College Was Going To Be Wonderful
Letter Achives
Dear Becky -- College was going to be wonderful.
My
writing portfolio got me into that private school. It wasn't my SAT
scores. I wasn't a 'problem' child, per se, but I had difficulties in
my high school years. From hanging around gang members in my freshman
year, to running away from home at 16, to coming back home only to move
far away to finish up that last senior year - life was difficult.
Not
only did I have my own seperate emotions from my childhood to deal
with, but I also lived with a single mother who was depressed. When she
adopted me, she owned two companies. She never had to 'struggle'. That
changed in fifth grade.
I remember moving away. I remember
leaving my friends and the spacious house to my grandmother's place.
From there, my mother was able to find a cheap, small house to rent.
She worked two jobs to keep bills paid - while at the same time, our
relationship started to fall apart.
This worsened over the years.
College
was going to be a wonderful experience. I would have my ultimate dream
come true to attend a private university and graduate with a degree in
Philosphy with an emphasis on Metaphysics and a minor of English with
an emphasis on Creative Writing. I would go on to get my doctorate and
would be a college professor and every seven years, take time off to
begin writing a novel. It was all planned out so perfectly in my head.
With
college - freedom would come. A newfound glory I had never known. No
longer under the shelter of my mother's 'strict' ways, I would be able
to go out when I wanted and wherever I wanted.
Of course - 'the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry'.
First
semester was perfect. I landed myself in above average courses. I was
accepted into the class of my dreams as only a Freshman. The Pyschology
and Philosophy of Religion. There were seven professors. Only six of us
were admitted. My writing skills soared and as a work-study, I was a
writing tutor - something that is not normally allowed as a Freshman.
In fact, I remember the meeting with my advisor and the Dean to be
allowed permission to do so.
Life was grand.
That was school. Then there was my 'freedom'.
For
the most part in the beginning of my first semester, I kept myself busy
with academic studying and clubs. But then the 'initial' friendships
are formed. People start to invite other people to places, movies,
parties and the like. I thought I could juggle all of it. For a while I
did.
In the beginning of December, I made a trip to Mrytle
Beach, SC to visit old friends. As a now more 'mature and free'
Danielle, I was able to go out and 'party' with these older friends.
After quite a few drinks, I found myself having sex with one of them.
Now,
'finding' myself having sex with one of them doesn't mean I wasn't in
control. I was. I knew what I was doing. Young, Naive Danielle thought
she was ready.
On my Christmas break, I came home to SC. I
worked with my mother at a local bank. Just simple filing and the like.
Nothing big.
I couldn't understand what was going on. Every
free second I had to sit still, I found myself dozing off. I remember
her coming into my office space and becoming angry. She had every right
to be.
I missed my period in January.
I took a trip to
Myrtle Beach to tell this person. We bought a pregnancy test. My heart
stopped beating. I couldn't believe that I was pregnant. He told me
that he could never tell his father and that he just wouldn't. He was a
man at that time. At least, in years, he was. He was in his
mid-twenties.
I drove back to the college that weekend more
scared than I had ever been in my life. I had known this man for two
years. At the time, I believed that to be a long time. How could he be
like this? I just couldn't understand.
It was decided that I
should have an abortion. I can't remember the defining moment, but it
was decided. I was too scared to tell my mother. I couldn't bare the
thought of dissappointing her to that degree.
I kept after him
for the following weeks for the money to have it performed. He'd say he
was sending it - and it would never arrive. Actually, it never did. My
roommate's mother loaned the money.
He said he would go with me. He never did. I never even recieved a phonecall to see if I was okay afterwards.
I
can't remember the exact day in February that it was performed. One
might wonder why another could not remember such a day as that, but the
fact remains that I can't. I remember the building. I remember the
drive. I remember the tears.
My best friend's boyfriend made
the drive to NC with me. I think it was performed in Chapel Hill. Or
maybe Charlotte. I think Chapel Hill.
When you walk in, no one
offers a comforting smile. There's the first waiting room where you
wait with everyone. And then the second. The second waiting room is
where you sit after your general information is taken. Friends/Family
are allowed in that room. Joey stayed with me and held a teddy bear
that my mother had given to me when she first met me when I was six
years old. Oh, how I longed for those happy days at that moment in time.
While
in the second waiting room, you are called back for a sonogram. You are
shown your child on the moniter. It was believed that I was in or
around 2 1/2 months pregnant. Approximately 12 weeks. But that didn't
even hit 'home' for me. Afterwards, you are taken into the doctor's
office with his big desk and dim light. You are told to sign a form in
which you cannot come back and sue him for any physical/emotional
damage caused from the act of abortion.
Only the girls having abortions are permitted in the third waiting room.
One
by one, a nurse comes out and gives you three pills and a blanket. The
room in dark. Somber. Within minutes, you see the girls asleep. Two
nurses come back in and take them away. You never see them again.
It was my turn.
I
remember taking the pills. I remember thinking that there was no
turning back. That technically, it wasn't a child at that point in
time. It was just a fetus. It would be okay. No heartbeat. No fingers.
No precious toes.
They helped me walk to the 'room'. They
helped me undress. I laid down and put my feet in the stirrups. It
hurt. Worse than any pap smear. And the sound. That sound. Like a loud
vaccum. But I was so dizzy...
No one helped me walk to the
fourth waiting room. It was filled with recliners. When I stepped in, I
was told to relax until I felt I could walk and given some sort of
juice.
The ride back was horrible. I do believe that I felt
every bump on the road. Everything hurt. I cried myself to sleep
several times only to awake in pain to cry myself to sleep again.
Somewhere
on the trip back, Joey stopped and bought a rose for me at a gas
station. I threw it on a ground. I knew I didn't deserve it. bled.
Alot. Three friends tried to get me to go to the hospital, but I
couldn't. My mother would find out. I couldn't have that.
I
returned to classes a week later. I was pale. White. Ghostly. It was a
small school. People quickly found out what had happened. The looks.
The stares. It was unbearable.
My first class was standard
Health. As Fate would have it, we were studying the developing fetus.
It was then that I found out that, at the time of my abortion, my child
had a heartbeat. Fingers. Precious toes. It was all developed.
Reality hit.
I left the class in the middle of discussion and threw up.
A
couple of months later, I was in the hospital. I was deathly sick. The
doctor actually told my mother that had I waited another day to come
in, I would not have lived. Period. No inbetweens. I would have been
dead by the next day from the continuous loss of blood.
After
my hospitilization, I became 'wild'. Premiscuous. I didn't care. I
drank, had sex and smoked weed daily. I dropped all clubs and stopped
going to school.
The truth is that I was kicked out of
college. That's something that I've never admitted to anyone but my
mother - and that was years later. The day that I finally told her that
I'd had an abortion, she admitted that she knew something had happened,
but didn't know what. I had become more distant that ever with
everything/everyone. I'll never forget that conversation.
After
being kicked out of college - my dream - I went to Myrtle Beach. I
continued that same lifestyle. Drugs, drinking and sex. I had truly
lost all caring.
A year passed.
Sometime in February,
Lillian was concieved. A year later. Same month. All over again, I was
scared. But who did I have to blame? Myself. I wasn't forced to lay
down with those men. I did it all on my own.
I don't feel the
need to go into detail about Lillian's biological father, but as most
of you already know, he's never been around.
So here I was pregnant. Again. Alone. Scared.
Oh,
how I weighed that decision in my head. You see, that picture up there?
That's how developed my child was when I had my abortion. And again, I
was a month along when I found out. On one hand, I thought abortion
would be best. I hated myself already. I didn't deserve a child. With
the condition I was in, I could never care for a child.
I
remember the defining moment. I was at work in the dressing room,
changing clothes with my roomate. I told her I was pregnant. The most
powerful happiness swept through my body. She asked me what I was going
to do. I told her I was going to become a mother.
And I did.
On November 11, 2001 at 9:32PM, Lillian Fae was born.
It was and has been the hardest job to accomplish. And yet, it has been the most fulfilling.
I've
gone through Hell and back with her. I lost everything I owned
physically, only to gain twice that much emotionally and mentally.
No,
I don't have that college degree, but I'm working on it. No, I don't
own a fancy, new car, but one day I will. No, I don't have the biggest
house on the block or the nicest clothes, but I'm okay with that.
I have my child. My child is my Life.
But
most of us - it doesn't. It leaves wounds that Time itself cannot heal.
There are no 'right' words to say. There are not 'enough hugs' to help
console. There's nothing. There's nothing because a part of you that
wanted to be consoled is gone.
I've often wondered if I had
what it takes to be a counselor of some sort. An outreached hand to
lift the spirits and soul of that single, scared girl who only needs to
be shown that there IS a way to accomplish being a mother. If one has
the determination and the extra 'push' of hearing that it IS worth it -
*sighs*. Just imagine what that could do. The information needs to be
put out there. More. More and more and more.
Let it be known
what really goes on in a clinic. Let it be known that there ARE other
options to becoming a mother. It IS possible. If I did it - and keep in
mind, I was sleeping in a car with only three shirts and two pairs of
pants for the first few months - anyone can. If only there were more
people out there to help. To build that confidence. To build that
self-esteem and worthiness. If only.
To this day, my heart aches for that child. To hold that child in my arms and say I'm sorry. Because I am.
I'm so very sorry, my little one. If only I had known.
Danielle / azriella11@yahoo.com
Dearest Danielle
- I am so very sorry that your heart hasn't healed. You know what? I
was the same exact age ... and I also aborted my precious little baby.
I will share a link my story with you. I am a previously featured Stand Up Girl:
http://standupgirl.com/site/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&lang=en&id=74&Itemid=41
So
you see Danielle - I am very familiar with your pain and I am so very
sorry your heart still hurts. As you may also see, I found healing and
forgiveness too. It's kind of like this:
You and I have the
exact same kind of wound. I was able to cover the hurt too. Cover it
with anything I could and most people didn't know the wound was there.
Then came a time when a girl came to me who had the same kind of wound
I did, but she had no pain and so easily and freely showed her 'scar'
to me, yet without pain. I wanted what she had and she shared Him with
me. When I went through the healing process, I am now able to share
with you that ... the wound will not go away, but it can heal. I would
love to share that with you if you are willing to hear more about it,
let me know. I would love to share it with you.
In the
meantime, I will share a link with you. It is a link that will pull up
a list of CPCs (Crisis Pregnancy Centers) in your area. But they also
may have a 'post abortion' support group. If they do, and if you are
able to contact them ... ask if the offer these support groups with the
materials "Forgiven and Set Free". It is a book that should take about
10 weeks to go through and though that road may be difficult, there is
healing in the end. I can almost 100% guarantee it!
www.OptionLine.org
Let me know if you are interested in more information ... and remember, I'm here for you if you would like to talk or share.
Take care
Luv Lisa | dearbecky@standupgirl.com




















