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Men and abortion

Monday, June 16, 2008
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"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 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 prolife 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
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 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. 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 and director of the Crosswinds Counseling Center in Dublin, California. "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 well-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. 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 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 in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and has spread to a large number of dioceses around the United States. 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.

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more than God's Mercy at issue

The issue with abortions includes forgiveness but it is not the whole issue.

The much larger issue is living Catholic lives in order to give God the glory that we can both inside and outside of Holy Mass.

When a man and woman show their affection and agape love for each other through the natural means supplied by God, they cooperate with Him in a miracle: the infusion of a soul which, through baptism, becomes a child of God.

Our society has come so far from that Catholic teaching that most Catholics are unaware of it. Even on the other side of an abortion is the issue of God's mercy and forgiveness, which is true and positive in and of itself. But what about the soul given up through an abortion? Through God's subjective judgement, it is possible that she may enjoy the beatific vision. But more likely, without baptism, she only enjos a natural paradise, fully content but deprived of seeing God face to face.

What is needed in the Church is a migration back to catechesis so that the Faithful and the world can see the beauty in God's wisdom and the rationale behind many of the Church's doctrines.

Viva Cristo Ray!
Our Lady of Guadalupe, Pray for us.

Men and Women that have had past abortion please read.

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Beautiful Article

Thank you for sharing this article. The emotional trauma that the majority of men and women experience when involved with an abortion is real and powerful.
Rachel's Vineyard Retreats are a place where those wounded by abortion, men and women, can go for healing in a place they can feel safe and know they are not alone and hopefully discover, or rediscover the great mercy and forgiveness and love that our Lord has for them.
I did find it kind of ironic that an abortion clinic refers to Project Exhale. I guess it is a small victory that even as they murder babies, they acknowledge that it wounds the living also. At the time of conception, life is created and that life is human. We can never get around that. Findings show that the majority of women who have abortions feel that they have "no-choice." More irony. It is instinct that tells us we should not kill our young. When we do, we will suffer that psychic pain until we can find forgiveness in God.
I pray that all who have been involved in an abortion will seek that healing and forgiveness that only God can give. I pray that all will be compassionate and loving to those who have been involved in abortion.I pray that all in the world will wake up to the evil that we do by allowing abortion to continue. In Jesus name I pray.

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