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by Marshall Allen
There are many victims of abortion: the unborn
child snuffed before it can reach his potential;
the mother who must endure a physically,
emotionally and spiritually devastating
procedure; and society in general, where a life
is worth less than the inconvenience of an
unwanted pregnancy. But perhaps no victims
of abortion have been more ignored than the
fathers of the aborted.
There are about 1.5 million abortions every
year in America in large part because it’s
presented as a solution to unwanted
pregnancy. The stereotype surrounding men
in unwanted pregnancies is that they are in
favor of abortion. And indeed there are plenty
of men who coerce, manipulate and pressure
the mother into an abortion. But it’s simplistic
– and wrong – to pretend this is always the
case. Many fathers involved in unwanted
pregnancies are ready to accept responsibility
for their children.
My friend Nick (names have been changed in
this story) is one of those guys. Allow me to
share his story.
Nick was 22 years old and a junior at a small
Christian college when he met “The
Freshman.” He and his buddies had given
Samantha that nickname because she was
the best-looking newcomer to their school that
year. The school’s dating pool was small and
Nick and Samantha connected because they
shared a home state. In a matter of months
they were a couple. The two decided to drive
home together for Spring Break; that decision
changed their lives forever.
During Spring Break, Nick crashed on the
living room couch at Samantha’s parents’
place. A Christian guy who was trying to do the
right thing (although he had been sexually
active in the past), Nick wasn’t looking for sex.
But he and Samantha quickly found it when
she crawled into his sleeping bag early one
morning. Even though both of them knew this
wasn’t God’s design for their relationship, they
had sex for the first time that morning. “It
wouldn’t surprise me if the child was
conceived that first time,” Nick says.
About six weeks into the relationship
Samantha told Nick she was pregnant. In that
instant, the whole dynamic of their relationship
radically changed. One night they had been
discussing the trivialities of dating – do we go
to the movies, to dinner, or to shoot pool? Now
they were asking, “What are we going to do
about this pregnancy?” and “What are we
going to tell our parents?”
The pressure was intense for Nick and
Samantha. The social sanctions on being
unmarried and pregnant are hard enough in
everyday society, but at a conservative
Christian college it’s a secret that can eat
people alive. Nick felt alone. “I had no idea
who to talk to,” Nick says. “It’s not like there’s a
‘Miss Manners’ book on the subject.”
Nick was sure about one thing: he would
accept full responsibility for the pregnancy and
provide for his child. He would love the baby,
take care of it, and even raise it if he had to. He
would support Samantha through the
pregnancy, too. “The way I was brought up,
you always accept the consequences of your
actions,” Nick says. “You mess around and
get pregnant, you don’t just do away with the
consequences.” Meanwhile, Samantha
wanted an abortion. “I was dead set against it,
I always was,” Nick says. “I said, ‘I can’t
support you in that.’ I said that countless
times.”
But Samantha didn’t need Nick’s support
because the decision about the abortion was
hers to make – her body, her choice. Thanks
to Roe v. Wade, fathers of unborn
children have no legal right to decide if the
child they helped conceive will live or die.
The double standard confronting men is that
they’re to take responsibility for the child, but
the woman doesn’t need to consult them to
abort that same child, says Linda Dean of the
Women’s Resource Center of Southern
Nevada. Dean has seen a lot of cases like
Nick’s. She has a master’s degree in
Marriage and Family therapy and has worked
with thousands of women and men who are
dealing with abortion. In her 20 years of
counseling, she’s often had men call her,
saying their partner wants to abort their child.
She can counsel them, but there’s really
nothing that can be done to enforce a father’s
right to be a father.
At the end of the school year, Samantha told
Nick she didn’t want to see him anymore and
ended the relationship. But not before asking
him to pay for the abortion. “I’m not going to
pay for something I don’t believe in,” Nick told
her. “I’d rather pay for raising the child.”
Samantha called Nick within weeks to give
him the news – she had aborted their child.
She didn’t come back to school the next fall
and Nick never saw her again.
When Nick first heard about the abortion, he
felt anger because of his powerlessness. It’s
a reaction consistent with what most men feel
after an abortion, according to Dean. She
believes men feel this way because God
created women to be nurturers and men to be
protectors. Thus, abortion goes against a
man’s nature and rips him apart inside. The
anger – which Dean says is rarely dealt with in
a healthy way – devastates men individually,
but it also has implications for our collective
society. The anger we see in society every day
– road rage, frequent mass shootings, etc. –
could be partially attributed to emotions
associated with abortion that have been
ignored, Dean says.
Nick experienced many other negative results
from the abortion. He feared that people won’t
accept him if they find out about the abortion.
He had trouble trusting women and
maintaining relationships – a dozen years
later he’s still single. Nick also struggles with
guilt, he says: “There are times when I look at
other kids and I think, ‘I could have a 12 or
13-year-old.’” Nick says that the effects of the
abortion will be with him for the rest of his life.
The number of abortions per year has been
relatively consistent, meaning that about 15
million fathers have been effected by abortion
in the past decade. Men who have their
children aborted against their will may be
more aware that their negative emotions stem
from the event, Dean says. This may help
them in dealing with the emotions. Men who
supported an abortion still suffer emotionally,
she adds, but sometimes it doesn’t surface
for five, 10 or even 15 years after the abortion.
This happened to my friend Doug, who was
supportive of his girlfriend’s abortion and paid
for the procedure. Doug couldn’t explain the
anger and confusion he felt after the abortion.
And after he and his girlfriend split up – which
happens to most post-abortion couples – he
didn’t think about it anymore. Ten years later,
Doug ran into his ex-girlfriend in a coffee shop
and immediately broke down weeping. All the
pain and guilt from the abortion washed over
him that day, he says. From that day forward
he’s dealt with the same symptoms Nick
experienced.
While abortion’s effect on millions of men is
palpable, so far it’s been virtually ignored by
society. “There’s a societal pressure on men
not to whine and cry,’’ Dean says. Moreover,
she adds, after an abortion men and women
are assured that they shouldn’t feel bad and
that they did the right thing. These assurances
that they’re OK, given to people after they’ve
gone through an abortion, actually produce the
opposite result. “We’re telling people who are
experiencing these feelings that they shouldn’t
be feeling these things,” Dean says. “So they
must be crazy – right? We’ve done this to men
for decades.”
Nick’s healing has only come through his
relationship with God and counseling. “I’ve
been blessed by the ability to have faith in
God, believe his Word completely and know
that His grace does go there,” he says. “You
have to believe in God completely to know that
you’re forgiven from that.” He still has to
remind himself that he’s forgiven, but he’s
gained a deep understanding of God’s grace.
“In a way I’m richer, but at a horrible price,”
Nick says. “I understand acceptance and
healing from God.”
Dean hopes and prays that society will come
to recognize the effects of abortion on men.
Her organization exists to help people
struggling with an unplanned pregnancy or
who have already been through an abortion.
They even have a ministry – one of the few for
men who have been through abortion – called
Forgotten Fathers. Her group has male and
female counselors to talk with anyone who
e-mails or calls.
Abortion is shrouded in shame and secrecy,
but in the end the way to deal with it is to talk to
someone about it. After all the people she’s
counseled, Dean knows this full well. “There’s
light at the end of the tunnel,” she says. “You
don’t have to stay in the dark.”
To contact Dean or Forgotten Fathers, call
(702) 391-4979 or e-mail
lvwrc@earthlink.net. Alternately, local
pregnancy resource centers usually have staff
trained to counsel men dealing with abortion
or its aftermath. You can find the center
nearest you through www
.pregnancycenters.org. To read more
about men and abortion, click here
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