by Catholics that abortion is something inside the church as well as outside would make it easier to offer reconciliation to those experiencing abortion without compromising the church's defense of the unborn. Many Catholics raised to respect life find themselves making a different choice when confronted with a crisis pregnancy, notes Rodman. "If we can be a community that speaks first of mercy and forgiveness, it may be easier for us to speak the words of truth and justice our culture needs to hear about abortion."

Hunter, for his part, hopes that more men and women come to experience the mercy and forgiveness he and his wife have known. "We did an unspeakable thing. But Jesus died so that even sins as terrible as ours could be forgiven. I wish more people could come to know the power of that forgiveness."

RESOURCES

ORGANIZATIONS

Project Rachel www.hopeafterabortion.com confidential e-mail: noparh@juno.com

National Office of Post-Abortion Reconciliation and Healing Inc. National Referral Line: 1-800-5WE-CARE home.wi.rr.com/noparh/

Rachel's Vineyard 877-HOPE4ME (877-467-3463) www.rachelsvineyard.org

BOOKS

Unspeakable Losses: Understanding the Experience of Pregnancy Loss, Miscarriage miscarriage: see abortion.
miscarriage
 or spontaneous abortion

Spontaneous expulsion of an embryo or fetus from the uterus before it can live outside the mother.
, and Abortion, by Kim Kluger-Bell (W.W. Norton)

Men and Abortion: A Path to Healing, by C.T. Coyle (Essence)

Healing a Father's Heart: A Post-Abortion Bible Study Bible study may refer to:
  • Biblical studies, the academic examination
  • Bible study (Christian), sometimes known as "Devotions" or "Quiet times"
Other terms related to the study of the bible:
  • Biblical criticism
  • Biblical hermeneutics
 for Men, by Linda Cochrane and Kathy Jones (Baker)

VIDEOS

Dear Children: A Story of Post-Abortion Healing (Liguori)

Beyond Regret: Entering into Healing and Wholeness After an Abortion (Paradete Video Productions)

RELATED ARTICLE: A pastoral perspective.

Father James Bacik, pastor of Corpus Christi Corpus Christi, in Christianity
Corpus Christi [Lat.,=body of Christ], feast of the Western Church, observed on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday (or on the following Sunday).
 University Parish in Toledo, Ohio
This article is about the city in Ohio. For Toledo, Spain, see that article. For other uses, see Toledo (disambiguation).
Toledo is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Lucas CountyGR6.
, says Catholic men who have come to see him about abortion fall into two categories. "One is men who found out later that their wives had abortions and were extremely upset, angry they were not consulted about a matter that was extremely important to them."

The other reaction has been "guilt from men who encouraged their girlfriends to have abortions and then later on felt remorseful re·morse·ful  
adj.
Marked by or filled with remorse.



re·morseful·ly adv.
 that they had pressured them into it."

Though most Catholic students at the University of Toledo National recognition
In its 125-year history UT has garnered several national accolades. The University’s programs, faculty and facilities have been highlighted in the media, including
 have "a strong sense that abortion is wrong," Bacik has also encountered students "who found themselves pregnant, felt all the pressures of society, worried about what parents would think, and given those pressures in some cases made decisions to have an abortion. It's extremely important that there be a healing of that--they need to deal with it within their Christian faith, with a God who's forgiving." He said that anyone who can listen well "usually ends up being empathetic em·pa·thet·ic  
adj.
Empathic.



empa·theti·cal·ly adv.
 to the horrible pressures on people in this situation."

Some make courageous decisions despite that pressure. Father Robert McLaughlin Robert McLaughlin (November 16 1836 – November 23 1921) was an Ontario manufacturer. He founded the McLaughlin Carriage and McLaughlin Motor Car companies which later became part of General Motors. , pastor of Mary Seat of Wisdom Parish in Park Ridge, Illinois Park Ridge, Illinois, is a suburb of 37,775 residents, 15 miles northwest of downtown Chicago, close to O'Hare Airport, major expressways and rail transportation.

Park Ridge is said to be located on the highest ridge in Cook County.
, met recently with a very young unwed couple who are choosing to keep their baby, thanks largely to the conviction of the Catholic father-to-be.

"He was really the driving force who very clearly said, 'We can't have an abortion. Somehow we're going to get through this and figure out what the best thing for the baby will be.'" The boy's parents backed him up, even though her parents talked about throwing her out of the house.

Decisions like this are what can happen "when the issue of abortion gets talked about, when people think of it as a moral issue," he says. In preaching, McLaughlin tends to use abortion as one of many examples when speaking about issues of justice or valuing life. "It's the kind of issue that has to be dealt with very, very sensitively in terms of what people are able to hear at this time. Otherwise it becomes punishing rather than challenging."

McLaughlin says that the people who've sought him out about an abortion have been almost exclusively women, and Bacik also says he had not spoken with large numbers of men on the issue. Another priest who has worked with young adults for more than 20 years said in all that time not one man had approached him to discuss an abortion.

"My sense," says McLaughlin, "is men frequently want to divorce themselves from the whole situation, and this is the thing that strikes me as so painful for women. They are abandoned by everybody, often by their parents and by the person they thought loved them. The man says, 'How did you let that happen to you? You're not going to suck me into this. I'll help you pay for the abortion.'"

McLaughlin recalls working with young women in a Catholic maternity hospital for unwed mothers when he was first ordained. One day he was meeting with 10 women, doing a word-association exercise. When he said the word "man," the women let fly with a barrage of angry, profane PROFANE. That which has not been consecrated. By a profane place is understood one which is neither sacred, nor sanctified, nor religious. Dig. 11, 7, 2, 4. Vide Things.  responses. The priest laid a pile of coats on a couch, asking each woman to imagine the coats as the father of their child and to respond however they chose: by picking up a coat and holding it close, for example. Every single woman went over and beat the stuffing out of the coats.

--Catherine O'Connell-Cahill

J. PETER NIXON The Hon. Peter James Nixon AO (b. 22 March 1928) was a long serving member of the Australian House of Representatives.

Born in Orbost, Victoria, Nixon was a gentleman grazier and company director prior to gaining Country Party pre-selection for the rural Division of
 is a graduate student at the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley The Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley (often abbreviated JSTB) is one of the member colleges of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California.

JSTB is located two blocks north of the UC Berkeley campus, and about two blocks east of "Holy Hill" the central
. Some of the names in this story have been changed to protect the privacy of the individuals involved.
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Author:Nixon, J. Peter
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Article Type:Cover Story
Date:Feb 1, 2005
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