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  <title>Susan Ito's blog</title>
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  <updated>2008-10-02T17:31:01-04:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>All That We Have Chosen</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2008/09/18/all-that-we-have-chosen" />
    <id>http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2008/09/18/all-that-we-have-chosen</id>
    <published>2008-10-02T14:00:00-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-10-02T17:31:01-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Susan Ito</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Access to Abortion" />
    <category term="Contraception" />
    <category term="Maternal Health" />
    <category term="Women’s Rights" />
    <category term="adoption" />
    <category term="birth mother" />
    <category term="Late-term Abortion" />
    <category term="pre-eclampsia" />
    <category term="women&#039;s health exception" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[I was toxemic, poisoned by pregnancy. My only cure was to not be pregnant anymore. But my life had been shaped by reproductive choices long before this latest one.    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>
We had been married just less than 
a year in that spring of 1989.&nbsp; My husband had a medical conference 
in Washington. He left our home in California early in the week and 
I planned to meet him there later, for a long weekend.&nbsp; When the 
airport van arrived at our house, I loaded my suitcase into the back, 
strapped myself in, and fell asleep before we reached the 
bottom of our street.&nbsp; The driver shook me awake at 
the airport; I had been drooling on my jacket collar.&nbsp; 
I had never experienced such overwhelming somnolence before.&nbsp; I 
stumbled through the corridors of the airport, feeling drugged, my head 
buzzing with a strange, sparkling heaviness.&nbsp; All I wanted to do 
was curl into a corner and sleep, the passengers rushing past me with 
their wheeled luggage, their tickets flapping in their hands.&nbsp; 
It was all I could do to stagger onto the plane, and doze, waking only 
to devour the plastic tray of rubbery food, and sleep again.
</p>
<p>
"I 
think I'm sick," I told John as I got off the plane.&nbsp; "I 
feel woozy."
</p>
<p>
But 
it had been the first month of sex without birth control, the little 
cervical cap far, far away in the bathroom cabinet, the spermicide buried 
in the underwear drawer.&nbsp; We had thought it would take months, 
maybe even a year.&nbsp; Not so soon as this.
</p>
<p>
I 
sat on the edge of the bed and flipped through the yellow pages, searching 
for a clinic that would be open on a Saturday.&nbsp; While John was 
in a darkened auditorium, studying the dark red planet of a diseased 
liver shining huge and luminous on the wall, I climbed into a taxi, 
trembling, and gave the driver the address of the Georgetown Women's 
Center.
</p>
<p>
They 
took a tube full of blood from my arm and then told me to call back 
in three hours.&nbsp; I wandered the streets of a city I didn't know, 
the jeweled boutiques, bookstores, a café with colorful bowls of salad 
crowded together under a glass counter.&nbsp; I sat there, eating stuffed 
grape leaves, staring at my watch, the tiny needle of the second hand 
jerking through space.
</p>
<p>
I 
thought about my blood, the tablespoons of blood that lay in the glass 
tube in the clinic.&nbsp; Blood that was waiting to speak, its language 
translated by chemicals and microscopes.&nbsp; Blood of the birthmother 
I'd tracked down and met when I was twenty, who had been glad to know 
me, but wanted me to stay a lifelong secret.&nbsp; Blood of my invisible 
birthfather, whose name she wouldn't reveal to me.&nbsp; Blood of so 
many unknown relatives. This blood was going to inform me 
of the presence of another, of one whose face I would finally see, a 
child to name and hold. 
</p>
<p>
The 
woman on the phone said yes.&nbsp; "Congratulations," she 
said.&nbsp; News that she delivered dozens of times a day, altering 
lives with one syllable.&nbsp; Yes.&nbsp; No.&nbsp; I stared at the 
plastic receiver, the telephone.&nbsp; The phone was bolted to a wall 
outside of a B. Dalton bookstore. I bought a book on pregnancy, and 
ran my finger along the due-date chart, counting months.&nbsp; Early 
January.&nbsp; New year, new life.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
I remember almost nothing about that 
pregnancy except the way that it ended.
</p>
<p>
In 
August, we took a trip to the Outer Banks in North Carolina with his 
brother's family. I swelled in the humidity like a sponge, my breasts 
enormous, my face squishy with fluid. "Look at me," I said, frowning 
in the mirror. "You look wonderful," he said. It wasn't what I 
was talking about.&nbsp; I hadn't been complaining about feeling fat 
or unattractive, although I <i>was</i> fat, in a strange, swollen way.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
John, a doctor, went from that
family vacation to El Salvador, heading a medical delegation to the war
zone of Guazapa, under the volcano. My father-in-law disapproved, told
me outright that he felt John was abandoning me. But I was proud of the
work we were involved in. While he was in Central America, I drove to
Davis to help load a container of wheelchairs, crutches, and medicine
bound for Nicaragua. It was then that I noticed I couldn't lace my
sneakers. My feet were the size of small footballs.
</p>
<p>
I 
picked him up at the airport, saying, "Don't you think I look fat?"
</p>
<p>
"You're 
pregnant, sweetheart," he said. "That's how you're supposed 
to look."
</p>
<p>
Sunday 
morning. September 17, 1989. I had gained thirteen pounds in a week. 
I pulled out the pregnancy book. In red print, it said, <i>Call the 
doctor if you gain more than three pounds in one week. If your face 
or hands or feet are swollen. </i>If. If. If. I checked them all off. 
While John was in the shower, I called my obstetrician and friend, Lisa. 
I whispered under the sound of running water, "I think something is 
wrong."
</p>
<p>
Lisa's 
voice was so smooth, so calm. "Swelling is very common," she said, 
"but it would be a good idea to get a blood pressure check. Can John 
do it?"
</p>
<p>
We 
stopped by his office, two blocks from the restaurant we had decided 
on for dinner. We were going to see a movie, then browse a bookstore; 
our usual date. I hopped onto the exam table, held out my arm. I couldn't 
wait to get to la Méditerranée. My mouth had been dreaming of spanakopita 
all day.
</p>
<p>
I 
heard the Velcro tearing open on the cuff, felt its smooth blue band 
wrapping around me. I swung my feet and smiled up at John, the stethoscope 
around his neck, loved this small gesture of taking care of me. I felt 
the cuff tightening, the pounding of my heart echoing up and down my 
fingers, through my elbow.
</p>
<p>
The 
expression on his face I will never forget, the change in color from 
pink to ash, as if he had died standing at my side. "Lie down," 
he said quietly. "Lie down on your left side. <i>Now."</i>
</p>
<p>
The 
numbers were all wrong, two hundred plus, over and over again, his eyes 
darkening as he watched the mercury climb on the wall. He shook his 
head. "What's Lisa's phone number?"
</p>
<p>
His 
voice was grim as he spoke to her on the phone-numbers, questions, 
a terrible urgency. He told me to go into the tiny bathroom and pee 
into a cup. "We've got to dipstick your urine, see if there's 
any protein."
</p>
<p>
I 
sat on the toilet and listened to him crash through the cupboards. I gave him the paper cup, the gold 
liquid cloudy and dense. The dipstick changed color quickly, from white 
to powdery blue to sky to deep indigo.&nbsp; My protein level was off 
the chart. "No," he whispered. "No, no, goddammit, no."
</p>
<p>
I 
asked what, over and over, not believing that things could be as bad 
as what his face was telling me.&nbsp; "Your kidneys aren't working," 
he said. He pulled me out the door, across the street to the hospital. 
He pounded the buttons of the elevator, pulled me flying to the nurses' 
station, spat numbers at them. I thought, <i>don't be a bully, nurses 
hate doctors who are bullies;</i> but they scattered like quail, one 
of them on the phone, another pushing me, stumbling, into a room. There 
were three of them, pulling at my clothes, my shoes; the blood pressure 
cuff again; the shades were drawn; they moved so swiftly, with such 
seriousness.
</p>
<p>
I 
had a new doctor now. Lisa, obstetrician of the normal, was instantly 
off my case, and I was assigned a special neonatologist named Weiss. 
He was perfectly bald, with thick glasses, and wooden clogs, a soft 
voice.
</p>
<p>
A 
squirt of blue gel on my belly for the fetal monitor, the galloping 
sound of hoof beats, the baby riding a wild pony inside me. What a relief 
to hear that sound, although I didn't need the monitor; 
I could feel the baby punching at my liver.
</p>
<p>
There 
was a name for what I had. Preeclampsia. Ahh. Well, preeclampsia was 
certainly better than eclampsia, and as long as it was pre-, then they 
could stop it, couldn't they?&nbsp; And what was eclampsia? An explosion 
of blood pressure, a flood of protein poisoning the blood, kidney failure, 
the vessels in spasm, a stroke, seizures, blindness, death. But I didn't 
have any of those things. I had <i>pre-</i>eclampsia. It felt safe.
</p>
<p>
They 
slipped a needle into my wrist, hung a bag of magnesium sulfate. This 
is to prevent seizures, they said. You may feel a little hot. As the 
first drops of the drug slipped into my bloodstream, I felt a flash 
of electricity inside my mouth. My tongue was baking. My scalp prickled, 
burning, and I threw up onto the sheets. I felt as if I was being microwaved. 
</p>
<p>
I 
was wheeled down to radiology. Pictures of the baby onscreen, waving, 
treading water. A real child, not a pony or a fish. The x-ray tech, 
a woman with curly brown hair and a red Coca-Cola t-shirt, asked, "Do 
you want to know the sex?" I sat up. "There you go." She pointed. 
A flash between the legs, like a finger. A boy. I nearly leapt off the 
gurney. "John! Did you see? A boy! It's Samuel!" Sahm-<i>well,</i> 
the Spanish pronunciation, named after our surrogate father in Nicaragua, 
the most dignified man we knew.
</p>
<p>
He 
didn't want to look, couldn't celebrate having a son. He knew so 
much more than I did.&nbsp;<br>
</p>
<p>
Weiss came to stand next to my bed. 
Recited numbers slowly. 
</p>
<p>
"Baby 
needs at least two more weeks for viability. He's already too small, 
way too small.&nbsp; But you . . ." He looked at me sadly, shook his 
head. "You probably can't survive two weeks without having a stroke, 
seizures, worse." He meant I could die. 
</p>
<p>
"What 
are the chances ... that we could both make it?" Doctors are always 
talking percentages.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
"Less 
than ten percent, maybe less than five percent." The space 
between his fingers shrunk into nothing.
</p>
<p>
This 
is how they said it. I was toxemic, poisoned by pregnancy. My only cure 
was to not be pregnant anymore. The baby needed two more weeks, just 
fourteen days.
</p>
<p>
I 
looked at John hopefully. "I can wait. It will be all right."
</p>
<p>
"Honey. 
Your blood pressure is through the roof. Your kidneys are shutting down. 
You are <i>on the verge of having a stroke."</i>
</p>
<p>
I 
actually smiled at him. I actually said that having a stroke at twenty-nine 
would not be a big deal. I was a physical therapist; I knew about rehab. 
I could rehabilitate myself. I could walk with a cane. Lots of people 
do it. I had a bizarre image of leaning on the baby's carriage, supporting 
myself the way elderly people use a walker.
</p>
<p>
We 
struggled through the night. "I'm not going to lose this baby," 
I said.
</p>
<p>
"I'm 
not going to lose <i>you</i>," he said. "And think of the 
baby. Chances are almost certain that a baby born this small will have 
problems. Severe problems."
</p>
<p>
I 
knew about children with problems; I had worked in a children's cerebral 
palsy clinic for years.&nbsp; Many of them had been born at the same 
gestational age as Samuel was now.&nbsp; I knew children who could not 
walk or speak or look into their mother's eyes. 
</p>
<p>
After 
the longest night of my life, I relented.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
I 
lay with my hands on my belly all night, feeling Samuelito's limbs 
turning this way and that. There was nothing inside me that could even 
think of saying goodbye.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
At four in the morning, I called my 
parents.&nbsp; "We're in trouble," I said.&nbsp; My mother 
wept, frantic, alone.&nbsp; "I've got to find Daddy."&nbsp; 
He was on the road, traveling somewhere -- where?&nbsp; North Carolina, 
Kentucky, Tennessee?&nbsp; On the road meant invisible, unreachable, 
gone.&nbsp; "I'll come out there tomorrow," she said.&nbsp; 
"There's no reason," I told her.&nbsp; She hung up sobbing.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
At 
six, I called my birthmother. She was calm, optimistic, her 
voice smooth as water. "I've known women who've had the same thing, 
and everything always turns out fine."
</p>
<p>
"It 
won't be fine, it's too early, way too early..."&nbsp; I wanted 
to tell her I wasn't <i>like</i> the others she'd known, that ninety-five 
percent of pre-eclampsia cases happen when the baby is nearly full term.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
She 
wasn't listening.&nbsp; "I'm sure everything will be <i>fine</i>."&nbsp; 
Her voice was flat, gentle.&nbsp; She didn't offer to fly out to California.&nbsp; 
I wondered about the stroke, if it really happened, if that would bring 
her to my bedside.&nbsp; I began to get a small glimmering inside me, 
of understanding what it means to be a parent.&nbsp; And seeing for 
the first time that this was what she was not.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
I 
had met her when I was twenty; after a heart-racing, detective-story 
search.  She was beautiful, glamorous, sophisticated: I felt I had hit 
the birthmother jackpot.&nbsp; Over the years it became clear that she 
was willing to be my friend and confidante, that she liked me.&nbsp; 
But there were two key conditions I had to adhere to if I wanted a relationship 
with her: One, I had to keep my own identity a secret in front of anyone 
she knew; and two, I had to not ask her who my birthfather was.&nbsp; 
At the time, it seemed worth it; I was young and infatuated by her charisma; 
I was willing to agree to anything.&nbsp; She also charmed my parents, 
who had fully supported my searching for her.&nbsp;
</p>
 
<p>
September 18, 1989. Another day of 
magnesium sulfate, the cuff that inflated every five minutes, the fetal 
monitor booming through the room. No change in status for either of 
us.
</p>
<p>
I 
signed papers of consent, my hand moving numbly across the paper, my 
mind screaming, I do <i>not</i> consent, I do <i>not,</i> I do not.
</p>
<p>
In 
the evening, Weiss's associate entered with a tray, a syringe, and 
a nurse with mournful eyes.
</p>
<p>
"It's 
just going to be a bee sting," he said.
</p>
<p>
And 
it was, a small tingle, quick pricking bubbles, under my navel; and 
then a thing like a tiny drinking straw that went in and out with a 
barely audible pop. It was so fast. I thought, <i>I love you, I love 
you, you must be hearing this, please hear me.</i> And then a Band-Aid 
was unwrapped, with its plastic smell of childhood, and spread onto 
my belly.
</p>
<p>
"All 
done," he said. All done.
</p>
<p>
My 
child was inside swallowing the fizzy drink, and it bubbled against 
his tiny tongue like a bud, the deadly soda pop.
</p>
<p>
This 
is what it was. A drug, injected into my womb, a drug to stop his heart. 
To lay him down to sleep, so he wouldn't feel what would happen the 
next day, the terrible terrible thing that would happen. <i>Evacuation</i> 
is what it is called in medical journals.
</p>
<p>
Evacuees 
are what the Japanese Americans were called when they were ripped from 
their homes, tagged like animals, flung into the desert. Evacuated, 
exiled, thrown away.
</p>
<p>
I 
lay on my side pinching the pillowcase. I wondered if he would be startled 
by the drug's taste, if it was bitter, or strange, or just different 
from the salt water he was used to. I prayed that it wouldn't be noxious, 
not like the magnesium sulfate that it wouldn't hurt. That it would 
be fast.
</p>
<p>
John 
sat next to the bed and held one hand as I pressed the other against 
my belly. I looked over his shoulder into the dark slice of night between 
the heavy curtains. Samuel, Samuelito, jumped against my hand once. 
He leaped through the space into the darkness and then was gone.
</p>
<p>
All 
gone.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
This was my first experience of being 
a mother.&nbsp; I went home at the end of the week, gushing fluid, peeing 
and sweating quarts of the liquids my body hadn't been able to release.&nbsp; 
I wept oceans.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
My 
parents called me several times a day.&nbsp; "Is there anything 
you need? What can we do for you?"&nbsp; I could imagine them wringing 
their hands, pacing, feeling helpless.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
"Nothing," 
I said dully.&nbsp; <i>I need my baby.</i>&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
It 
was a week before I called my birthmother again.&nbsp; Her voice was 
bright.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
"Oh!" 
she said, surprised. "When I didn't hear back from you again, I 
assumed everything must have turned out all right."&nbsp; Seven 
days, I thought, seven days and she never called.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
"It 
didn't turn out all right," I said, my voice as dull and heavy 
as a stone.&nbsp; First grandchild swept away and she never picked up 
the phone.
</p>
<p>
"Well," 
she said, (how could her voice be so calm?) "I'm very sorry.&nbsp; 
You're so young, though..."
</p>
<p>
Is 
that what she told herself, at twenty-nine, when she had me and then 
let me go?&nbsp; Did she just set her vision to the future, the other 
children she would have?&nbsp; Was it really that easy?
</p>
<p>
There 
weren't many choices for my birthmother when she was pregnant with 
me back then. It's possible that she could have taken a 
knitting needle or rat poison and tried to terminate the pregnancy herself; 
I'm thankful, for both her sake and mine that she didn't do that.&nbsp; 
She might have run away to an anonymous town where nobody knew her, 
and passed herself off as a widow with a child.&nbsp; But that would 
have meant tearing herself away from her family, her community, and 
everything she knew.&nbsp; So she did what felt like the only viable 
option at the time:&nbsp; she bought a girdle.&nbsp; She ate like a 
bird.&nbsp; She did what she could do to assure that I would be as small 
as possible; then she traveled to a faraway city and gave birth to me 
two months prematurely.
</p>
<p>
And 
then she gave me up for adoption.
</p>
<p>
Her 
choices had begun narrowing long before that day, however.&nbsp; They 
started shrinking when, in 1941, our country went to war with Japan, 
whose people looked like her family.&nbsp; Her family had no choice 
when their Los Angeles business was shut down and they were told to 
pack their lives into a single trunk, and they were forced to show their 
allegiance by moving into a barbed-wire compound in the high dusty desert 
of Colorado.&nbsp; She was ten years old then.
</p>
<p>
They 
had little option when the war ended and they were offered sponsorship, 
a job and a home and a place in a tiny town in the Midwest.&nbsp; Everyone 
in this town originated, one generation or two or three, from the same 
small country in Europe.&nbsp; Her family would become a charitable, 
benevolent experiment:&nbsp; loved but untouchable.&nbsp;When she 
reached adulthood, it was expected that she would choose a solitary 
life, the life of a schoolteacher or a nurse.&nbsp; The life of a wife 
did not seem an option because who in that community could openly marry 
such an outsider? 
</p>
<p>
She 
chose love, a secret love.&nbsp; She chose a married man with a family.&nbsp; 
And that was how I came to be. 
</p>
<p>
When 
I was twenty-five, and in a fragile, new relationship, I 
felt myself experiencing strange sensations:&nbsp; swollen, hypersensitive 
breasts, and the impulse to weep every five minutes. It took a while 
for me to understand what might be happening.
</p>
<p>
I 
picked up the telephone book, scanned the millions of numbers, flipping 
the thin yellow pages, and dialed. <i>Crisis Pregnancy Center</i>.&nbsp; 
I certainly felt like I was experiencing a crisis. I spoke with a woman 
who told me to come that day.&nbsp; I pressed the white buttons on the 
phone and called my boyfriend.&nbsp; My mouth was dry as I told him 
where I was going.&nbsp; He had only the year before gone through a 
pregnancy with another girlfriend; had seen her through the entire thing, 
held her hand through labor and birth, and together they had signed 
relinquishment papers for their daughter's adoption.&nbsp; He didn't 
say much when I told him what I feared; he was in shock.
</p>
<p>
He 
drove me to a place in the outer Richmond district, by the beach, a 
small white door in the basement of a church.&nbsp; A woman in a plain 
brown dress opened it, scouring us both with her eyes.&nbsp; "Did 
you call this morning?"&nbsp; I nodded and handed over a brown paper 
bag that held a mayonnaise jar, sloshing with warm urine.&nbsp; She 
told us to wait in what looked like a daycare room, with blue and yellow 
padded mats on the floor, and a plastic playhouse littered with stuffed 
animals.&nbsp; We sat on short chairs, our knees tilted up to the ceiling.&nbsp; 
Thirty minutes later, the woman called us into a windowless room, sat 
us down on a worn loveseat and said that I was pregnant.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
The 
world became very quiet.&nbsp;&nbsp; I believed that I could hear the 
little ball of cells, popping and dividing underneath my skin.&nbsp; 
I imagined a tiny seahorse, rocking in a crimson pear.&nbsp; The woman 
began talking about baby clothes and financial assistance for unwed 
mothers, and then paused and squinted at me.&nbsp; "You aren't considering 
abortion, are you?"&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
I 
couldn't lift my eyes. "I don't know."&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
"Well.&nbsp; 
Let me tell you about what <i>really</i> goes on in that procedure."&nbsp; 
Her lips curled away from her teeth.&nbsp; "What happens is this. 
Your baby is sucked out of your body by a machine that is <i>15 times 
more powerful</i> than your household vacuum cleaner!&nbsp; Can you 
imagine?"&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
I 
told her that I couldn't imagine.&nbsp; Then I stood up to leave, 
telling her I would think about it.&nbsp; My boyfriend's face was gray 
as stone.&nbsp; He reached out to take my hand.&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
The 
woman moved to the door, blocking us a bit.&nbsp; Taking slow long looks 
at each of us, she warned, "You might want to consider the fact 
that the majority of relationships deteriorate after an abortion."&nbsp; 
We thanked her and walked to the ocean.
</p>
<p>
Pregnant.&nbsp;&nbsp; 
It couldn't be possible.&nbsp;&nbsp; I clutched at the front of my 
jeans, stumbling in the sand.&nbsp;&nbsp; "I'm scared," I said.&nbsp; 
Tears ran down into the collar of my shirt.&nbsp; And then, "No wonder 
I'm crying all the time."
</p>
<p>
He 
squinted out at the ocean, his eyes bright.&nbsp; I knew what he was 
thinking.&nbsp; <i>Not again.&nbsp; Not again.</i>
</p>
<p>
It 
seemed that there were three possible options: abortion, adoption or 
keeping the baby ourselves.&nbsp; Adoption was out of the question: 
there was no way I was going to relinquish my first blood relative, 
and there was no way he was going to endure that particular hell again.&nbsp; 
Keeping the baby, at that point in our lives, seemed as abstract and 
unrealistic as becoming astronauts or movie stars.&nbsp; Our relationship 
was too new, and we were way too unequipped.&nbsp; My parents were extraordinarily 
conservative and old-fashioned, and I couldn't imagine even admitting 
to them that I had had sex. Some people might, at the age of twenty-five, 
decide to up and raise a baby with a person they barely knew. But it 
seemed absolutely incomprehensible to me.
</p>
<p>
Abortion 
felt like the only avenue.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
I 
was fascinated though -- horrified and fascinated -- to realize that 
my body was capable of doing such a thing.&nbsp; Growing a human being.&nbsp;&nbsp; 
I patted the skin over my belly, trying to feel something, although 
it was ludicrous; surely it was no larger than a paper clip.&nbsp; I 
knew that its days were numbered, and I resolved not to miss any part 
of it, to feel everything I could until it was gone.&nbsp;<br>
</p>
<p>
I 
called her.&nbsp; There was no question of calling my parents. I called 
my birthmother because I knew she would understand.&nbsp; And of course 
she did.&nbsp; She had been an alarmed, unmarried pregnant girl, twenty-five 
years ago.
</p>
<p>
Her 
voice was bright when she recognized my voice.&nbsp; "Su-san!&nbsp; 
How <i>are</i> you?"
</p>
<p>
I 
felt something crumple inside me.&nbsp; The words came out brokenly. 
"Not so good."
</p>
<p>
I 
could hear her breath catch over the phone.&nbsp; She inhaled, then 
let it out.&nbsp; "What is it? What's the matter?"
</p>
<p>
"I'm 
pregnant."
</p>
<p>
"Ohh."&nbsp; 
The vowel sound she made was filled with empathy, pain, and recognition.&nbsp; 
It was exactly the sound I needed to hear.&nbsp; <i>Thank you</i>, I 
said silently.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
"What 
will you do?" Her voice was solemn and soft.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
"I've 
got an appointment.&nbsp; On Monday." I didn't say the word out 
loud.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
"Ah.&nbsp; 
Well, I think that's probably the best, isn't it?"&nbsp; She knew 
that my relationship hadn't turned out to be The One, that I wasn't 
anticipating a long future together.&nbsp; I'd confided in her just 
as thoroughly as I had with my best girlfriends.&nbsp;&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
I 
sighed.&nbsp; "I'm sure it is.&nbsp; But it's still... hard."
</p>
<p>
"Of 
course it is.&nbsp; It must be very hard."&nbsp; I could feel the 
tenderness coming through the receiver and I closed my eyes.&nbsp;&nbsp; 
It was as if her palm was on my forehead, stroking it.
</p>
<p>
"You're 
lucky that you have this option."
</p>
<p>
"Yes."
</p>
<p>
"It's 
what I would have done, if it had been available to me..." And then 
she stopped short, realizing what she had just said.
</p>
<p>
I 
blinked.&nbsp; I tried to keep my voice steady.&nbsp; "Of course.&nbsp; 
I know."&nbsp; I was balancing on a tightrope.&nbsp; I wanted this 
support, this ability to confide in her.&nbsp; I needed her to be my 
understanding, forgiving mother. And yet she had just told me that she 
would have killed me if she had had the chance.&nbsp; The rigid voice 
of the woman in the church basement came back to me.&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw 
the deadly vacuum cleaner.&nbsp; I thought of coat hangers and bottles 
of X-labeled poisons.&nbsp; I blinked through tears, harder, and pushed 
it all away.
</p>
<p>
She 
tried to smooth over her own words.&nbsp; "Susan, is there anything 
you need?&nbsp; Can I do anything for you?"
</p>
<p>
<i>Come 
to me,</i> I wanted to say.&nbsp; <i>Come be with me and hold my hand.</i>&nbsp; 
But I couldn't choke the words out.&nbsp; To hear her say no would 
have been unbearable.
</p>
<p>
"No," 
I said.&nbsp; "I'm sure it will all be fine."
</p>
<p>
Maybe 
she was just echoing my words four years later, telling me what she 
thought I wanted to hear.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
I 
have two other children now, daughters. After losing Samuel, I was frightened 
and alarmed at my body's betrayal.&nbsp; My husband and I began pursuing 
adoption instead; it seemed safer than running the gauntlet of another 
pregnancy.&nbsp; But our two daughters insisted on showing up in our 
family, despite our feeble efforts at contraception; I am infinitely 
grateful that they did.
</p>
<p>
And yet I do not forget that son, small cowboy, the way he galloped 
through me.&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor do I forget the microscopic, unnamed seahorse 
of a child who came before that.&nbsp; There is still a part of me that 
believes that I failed the test of motherhood, the law that says your 
child comes before you, even if it means death. I put myself first when 
it came to Samuel, just as she had with me.&nbsp; And sometimes I cannot 
bear what that feels like. I look at my girls, the life that 
fills this family, and I think, none of this would be here if I had 
chosen differently.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
If 
I had stayed with that old boyfriend, and never had that first abortion. 
If I had refused to give up on Samuel's chances.&nbsp; Maybe I wouldn't 
be here today. Maybe I would have a severely disabled son.  If my birthmother 
had taken a coat hanger to me instead of hiding me under a girdle and 
then delivering me in a far-away state.&nbsp; If she had stolen away 
with me and pretended to be a widow in a new town.&nbsp; If that married 
man, my birthfather, had left his wife and children. If, if, if.
</p>
<p>
There 
are lifetimes of ifs to consider.&nbsp; But in the end, my birthmother 
and I made the choices we did.&nbsp; One time I chose one way, and another 
time it felt less like a choice than a gun at my head.&nbsp; 
</p>
<p>
I 
am inching towards fifty now.&nbsp; I no longer condemn her or myself 
for what we decided for ourselves, years ago.&nbsp; Did we choose wrongly?&nbsp; 
Were we selfish?&nbsp; There is no way to truly answer those questions. 
My life has been steeped in the tea of reproductive choice since the 
moment of my own conception.&nbsp; I wish us peace for all that we have 
chosen. 
</p>
<blockquote>
	<p>
	This essay was originally published in CHOICE, edited by Karen Bender and Nina de Gramont. 
	</p>
</blockquote>    ]]></content>
  </entry>
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