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7736 lines
352 KiB
Plaintext
119 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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Big Blue Book No. 474
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CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
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by
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Martin Avery
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(non de plume)
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Intimate Sidelights on the Secret Human, Sorrow, Drama and
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Tragedy in the Experience of a Doctor Whose Profession It Is To
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Perform Illegal Operations.
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1939
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Haldeman-Julius Company
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GIRARD -- : -- KANSAS
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1. EARLY DAYS AND IDEAS
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Sometimes I find myself thinking wistfully of the days when I
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was young and sure of myself and my future, when I thought the
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solid ground under my feet was a foundation for an air castle and
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when right and wrong were very definite things, and black was black
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and white was white and I would have nothing to do with gray.
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I had no such regrets, of course, when first I gloated
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childishly over the neat little black and gold sign that announced
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to the world that Martin Avery was a doctor of medicine and ready
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to practice. I admired my small library of medical textbooks, my
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shiny surgical instruments and I repeated over and over the
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sonorous words of the oath I had taken. Much has happened to me
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since then, much that I somehow feel compelled to put on paper.
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Perhaps even after these years I want to prove that in my way I
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have tried to be faithful to my youthful ideas.
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So this is a human-interest document designed to show troubled
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women that they have companions in distress, I shall not clutter it
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up with medical terms. I have no patience with doctors who think
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they must sprinkle Latin in every sentence and generally talk as
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though they were dictating a highly technical article for a medical
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journal. I am not trying to be impressive nor am I trying to
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preach. This book might be called "Sidelights on Tragedy." If it
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will make a few less persons look disdainful or horrified at the
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word "abortion," I will have succeeded in my purpose.
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I must have been a somewhat priggish Sir Galahad when I was
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graduated from medical school. I saw myself curing the world of
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nice, respectable diseases like measles and smallpox and perhaps
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halting epidemics by quickness of thought or saving a rich man's
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life by my miraculous skill as a surgeon.
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I had lived a fairly clean life, almost unbelievably clean it
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seems to me now. But then I never had much money. My people were
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farmers. That accounted for part of my pride. I thought Myself
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mighty smart to be going up a rung in the ladder, from peasant to
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professional man. Sometimes I thought it would be nice if I had a
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BANK of WISDOM
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
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physician father to take me in with him and a long line of medical
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ancestor's to give me an honorable tradition. But at the same time
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my egotism fed itself on the thought that I was the first of my
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family to have guts and ambition and brains enough to escape the
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soil for a white-collar profession.
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I liked to hear my mother refer proudly to "My son, the
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doctor," and I liked to strut around in front of the neighbors. To
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be sure, the white collar and the shiny instruments and even the
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neat little office were mortgaged to my father, whose dirt-
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encrusted hands had earned the money that sent me through school.
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But I had visions of grateful patients showering me with gold. I
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was an idealist in those days and I had plenty of illusions, too.
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The sad thing about my office was that it stayed empty as did
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likewise my purse. I angled after connections as hotel physician,
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and I tried to get a job as a city clinic doctor; but I had no
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political pull, and, being a farm boy, no influence in any other
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lines. Most of my few patients had little money and came to me
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because they believed I would be cheap.
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So for a while I pursued my honorable profession by lancing a
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few boils, prescribing for a few bad hangovers, treating a child
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for a nail wound, issuing headache pills to a woman who went from
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doctor to doctor seeking an audience for her complaints and dishing
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out enough medicine for common colds to stock a drug store. I was
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so anxious to display all my knowledge that I went in for complete
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examinations no matter how trifling the complaint, tried to look
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wise, clucked thoughtfully and shook my head.
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At times I wished to high heaven that I lived in England,
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where I could buy a steady practice and not have to sit in my
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office reading and re-reading medical journal's and wondering if
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I'd soon lose any surgical skill I possessed for lack of practice.
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It amuses me now to recall how I felt when I first treated a
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house girl who had gonorrhea. I treated the girl, and then gave her
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a lecture in which, as I recall, I told her that because of my oath
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I would protect her secret but that she was running a horrible
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risk. I know now that she must have been choking with laughter, but
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at the time I thought that she was mightily impressed. And I felt
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quite the man of the world. In fact, I made up some impressive --
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to me -- thoughts about how my profession brought me in contact
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with the dregs of the world and how it was up to me to maintain my
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purity of thought in spite of all the depravity I was forced to
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see. I meant to deliver these noble sentiments to a pure sweet girl
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whenever my practice grew enough that I could afford to seek this
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marvelous woman who would be chosen as my wife.
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I still had this holier-than-thou attitude when a very pretty
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blonde came to see me. She looked like a "nice girl," and this
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shocked me all the more when she told me, in a frightened way, that
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she was "caught" and she wanted an abortion. Her father was dead,
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and she lived with her mother and her brother, a prominent
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businessman in the town. I had heard of the girl as a well-known
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college student and a gay member of the younger set. She was not a
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social luminary, but she was a class ahead of me.
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BANK of WISDOM
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
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I made the finger examination and there was no doubt that she
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was pregnant -- about two months along. She wanted a
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"prescription," she said. She was ignorant about such things, but
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a friend had told her that for a few dollars she could buy some
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medicine that would cause a miscarriage.
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It seems odd to realize that I was shocked about this. I had
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heard of girls who were "knocked up" and did something about it.
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There had been plenty of such gossip in the farming community where
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I had lived, and I'd heard methods of causing crude abortions
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discussed among the medical students. In fact, I knew one medical
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student who worked his way through his senior year as an
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abortionist among the lower classes of the university town. He had
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told me something about the method he had used, but I had paid
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little attention and had disapproved of the whole business.
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I was stern and righteous with this girl and asked her why she
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did not marry the man.
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She burst into tears. "I can't," she said.
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"Is he married?" I asked.
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She shook her head.
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"Engaged to another man?" I asked. Those were the only two
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reasons that my mid-Victorian mind could conceive why any man would
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refuse to marry her.
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"No," she said, "but he says that it is my fault. And I guess
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it is. He asked me if I were doing anything about this, and I
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suppose I was a fool, for I said that I was. I didn't know anything
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to do. I asked a girl I know, and she told me to take a douche
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anytime within 24 hours."
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Dumb as I was, I was shocked at this ignorance. Bit by bit she
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unfolded a story that was new and pitiful to me then but which I
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have heard so often since that I can supply it before the girl
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opens her mouth.
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Katherine, as I shall call her, had fallen in love with a man
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about seven years older than herself, a bachelor businessman. She
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had gone absolutely crazy about him.
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The man was the sort who likes sexual freedom and gets panicky
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at the thought of marriage. He had given Katherine a big rush, for,
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of all reasons, her look of wholesomeness. He had said that she had
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a "wholesome attitude" toward sex. As a matter of fact, she was too
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deeply infatuated to have any definite attitude except to agree
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with everything he said. A man's idea of a wholesome attitude
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toward sex usually is one that leaves him absolutely free, while a
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woman's idea is one that leads inevitably toward marriage.
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Because she wanted to appear worldly-wise, she denied being a
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virgin. I was astounded to hear that, but I learned afterward that
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a great many young girls do the same thing. Frequently they
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themselves cannot explain why. Almost invariably, it is when they
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BANK of WISDOM
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
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are having affairs with older men. They seem to believe that the
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man will wonder why they have not had affairs before and will think
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less of them. So they try to disguise their awkwardness and
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ignorance; and since many athletic girls do not have hymens, the
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man does not find it out.
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Katherine had talked vaguely about an imaginary previous
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affair. She seemed to think that it would make her more interesting
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if the man believed she was sexually experienced and had been
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desired before. "A lot of men had made overtures to me," she told
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me. "but I had managed to evade them. I knew that Don had had a lot
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of affairs and told him some lies so he wouldn't think I was quite
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so dumb."
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This, of course, released the man from any feeling of
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responsibility and had also made him think that she knew about
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contraceptives and could take care of herself. And she was too
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inexperienced to know whether he was protecting her. It was an
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example of the dangers of innocence and where ignorance was not
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bliss.
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Naturally, when she did not insist that the man use
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contraceptives, he omitted them. She told me that when she learned
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she was pregnant, she had explained the situation to him and he had
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advised her to go to a doctor. But I think now that she lied. A lot
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of girls are overwhelmed with false modesty in such circumstances
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and will go instead to girls as inexperienced as they are. Having
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pretended to be worldly-wise, they are caught in a web of their own
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lies.
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This girl was not as stupid as she seems in this narrative.
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She had sense enough to realize just what type of man she loved.
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Apparently he had made it plain that he did not intend to marry her
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and he expected her to take her full share of the responsibility in
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this affair. She couldn't tell her mother because mother was the
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type who would "rather See her daughter in her grave" than have an
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abortion and she probably would try to force the man into a shotgun
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marriage. Katherine was sensible enough to see that the man would
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evade this, or if he married her, would hate her for the trick.
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Too, since she had lied to him about her virginity, she had thrown
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away that hold.
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So she had gone to a girl friend and the girl had said
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something about a mysterious medicine that would cause her to
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resume menstruation. Then she had come to me, for, of all reasons,
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the fact that she did not know me and I was new in town. She did
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not want to go to her family doctor or any physician whom she knew.
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It was a case of the blind going to the blind. I was horrified
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and told her that, of course, I could not perform an abortion I had
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heard about some of the drastic medicines given in such cases and
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I warned her against them. I told her that I could go to prison for
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doing what she wanted, and I was against such things personally. I
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probably sounded fierce, for I was afraid someone would find out
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that she'd been to me with such a request, and I feared even that
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would get me into trouble.
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BANK of WISDOM
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
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She left me a great deal more frightened than when she
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arrived. I had told her that no decent doctor would perform an
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abortion. And I had scared her pretty badly about using any home
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devices. Also I'd added a little homily on her 'sins. I should have
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been shot, but I felt righteous about the whole business. She had
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some money. She'd been teaching school and saved several hundred
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dollars and she offered me the whole sum if I would get her out of
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the jam. I needed the money, but I felt a virtuous glow over
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turning it down. I was living up to medical ethics. I was being a
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good citizen and an honorable physician.
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So she went away, and I settled back in my empty office and
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read medical journals and old magazines and treated a few persons
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who came in with colds and indigestion.
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The next day her name leaped at me from the front page of the
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daily newspaper. Her body had been found on the doorstep of her
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home, at one o'clock that morning, by her brother as he was
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returning from a dance. She had shot herself, and she died in the
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ambulance on the way to, the hospital.
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The newspaper account said she had resigned her position as a
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teacher because of a nervous breakdown culminating when she fainted
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in the class room. Her relatives had noticed that she seemed very
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||
nervous, refused to eat and was unable to sleep at night. They had
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tried, without success, to arouse her interest in social life. She
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had left no note -- just gone out in the yard and shot herself with
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her brother's revolver.
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There followed several paragraphs telling how prominent and
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popular she had been in school, how she had a promising future as
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a teacher. Her family was. grief-stricken.
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It shook me pretty badly. I tried to console myself by saying
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that she had not threatened suicide to me, that I was within my
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rights, in refusing to help her, and it was unfair of her to ask me
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to risk my future by performing an illegal operation.
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But I kept seeing that description of her. "She was a pretty
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blonde girl. College mates described her as always being full of
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fun and active in all school enterprises." She had belonged to
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several clubs. I wondered which sorority sister had advised her to
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"get a prescription."
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I wondered how her lover felt. I was filled with sudden hatred
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for him, taking this young girl easily and selfishly and ruining
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her life, talking to her glibly about her "wholesome attitude
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toward sex." Now she was dead, and innuendoes would be whispered
|
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about her nervous condition and her fainting spells and her lack of
|
||
appetite and her insomnia. Her relatives would feel bad about it.
|
||
It might even ruin their lives, too. Of course, her puritanical
|
||
relatives were partly to blame. Had they been more tolerant, they
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would have helped her. It was her own fault, too, for being so
|
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careless. She had trusted people and life too much. She had been
|
||
too confident in the decency of others.
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BANK of WISDOM
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
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In the back of my head there was a nagging thought that I,
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too, was to blame. I might have found someone else to help her. I
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might have made arrangements. I was not so stupid that I did not
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know of a doctor whose legitimate practice was small but who, drove
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||
around in a big car with a chauffeur and had plenty of money. It
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||
was common talk that he did a lot of illegal operations. He was a
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pretty good surgeon, too.
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It was all a mess, and I resented being dragged into it, and
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being made to feel guilty over the death of a strange girl.
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II. MY FAMILY SPEAKS
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I went out in the country to see my family every Sunday. This
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meant that I got a good meal and my depressed spirits were helped
|
||
by my mother's soothing prediction that soon her boy's practice
|
||
would pick up.
|
||
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||
The next Sunday the conversation happened to turn to the
|
||
suicide of Katherine J--.
|
||
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"The poor girl," my mother said. "Sounds like she was in the
|
||
family way."
|
||
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||
She clucked her tongue sympathetically. "I wish you had seen
|
||
her," she said. "If she'd come to you, you could have sent her to
|
||
old Ma Gooding, the one folks call Feather Sally, because she uses
|
||
a goose feather. Lots of good doctor's send patients to Feather
|
||
Sally, and she's never lost a one. Good money she makes, too."
|
||
|
||
I was shocked.
|
||
|
||
"She did come to me," I said indignantly, "waving her money in
|
||
my face as if I were a quack she could buy with a few hundred
|
||
dollars. But I refused to have anything to do with it. That's a
|
||
prison offense."
|
||
|
||
My mother looked at me queerly. "And it's no prison offense to
|
||
drive a girl to suicide?" she asked.
|
||
|
||
"It was her own lookout," I said, "She couldn't expect me to
|
||
risk my future with a criminal operation in order to get her out of
|
||
a jam."
|
||
|
||
"If you keep on turning down hundred-dollar fees, it doesn't
|
||
look as if you're going to have much future," my father said dryly.
|
||
"The drought hit us pretty bad son, and we're needing money out
|
||
here, too. Doesn't pay to be too choosy about how you earn it. Old
|
||
Doc Kennedy over at Clear Creek makes plenty of money that way.
|
||
Specializes in it. You'd be surprised to know the names of some of
|
||
his patients, too."
|
||
|
||
I felt like a badgered animal. It was not until years later
|
||
that I realized that only youth is moral in the accepted way. Youth
|
||
judges more severely and expects more rigid living up to standards.
|
||
Old age is more tolerant; it has learned to compromise and give
|
||
only lip-service to awkward convention.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
And like most youths I had the idea that my parents were very
|
||
strict. It was a shock, now that they had admitted me to adulthood,
|
||
to learn some of their views.
|
||
|
||
"Folks call it murder," sniffed my mother. "Ain't hardly
|
||
nothing more'n a germ at first. Ain't no more murder than doin'
|
||
something aforehand to keep from having children. As far as that
|
||
goes, it ain't really no more murder than bein' an old maid and not
|
||
havin' nothin' to do with man at all. If you want to argue, you can
|
||
always say that every woman could bear a child, and it's murder if
|
||
She don't do it. Talk about the child's right to be born! The child
|
||
ain't saying nothin' about it. How do all these preacher's know the
|
||
child wants to be born. I've seen some cases where if the child
|
||
knew what was coming to him afterward he wouldn't want to be born.
|
||
Her voice softened. "Poor unwanted little mites. No money and no
|
||
name and not much chance in the world."
|
||
|
||
"It was a case of professional ethics, mother," I said. "Of
|
||
course, quack doctors do a lot of underhanded business. And
|
||
probably they risk the girl's life by crude methods. But good
|
||
doctors avoid such things."
|
||
|
||
"Maybe," 'sniffed my mother.
|
||
|
||
"Some of these days the laws may be changed," I said, "and
|
||
birth-control methods and abortions may be legalized. But until
|
||
then, I must obey my oath and abide by the medical code."
|
||
|
||
This did not impress my parents. Country people are not much
|
||
in favor of laws. Laws to them mean disagreeable taxes, game laws
|
||
which preserve the quail and ducks for the benefit of city folks
|
||
who swarm over the land, shooting at everything that appears on the
|
||
horizon, foreclosing of mortgages and other unpleasant
|
||
interferences with their lives.
|
||
|
||
"Human beings come before laws," my mother said. "Some of
|
||
these laws are made by folks who want to kick others in the gutter
|
||
so's to make themselves seem higher up. I ain't never had no use
|
||
for such folks. Pull themselves up by pushing others down. I've
|
||
known some mighty good women who had convenient miscarriages and
|
||
women who were in trouble and later on made fine marriages and good
|
||
wives."
|
||
|
||
She sighed. "If I'd known that poor girl, maybe I could have
|
||
told her something to do. They're more ways of killing a cat than
|
||
choking it with butter."
|
||
|
||
My father laughed. "Ma could tell her," he said. "She'd have
|
||
had her jumping off porches and riding houses and merry-go-rounds
|
||
and climbing up and down stairs and taking hot baths and purgatives
|
||
and God knows what all."
|
||
|
||
My mother smiled. "That's all right for you," she said. "Many
|
||
a time you've been thankful I wasn't so green."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"I never could stand to see a poor young girl bringin' a
|
||
fatherless babe into the world," my mother went on. "Of course,
|
||
sometimes they love the children just as much as if they were born
|
||
in wedlock and sometimes they make good marriages later on. But the
|
||
run of folks are hard on them, and it's bad trying to live down
|
||
your mistakes."
|
||
|
||
My father, however, was more upset by the idea that I had let
|
||
a hundred or so dollars slip out of my hands because of ethics.
|
||
|
||
"It's dangerous," I said. "Suppose I'd done a bad job and
|
||
she'd died because of the operation. Her folks would claim that I
|
||
murdered her."
|
||
|
||
"She killed herself anyhow, didn't she?" my father said.
|
||
"Looks to me like it's six of one and a half-dozen of the other."
|
||
|
||
It was a relief for me to get back to my bare room in a cheap
|
||
Lodging house in the city. My pleased glow of virtue had departed,
|
||
and I remembered the boy who had worked his way through school with
|
||
abortions and a young interne who frankly had announced that he
|
||
meant to specialize in illegal operations.
|
||
|
||
"They're the easiest way for a young doctor to get started,"
|
||
he had said. "And they're no more dangerous than, performing any
|
||
other operations. I'll wait until I get a little money saved and
|
||
then I'll be respectable. It takes money to be high and mighty."
|
||
|
||
Some nagging prick of conscience forced me to go to Katherine
|
||
J's funeral. I eyed her weeping relatives with scorn. A little of
|
||
the love they were parading in public would have saved the girl's
|
||
life if they had exercised it in private. Some of the money that
|
||
went into the flower's, the elaborate coffin, the big monument,
|
||
could have sent the girl away on a "vacation" and brought her back
|
||
whole in body, and presently her heart would be healed. Later on,
|
||
I was to learn that while broken hearts cannot be cured by a
|
||
doctor, a little surgical or medical aid for the by-products helps
|
||
along a lot.
|
||
|
||
Since then I've seen many girls, who were as tragic in speech
|
||
as Katherine, laugh about the whole episode a year later. By then
|
||
they had put it down as a valuable lesson and forgotten the horror
|
||
and fear they first felt.
|
||
|
||
After the funeral, I drifted into a coffee shop and
|
||
encountered a doctor I admired.
|
||
|
||
"You look low," he remarked.
|
||
|
||
"I've been to a funeral," I said, and gave the girl's name.
|
||
|
||
He nodded. "Nasty business. I suppose it's the old story."
|
||
"Yes," I looked at him. "I guess you see plenty of them," I went
|
||
on.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Not so many now," he said. "I get about two patients a year
|
||
who want abortions. I got more of them when I first started to
|
||
practice. I guess they thought that, being a young doctor, I'd need
|
||
the money. But luckily I made money from the start. I had plenty of
|
||
friends, and so I didn't need to take the risk."
|
||
|
||
"What do you do about the ones who come to you now?" I blurted
|
||
out.
|
||
|
||
He gave me a keen glance. "Give them an examination and tell
|
||
them whether they're really pregnant. Chances are they're only
|
||
delayed by something. Up until three months, it's not easy to tell,
|
||
especially with the finger examination."
|
||
|
||
This, it might be added, was before the rabbit test was widely
|
||
used. Nowadays it is possible to tell immediately by injecting
|
||
urine, into the rabbit and examining its ovaries 36 hour's later.
|
||
|
||
"Then," the doctor went on, "I say nothing more unless the
|
||
Patient obviously is ignorant of anything to do, I may drop a hint
|
||
about the proper doctor to go to. Usually I don't do this, because
|
||
most people have ways of finding that out for themselves. However,
|
||
of course you know that some doctors make a good deal of money with
|
||
such recommendations and split fees. If I do drop a hint, I make
|
||
sure that I can trust the doctor."
|
||
|
||
"It's a problem," I said frankly, "I've been wondering what to
|
||
do about such business. People come to me for medical aid and I
|
||
have to refuse treatment. We are permitted to treat venereal
|
||
diseases and we can be called in after miscarriage --"
|
||
|
||
He grinned. "Of course. You know the stock alibi. You were
|
||
called in, and it was obvious that something had been done to cause
|
||
a partial abortion and your aid was needed to save the girl's life.
|
||
As soon as the uterus is punctured or the fetus is expelled, the
|
||
abortion is a fact. No one can prove anything against you as long
|
||
as you and the patient keep mum."
|
||
|
||
"Understand," he went on. "I'm not taking sides. I'm not the
|
||
type of doctor that crusades for birth-control legislation. A
|
||
successful doctor -- of my variety -- can't afford to. I admire the
|
||
kind of doctor who does -- but he usually doesn't make any money.
|
||
Whenever anyone asks me, I give them what birth-control data I can,
|
||
which isn't much. Anyhow, they probably won't follow instructions."
|
||
|
||
"Maybe the laws will be changed," I suggested.
|
||
|
||
"I'm not very hopeful about legislative reform," he said. "In
|
||
my opinion, the whole business will work out for itself.
|
||
Information will be spread more widely. To me, it seem's better to
|
||
send a girl to a good surgeon than to let her get an infection by
|
||
going to a quack or trying some crude home method. I knew one poor
|
||
girl whose sweetheart kicked her in the abdomen and almost killed
|
||
her."
|
||
|
||
"Of course," I said weakly. "It's the women's fault."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"I blame the men more. Some of these men are just like
|
||
animals. They don't give a damn what happens to the woman. They may
|
||
know all about contraceptives; but they don't want to use them, and
|
||
some of them think it's fun to fool the woman. But even those men
|
||
aren't so bad as the ones who carry disease and won't warn the girl
|
||
or take any precautions. A girl may escape pregnancy but she'll
|
||
probably get a dose. I'd Like to see all venereal-disease carriers
|
||
quarantined or branded. And if they're incurable, they ought to be
|
||
sterilized or shut up."
|
||
|
||
I grinned to myself. The doctor, in spite of his suave
|
||
exterior, was like all good doctors, a bit of a crusader when you
|
||
got him on his pet subject.
|
||
|
||
"They send habitual criminals to prison," he went on. "But a
|
||
man can get dose after dose of a disease and remain at large. He's
|
||
just as dangerous, if not more so, to the community than a habitual
|
||
burglar. He's worse, in my opinion. A burglar only rob's people
|
||
who've got plenty of dough. But a man probably will give a dose to
|
||
some poor dumb girl who hasn't sense or money enough to get proper
|
||
treatment, and she may die or be ruined for life. Reformers talk
|
||
about sterilization of criminals and the insane, but I'm in favor
|
||
of sterilization of any man who's had a disease more than twice. A
|
||
man can get a dose once without really being to blame. But if he's
|
||
got any sense, he takes care of himself after that."
|
||
|
||
He seemed to weary of the subject then, and I went home a
|
||
mighty thoughtful young doctor. I'd been so busy passing exams and
|
||
skimping along on my allowance that I'd never gone in for many bull
|
||
session's. Anyhow, a lot of the stuff that we talked at medical
|
||
school seemed haywire now. I'd gone around with a bunch of young
|
||
idealists who talked about being second Pasteur's and great
|
||
surgeons and doing good for humanity and in the back of my mind I'd
|
||
always seen myself saving a millionaire's life and bringing young
|
||
beauties back from sure death by tuberculosis.
|
||
|
||
But I was getting rid of my fancy ideas mighty fast.
|
||
|
||
|
||
III. I TAKE A CASE
|
||
|
||
Two or three days after my talk with the old doctor, a well
|
||
dressed man came into my office.
|
||
|
||
"There'll be a girl up here pretty soon for treatment for
|
||
gonorrhea," he said bluntly. "I'm paying for it. She's a dumb cluck
|
||
who got mixed up with one of my employees. He won't pay for it, but
|
||
something had to be done for the girl, and I told her I'd have her
|
||
cured if she wouldn't see him again.' You fix her up and send me
|
||
the bill. I don't want to give the girl the money because she might
|
||
spend it on something else or quit after one treatment. See that
|
||
she's clean, but if she comes back with another dose I won't be
|
||
responsible for any more bills."
|
||
|
||
He gave me his card and the girl's name. He was managing
|
||
editor of one of the local newspapers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"See if you can get any sense into her head," he added. "I
|
||
don't want any more trouble with her."
|
||
|
||
He went out then, looking irritated, and I grinned. I figured
|
||
it was one of those "A-friend-of-mine" stories in which the
|
||
personal pronoun is soon brought into play. I wondered a little why
|
||
he told such a clumsy lie.
|
||
|
||
But when the girl came in, half-frightened, half-angry, I
|
||
learned his story was the truth.
|
||
|
||
One of the reporters had seduced the girl, whom I shall call
|
||
June. She was a pretty business-college student, dumb but
|
||
attractive in a virginal fashion. It may have been that very docile
|
||
innocence that attracted the man. He played around with a
|
||
sophisticated, hard-drinking crowd and it probably was, amusing to
|
||
find a girl who didn't know the ropes, didn't drink, didn't smoke,
|
||
|
||
June, on the other hand, had heard about Jim, the reporter,
|
||
and she was fascinated by his reputation as a dapper man-about-
|
||
town. Jim was a handsome and entertaining scoundrel. He said that
|
||
he did not know she was a virgin until he had already started the
|
||
sex act. This may have been true, but it did not stop him then.
|
||
|
||
Afterward, he either was conscience-stricken or decided that
|
||
it was dangerous to play around with her. Innocence may be
|
||
dangerous not only to the girl but to the man. At any rate, he did
|
||
not see her for about a month.
|
||
|
||
But June was seized by the crazy infatuation which many young
|
||
girls feel for their first lovers. She telephoned Jim, she wrote
|
||
him notes asking why he was angry with her, what had she done? She
|
||
wept. She reminded him that, although a virgin, she had gone to bed
|
||
with him.
|
||
|
||
Jim told his boas that he firmly intended to stay away from
|
||
June. Whether he was deeply attracted and some remnants of chivalry
|
||
motivated his refusal to see her or whether she bored him, I don't
|
||
know. But in the meantime he had been playing around with girls
|
||
equally dumb but not so innocent, and he got gonorrhea. He was
|
||
forced to tell his wife and to refrain from any intercourse with
|
||
her. But apparently his scruples did not apply to the young girl he
|
||
had seduced, for he went back to her. She got the disease and the
|
||
whole thing began again with the girl pursuing the reporter and
|
||
asking for medical treatment. The badgered newsman had gone to his
|
||
editor for sympathy.
|
||
|
||
But his editor cursed him and told him to do something to keep
|
||
June from calling the office and coming down to the newsroom. Jim
|
||
refused, saying that he didn't have the money and anyhow the girl
|
||
had been with plenty of other men since he first seduced her.
|
||
Whether this was true, I do not know. It may have been. Frequently
|
||
girls who have just lost their virginity become promiscuous if
|
||
their first lovers desert them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Such girls seem to feel that since, they have lost their much-
|
||
guarded chastity it doesn't make much difference what they do and
|
||
they weakly succumb to any man who comes along. It takes some time
|
||
for the girls to recover their emotional balance and become
|
||
discriminating. June denied that she had been with any other men.
|
||
And Jim admitted that he was diseased when he was with her.
|
||
|
||
So the editor went to June and agreed to pay for her
|
||
treatments if she would promise never to see any of his reporters
|
||
again. She was grateful but at the same time she was a little
|
||
indignant about it. The editor had not minced words in describing
|
||
her lover, and she resented being forced to face the fact that
|
||
there was no romance in her seduction. She wanted the treatments,
|
||
but at the same time she would have liked to save her vanity.
|
||
|
||
Since then, I have noticed the same traits in many girls. They
|
||
will try to find excuses for their first lovers, and say that it
|
||
"wasn't all his fault." They generally have remarkably few
|
||
illusion's about later lovers, but they want a little glamour over
|
||
the first affair.
|
||
|
||
One intelligent girl talked to me about it. "It's a matter of
|
||
vanity for women to lie to themselves about their sweethearts," she
|
||
remarked. "The worst thing about breaking up an affair is that I
|
||
finally have to admit to myself that I have been kidding myself all
|
||
along. You see, I know that I am only an average girl and therefore
|
||
will attract only an average man. I know there are exceptions, and
|
||
sometimes you see a fine man absolutely crazy about a very
|
||
commonplace girl. But I, of course, have an ideal man in mind.
|
||
Whenever a man falls in love with me, I try to see my ideal
|
||
characteristics in him and I exaggerate those I do find. I try to
|
||
convince myself and my friends that he's a better man than he is.
|
||
When we break up, I have to see him as himself. That hurts, because
|
||
it shows me that I'm not attractive enough to get the sort of man
|
||
I want and hold him."
|
||
|
||
But to go back to June. I sent my bill in to the editor and he
|
||
paid it promptly. June's spirits grew better as her cure
|
||
progressed. This time I gave no lecture on morals. Instead I tried
|
||
to teach her a few principles of hygiene.
|
||
|
||
"Listen," I said, when I had pronounced her cured, "there is
|
||
no Santa Claus in this sex business, even if your case does look
|
||
like it. You were darned lucky. There are not many men who would do
|
||
for you what this editor did. It wasn't for the good of his soul,
|
||
either. He couldn't afford to have one of his men in a jam. So
|
||
don't go around expecting good Samaritans to yank you out of the
|
||
gutter. And don't try to get out of your class. You thought it was
|
||
romantic to have a love affair with a social butterfly, a dashing
|
||
columnist. But look what happened. A stranger got you out of your
|
||
jam. He did it because you were making a nuisance of yourself. If
|
||
you'd been in this guy's class, he would have taken more
|
||
precautions. He didn't give his wife a dose, but he figured you
|
||
didn't count. And to him you didn't. So you play in your own back
|
||
yard."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She nodded. Later she married a clerk and they have three or
|
||
four kids. I don't know whither she ever told him about her first
|
||
affair. If she was smart, she didn't.
|
||
|
||
The editor was pleased, because she kept away from his men And
|
||
two or three weeks later he sent me an abortion. This time didn't
|
||
quibble, I did it.
|
||
|
||
IV. WHY I AM AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Since then I've performed hundreds of abortions and when I did
|
||
all the work I've had no fatalities. Of course, I've been called in
|
||
on bungled jobs when it was too late; there was infection or a
|
||
hemorrhage and death was a matter of hours.
|
||
|
||
I have changed from the surgical operation, in which the womb
|
||
was scraped, to use of heat, bacteria and exercise to cause a
|
||
natural premature birth with very little danger. I discarded the
|
||
finger test for the rabbit test of pregnancy. My prices went up as
|
||
the danger went down.
|
||
|
||
I don't regret the fact that I have risked prison terms
|
||
constantly. As I went up the financial scale, I tried to use more
|
||
discrimination and to work for the sake of humanity. I have refused
|
||
to abort young society women who merely wanted to save their
|
||
figures, who shrank from the responsibilities of children. I have
|
||
turned away young women who could afford to marry and who I felt,
|
||
should mate legally and carry on the race. I have seen women whom
|
||
I felt needed children to make their lives fuller and who were
|
||
merely lazy or afraid of pain. And I have performed operations
|
||
later regretted by the women when they wanted children and for some
|
||
reason could not have them. That has made me more careful.
|
||
|
||
I am not bragging that I really made the world better. I am an
|
||
older man now and a little tired and a bit inclined to be cynical.
|
||
Perhaps all these things would have worked out anyhow. But I
|
||
believe that I have saved valuable members of the race from
|
||
disgrace or from suicide, that I have kept families from being
|
||
wrecked. And I have not had a repeat case in years,
|
||
|
||
The reformers argue that we must pay for our sins. But I do
|
||
not know that I agree with their definition of sin. There are times
|
||
when our instincts are too strong for us. There are accidents.
|
||
There are many cases in which it does not seem to me that I should
|
||
judge. I do not believe in populating the world with unwanted
|
||
children. I do not like to see the women suffer when the man
|
||
escapes without even blame. If there is some disease or some taint
|
||
of insanity, I do not believe in allowing the child to be born. And
|
||
if the birth of the child is going to wreck even one adult life, it
|
||
seems to me kinder to stop it. The people who yell "child murder"
|
||
have almost invariably never been faced with the problem.
|
||
|
||
Criminologists say that crime is caused by children being born
|
||
into families where they have no opportunity for proper upbringing.
|
||
The children turn to stealing to get money for luxuries, even
|
||
necessities. They run in the streets because they have no
|
||
playgrounds. Their minds are warped in childhood. I believe it to
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
be an act of crime prevention to halt any such children coming into
|
||
the world with the stigma of illegitimacy and a mother who is going
|
||
to have a much harder time making a living after the child is born.
|
||
|
||
I am always irritated when I hear politicians talk about as
|
||
being the only land of equal opportunity. It isn't. Illegitimate
|
||
children had far better chances in the medieval days when "natural"
|
||
sons and daughters were the "natural" thing.
|
||
|
||
I have never been in favor of forced marriages. In this
|
||
complex world the married couple starts out with enough problems
|
||
without being handicapped by an unwanted child and probably
|
||
unwanted mates.
|
||
|
||
A great many cases have been like that of poor June, who fell
|
||
in love with a married man of a class slightly superior to her own.
|
||
Had she been slightly above him socially, the chances are that the
|
||
man would have obtained a divorce and married her. At least he
|
||
would have given her much better treatment. I get many girls who
|
||
have had affairs with their employer's, either married or
|
||
unmarried. The men do not want to marry them. Frequently they blame
|
||
the girl, for a great many men seem to think that it is up to the
|
||
girl to protect herself.
|
||
|
||
I have heard men who considered themselves ethical in sexual
|
||
matters say that they believe the women should protect themselves.
|
||
Some of them excuse this by saying that women cannot trust the men
|
||
and so they must get accustomed to taking their own precautions.
|
||
Others frankly admit that they will not use anything that
|
||
interferes with their pleasure.
|
||
|
||
A fellow doctor, one high in his profession and a man who
|
||
gives birth-control advice to his patients, once told me that he
|
||
received his pleasure from the thought of the risk.
|
||
|
||
"If my wife is even a week pregnant, my pleasure is gone," he
|
||
said. "And I wouldn't touch a woman if I knew she was using any
|
||
sort of protective device. Man is still primitive enough to want
|
||
copulation for conception."
|
||
|
||
He might have added that man is still primitive enough to want
|
||
to shirk all responsibility for the act and perhaps civilized
|
||
enough to regret any consequences.
|
||
|
||
For these reasons I advise my women patients to take their own
|
||
precautions. One girl told me that she was shocked when her lover
|
||
asked her if she never used any contraceptive devices. He had made
|
||
love to her several times and she thought that he was protecting
|
||
her. She came to me for a pregnancy test. Fortunately she was all
|
||
right. But she was indignant and disgusted with the man.
|
||
|
||
"I thought he was a swell fellow," she said. "I'd had only one
|
||
love affair and then the man took care of everything and I supposed
|
||
this man would do the same. He's shocked now because I won't see
|
||
him any more. But I hate to ask him to do anything and I'm afraid
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
to risk dating him unless this is arranged beforehand. Suppose I
|
||
get a little tight? Anyhow, I can't carry around a medical kit when
|
||
I go on a date. And it's more awkward for the girl to do such
|
||
things than for the boy."
|
||
|
||
She laughed a little self-consciously. "It sounds silly to
|
||
talk about modesty at a time like this. But these affairs usually
|
||
aren't deliberately planned. It's one thing for a man and girl to
|
||
have a steady affair and go to a hotel room with a private bath or
|
||
to an apartment where they can have everything handy. It's quite
|
||
another thing to go to a dance and have a hot petting scene on the
|
||
way back. I take this business seriously and I'm not promiscuous.
|
||
I don't mean that I've got matrimony in my eye all the time, but if
|
||
I let a man "make" me I mean for this to be an affair of fairly
|
||
long duration and I'm fond of the man. But there has to be a first
|
||
time for it; and I'm not sure when that's coming and maybe I won't
|
||
get an opportunity to protect myself. Girls in an excited emotional
|
||
state aren't noted for using their heads."
|
||
|
||
"And another thing," she continued. "My generation may sound
|
||
hard-boiled and as if we knew what it was all about. But most of my
|
||
girl friends are pretty dumb about sex. We think we're smart
|
||
because we keep a few college boys from "making" us. And we joke
|
||
about the trade names of contraceptives, but you'd be surprised how
|
||
little practical knowledge most young girls have. A girl told me
|
||
the other day that she'd die of shame before she'd go to a doctor
|
||
and ask him about feminine hygiene. I told her that she might die
|
||
of shame if she didn't. There are a lot of jokes about how a girl
|
||
can't be raped, but if she's a little tight she hasn't got much
|
||
resistance. And most girls get panicky when they find themselves in
|
||
a difficult situation."
|
||
|
||
The answer to all this of course would be that a girl who
|
||
can't take care of herself shouldn't take a drink and shouldn't go
|
||
out with men she can't trust. But at the same time it seems to me
|
||
that men would find it easier and better to use a little
|
||
discretion. Where do they expect the girls to get any knowledge of
|
||
birth Control? Their mothers certainly aren't going to tell them --
|
||
not if they're nice girls. The girls are afraid to ask a doctor.
|
||
The other girls they know are just as dumb. They can't believe the
|
||
advertisements they read -- if they do they'll probably get caught,
|
||
either because they don't follow the direction's or because the
|
||
stuff isn't any good. They may ruin themselves with too strong
|
||
douches or they may trust some preparation applied too long before
|
||
or too long after the sex act.
|
||
|
||
Anyhow, the girl usually wants this whole business sentimental
|
||
and glamorous. She wants to be swept off her feet. Otherwise she
|
||
feels a little guilty about it. So she doesn't precede her moment
|
||
of grand passion with a questionnaire on hygiene. Furthermore, the
|
||
inexperienced girl has no way of knowing whether she can trust a
|
||
man. Usually she finds out that she can't when it's too late.
|
||
|
||
A lot of the fault lies with young boys who got their first
|
||
sex experiences with older women who knew enough to guard
|
||
themselves, or with prostitutes. From the talk of youths who come
|
||
into my office, I've decided that they don't have sense enough to
|
||
take care of themselves let alone protect the girl. They're not
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
bothered by false modesty, but a lot of them think it's smart to
|
||
fool the girls, either by lying to them or using some cheap trick
|
||
to make their precautions useless. The older men have more sense,
|
||
but some of them are selfish and not much concerned with protecting
|
||
a girl, or they find it hard to believe that a young woman can be
|
||
ignorant of matters so vital to her.
|
||
|
||
I haven't any answer to the problem. Gradually hygiene classes
|
||
are becoming more liberal, but they still fall far short of what is
|
||
necessary. Doctors do what they can, but we can't go from house to
|
||
house instructing girls and boys. Like lawyers, we're usually
|
||
called in when the damage has been done. I'd like to see all high
|
||
school students given compulsory sex education.
|
||
|
||
One doctor I know says that there should be a stiff penalty
|
||
for spreading venereal disease. I asked him how he was going to get
|
||
witnesses to testify, and I said the medical profession had better
|
||
clean house first. I pointed out that doctors have been run out of
|
||
small towns for introducing disease-stricken, cheap prostitutes who
|
||
spread the disease and brought business to the physician.
|
||
|
||
"It's just like blackmail," I said, "The ones who are really
|
||
hurt by diseases are the nice girls, and they'd never testify
|
||
against a man. The list of men I've had in for treatment would
|
||
sound like a Who's Who of the town. You can't regulate sex. We've
|
||
just got to do the beat we can. Even if there were a fool-proof
|
||
contraceptive, which there isn't, people would forget to use it or
|
||
they wouldn't know about it, or they wouldn't believe in it."
|
||
|
||
The most cheering thing to me is that doctors are getting more
|
||
skillful in such matters and the present generation is becoming
|
||
wiser regarding the need for knowledge. Anne, who said she would
|
||
feel foolish interrupting an ardent love scene to arrange for her
|
||
contraceptive, did not allow that false modesty to keep her from
|
||
dashing down to my office immediately for a pregnancy test instead
|
||
of waiting and worrying for several weeks until time for her
|
||
menstruation.
|
||
|
||
More and more women are making a practice of monthly visits to
|
||
the doctor to make sure that nothing has gone wrong and to get
|
||
early aid if anything has.
|
||
|
||
In the last few years I have had fewer women patients who had
|
||
to be told that they had waited too late; that it was too dangerous
|
||
for them to have an abortion and they'd better arrange matters so
|
||
they could have the child and have it adopted. Fewer women spend
|
||
months of mental agony hoping that something will happen to cause
|
||
a miscarriage or trying dangerous home devices. The doctor's bill
|
||
may sound steep, but it's cheaper than risking an injury by home
|
||
use of sharp instruments or by violent blows in the abdomen.
|
||
|
||
I get more women whose menstruation has merely been delayed by
|
||
natural causes but who know it is wise to go to a doctor as soon as
|
||
they are a week or 10 days overdue. A hot bath, a few drinks, a
|
||
strong purgative or a simple prescription saves them from a lot of
|
||
worry and from dangerous patent remedies. A woman who is
|
||
persistently irregular needs medical treatment, anyhow.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
While I admire these self-reliant young women, I see a danger
|
||
in their new attitude. I do not mean the risk of promiscuity that
|
||
moralists raise whenever the birth-control question comes up.
|
||
Promiscuity, I believe, is a matter of taste and character and not
|
||
knowledge. Too, a woman who takes the trouble to inform herself on
|
||
these matters and who spends money to protect herself is going to
|
||
be smart enough to use discrimination. She's not going to be as
|
||
casual as the dumb girl who doesn't know what she's getting into.
|
||
|
||
Nor do I howl race-suicide and say that the country will go to
|
||
the dogs because all the big families are in the lower classes. The
|
||
lower classes have always had big families. Let them share in the
|
||
knowledge, too. Many of the women would be grateful for birth-
|
||
control data.
|
||
|
||
But I will give you an example. Not long ago a young girl came
|
||
in to see me. She was about 29, attractive, intelligent, earning
|
||
her own living. She wanted an abortion. She had the money to pay
|
||
for it and she said she wanted the best one she could get.
|
||
|
||
I always ask the history of these cases, but it happened that
|
||
I knew this girl. Her lover was a young businessman in the same
|
||
town, handsome, healthy and with a promising future.
|
||
|
||
"Why don't you marry, Dorothy, and have this child?" I asked.
|
||
"I know that when you started this affair your lover was still
|
||
married, although he was separated from his wife and the divorce
|
||
was pending. But now there's no obstacle to marriage. You're both
|
||
earning good salaries. You could afford a child. It would be better
|
||
for you. It isn't natural for two adults such as you and Bruce to
|
||
continue living with your families and have a clandestine
|
||
relationship. It's hard on you. It's making you nervous."
|
||
|
||
She shrugged her shoulders. "I know," she said. "But Bruce is
|
||
panicky about marriage. He had one, and it failed. And he hates
|
||
responsibility. I'm not sure that I'd be a good wife, either. I
|
||
don't want children and I hate domesticity."
|
||
|
||
"You're spoiled," I told her. "And even if it weren't for the
|
||
child, you ought to marry. Marriage isn't such an outdated
|
||
institution as you young folks seem to believe. There are plenty of
|
||
reasons for it, especially from the woman's standpoint. You've got
|
||
too much to risk. Here you are sneaking into my office and jumping
|
||
whenever you hear a door slam. And if I do this, you'll have to
|
||
stay in hiding for about 10 days, I don't think there's any danger,
|
||
because you're a healthy young woman. But you'll have to keep it a
|
||
secret, of course, and that's going to be a strain."
|
||
|
||
"I know all that, too," she replied. "But Bruce and I agreed
|
||
long ago that if anything happened I was to get an abortion and
|
||
we'd split the expenses. I can't go back on that now. I'm not going
|
||
to pull the weeping-woman stunt and sandbag him into marriage. I'll
|
||
admit I'd like to be married. I'm tired of this hole-in-the-corner
|
||
business. I'm as much to blame as Bruce is for what's happened and
|
||
I'm not going to have him suspect that I arranged this to trick him
|
||
into marriage."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"You don't need to Sandbag him, as you phrase it," I
|
||
protested. "If you're in love with each other, surely you want
|
||
something more than this. You can't go on forever having just an
|
||
affair. You can be subtle about this and arouse his sense of
|
||
possession. A lot of the happiest marriages didn't start with
|
||
romantic proposals on the bended knee. People need to have a few
|
||
responsibilities. A little encouragement and he'd be proud of the
|
||
child and proud of his marriage. And a child would hold you
|
||
together."
|
||
|
||
"Maybe," she said, with a touch of bitterness. "And maybe not.
|
||
He had a child by his first marriage, and his wife had an abortion
|
||
when she was pregnant the second time. Children didn't hold that
|
||
marriage together. Maybe he'd be proud of me; maybe not. But I'm
|
||
too proud to make the first move. I've bragged too much about how
|
||
I, can take care of myself and how I want to stand on my own feet."
|
||
|
||
She smiled at me. "And don't say that Bruce isn't any good
|
||
either, doctor, I happen to love him. I'll admit that he has his
|
||
faults and he's selfish. Maybe that's the fault of his first wife.
|
||
Maybe it's my fault for spoiling him. She wanted too much and asked
|
||
for it and I ask for too little. Maybe sometime we will marry. But
|
||
I'm not going to play the helpless innocent to arrange it. I don't
|
||
blame him for not wanting to marry me. His family disapproves of me
|
||
because my reputation isn't exactly unspotted. His friends don't
|
||
like me. It would make trouble if he married me -- so why should
|
||
he? This way he can take sex as an adventure."
|
||
|
||
"It's an unhealthy state for you," I said. "You're getting to
|
||
be an emotional, nervous type."
|
||
|
||
"I know," she interrupted impatiently, "and wondering what's
|
||
going to happen all the time doesn't make me any more calm. But
|
||
then neither does having a series of casual dates and keeping
|
||
almost strangers from 'making' me. That or an affair are the two
|
||
choices I have until some man decides to make an honest woman of
|
||
me. And i'm too proud to use any of the old gags to get a proposal.
|
||
I'm used to working as a man and getting a man's salary and being
|
||
respected as an equal."
|
||
|
||
"You're not an equal now," I told her. "Your lover is paying
|
||
half the expenses but you are the one who'll be away from work,
|
||
who'll suffer the pain, the fear of discovery. In sex, you'll never
|
||
be man's equal. You've got to turn your weaknesses into strength.
|
||
But it's your own business, of course."
|
||
|
||
"Sure," she said, "and if you don't want to do this, doctor,
|
||
I'll go out of town to a strange physician and use a fake name and
|
||
a fake story."
|
||
|
||
"I'll do it," I promised, "but I don't want you back again as
|
||
a customer."
|
||
|
||
I didn't either. At first, as I said, I did abortions for the
|
||
money in them. Later I did them because I felt I was doing the
|
||
right thing. Maybe in this case I made a mistake. The girl got
|
||
along fine. But later on she told me that after it was all over,
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
her lover said that he wished she hadn't had to do it, "And then,"
|
||
she added bitterly, "he said very quickly, 'but of course I knew
|
||
that it would be impossible for you to have the child.' And I
|
||
agreed that it would have been. You see, he didn't add that he
|
||
wanted to marry me."
|
||
|
||
But if all doctors had refused to perform the illegal
|
||
operation, he probably would have married her. And they might have
|
||
been happy. On the other hand, she might have tried some home
|
||
method and inflicted an irreparable injury.
|
||
|
||
That's one type of patient. There was another in which I had
|
||
no qualms at all. A young teacher with a promising future came to
|
||
me. She was about 32, and did not have a very attractive face, but
|
||
she had one of the most beautiful bodies I have ever seen. And
|
||
bodies are no novelty to a doctor.
|
||
|
||
Furthermore, she was naturally a passionate woman. But because
|
||
of her position she had to be very discreet and lead a circumspect
|
||
life. She told me that she had had sexual intercourse only two or
|
||
three times in her entire life.
|
||
|
||
That summer she had gone to a farm to spend a week. A cousin,
|
||
who was almost an idiot, was staying there. He came into her room
|
||
one night. The teacher had one of those sudden bursts of passion
|
||
that occasionally overcome women who are forced to live suppressed
|
||
lives. She had intercourse several times with her cousin. And,
|
||
unfortunately, she was caught.
|
||
|
||
Even had the man been fit mentally to be a father, it would
|
||
have ruined the woman's career to give birth to the child. She
|
||
would have had to marry her cousin, and that would have forced her
|
||
resignation.
|
||
|
||
"I hate him now," she told me. "I'd rather die than marry him.
|
||
I just went crazy, that's all. And disgrace of any sort would ruin
|
||
me in my profession. I couldn't go somewhere else and start all
|
||
over again. Teachers can't do that. The Slightest stain on my
|
||
character would prevent me from getting another job."
|
||
|
||
"Stop worrying," I said. "Everything is going to be all
|
||
right." Later on she married a fellow teacher. She came to me
|
||
before the marriage.
|
||
|
||
"I haven't told him about it," she explained. "He knows I'm
|
||
not a virgin and he can't expect me to be -- at my age. That
|
||
doesn't make any difference. But I wonder if I should tell him the
|
||
whole story."
|
||
|
||
"Don't," I advised her. "You paid the penalty for it. There's
|
||
no reason why you can't have children. No one can prove that you
|
||
had an abortion. Forget the whole thing."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
V. THEY AREN'T SO EASY
|
||
|
||
But those sample cases were several years after my first
|
||
abortion. I'll admit I was a little panicky then. I was an
|
||
inexperienced doctor and such operations were more dangerous then.
|
||
The death rate among women with abortions was much higher than the
|
||
deaths in childbirth. If the girl died, I would go to prison and my
|
||
life would be ruined. But I needed the money.
|
||
|
||
"I might as well go to prison as starve," I thought, and I
|
||
went ahead.
|
||
|
||
This girl was far different from the poor teacher who had
|
||
killed herself. A married man had got her into trouble and was
|
||
paying for her operation. She didn't seem worried about it. In
|
||
fact, she seemed rather proud of her affair with a prominent man.
|
||
|
||
"For God's sake, try to get it through her head that this is
|
||
serious business," the intermediary said. "I know that you'll keep
|
||
your month shut, but that fool girl hasn't any sense. Tell her
|
||
she'll go to jail. Tell her anything to keep her from talking."
|
||
|
||
Her lover was married to a wealthy woman, and it was necessary
|
||
to keep the story from the wife.
|
||
|
||
"She'd divorce him in a minute," the editor who brought me the
|
||
case said. "She's 'strait-laced. And to do X justice he isn't the
|
||
playboy type. He's got several children and he's crazy about them
|
||
and he loves and respects his wife. He went on a party with two or
|
||
three other businessmen. It started out as a stag drinking party
|
||
and someone suggested that they bring in some women. They did, and
|
||
this girl, Dot, was one of them. She was X's girl. Everybody got
|
||
drunk, and it wound up as a hotel party."
|
||
|
||
I grained. "The usual story. Only this time. it was a man who.
|
||
got betrayed."
|
||
|
||
"Exactly. X said that Dot, was a good sport. She isn't a
|
||
chippy or anything like that. She just went along for the party,
|
||
and it wasn't her idea to stay all night and she wasn't paid for
|
||
it. X is about 40 and he's always behaved himself pretty well. He
|
||
was flattered at a young girl liking him and he said that he wanted
|
||
to see her again. He forgot all about it, and then she telephoned
|
||
him. He felt that he owed her something for keeping quiet about the
|
||
party so he went out to see her, thinking that he'd take her a box
|
||
of candy and apologize again for the jam they'd been In. After
|
||
that, he saw a lot of her. He told me that he knew she was cheap
|
||
and ignorant but somehow that was what fascinated him. He'd seen
|
||
too much of over-civilized, inhibited women, and it was a relief to
|
||
find a girl who was pleased with whatever he did for her, who
|
||
enjoyed sex for itself alone and who gave him a good time. Pagan is
|
||
too lovely a word for it and animal sounds a little too vulgar. But
|
||
whatever she had, it went over with X."
|
||
|
||
Dot, in her way, was one of the most unusual girts I've ever
|
||
met -- and in my business I've seen all kinds. I could see why she
|
||
had attracted a sedate, prominent businessman, and I could see why
|
||
she puzzled the editor.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Pagan was not the right word for her. That somehow implies
|
||
unspoiled naturalness. Dot used make-up far too liberally. She
|
||
curled her black hair tightly. She drank and she smoked. She was
|
||
not childish, she was not innocent and yet she was not vulgar. Her
|
||
idea when drinking was to keep on until she got soused. She took
|
||
her hangovers philosophically. She never seemed envious, never
|
||
blamed anyone, was always good-natured, enjoyed every treat with
|
||
fresh pleasure.
|
||
|
||
I suppose she was mentally a little deficient, but sometimes
|
||
I've thought it would be a better world if we were all more like
|
||
Dot. Her happy-go-lucky attitude made her helpless and at the same
|
||
time provided a protection. People wanted to do things for her
|
||
because she did not clamor for her rights.
|
||
|
||
She did not envy her lover his wealth or think that he had
|
||
hurt her. In fact, she seemed a little sorry for him.
|
||
|
||
"He doesn't have much fun," she told me. "His wife is too
|
||
good.
|
||
|
||
I do not like very good women."
|
||
|
||
I smiled. "Why?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
She looked a little astonished that I did not understand.
|
||
"Good women want to boss because they think they're always right.
|
||
They won't let people alone. When I was little, people were always
|
||
telling me to be good. Whatever I really wanted to do wasn't good
|
||
for me. And it was always bad people who did nice things for me.
|
||
And never asked anything in return."
|
||
|
||
Oddly enough, though, it was by telling her that people would
|
||
think her lover was not a good man that I got her to promise
|
||
secrecy about the whole business. She realized that it was
|
||
important for him to appear "good."
|
||
|
||
X came to me when it was all over and paid me. "I felt like a
|
||
cad not coming down with her," he said. "But Ben (Ben was the
|
||
editor) insisted that he'd arrange everything. And I guess he's
|
||
right when he says it's best for me not to see Dot again. I hate to
|
||
do it. It's like slapping a child. Dot's a sweet kid. A lot of
|
||
girls would be howling for money and making trouble and wanting
|
||
marriage. I've never seen anyone like her."
|
||
|
||
"And you won't again."
|
||
|
||
"I know," he hesitated again. "She does things that in any
|
||
other woman would disgust me. You know the sort of things I mean.
|
||
But they seem all right coming from her. She pulls tricks that I
|
||
know she must have learned from prostitutes. And with her they seem
|
||
an innocent desire to give as much pleasure as possible. I
|
||
sometimes think that if she wanted me to, I'd give up everything
|
||
and marry her."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
But he wouldn't, of course. It was the fact that she made no
|
||
demands of any kind that made him feel guilty, and he got a feeling
|
||
of virtue from toying with the idea of what he'd do if she wanted
|
||
him to. He liked to think of giving up his prestige, his money, his
|
||
respectability, as a gallant gesture. But if it came to brass
|
||
tacks, he would have decided that she was just another gold-digger
|
||
and howled like the dickens.
|
||
|
||
Since then, I've heard a lot of men make the same curtain
|
||
speeches. Sometimes I've wanted to say exactly what I thought about
|
||
them. Sometimes it's amusing. A man comes to me to arrange for an
|
||
illegal operation. He's sweating blood. Maybe he really loves the
|
||
girl and he's worried about her. He's worried about himself, too.
|
||
And he's in a hurry. He and the girl may have waited for a month,
|
||
waiting to see if she actually were pregnant. As soon as they find
|
||
out, they're in a hurry to get the abortion over, especially the
|
||
man, since he's afraid the girl will, change her mind.
|
||
|
||
The man is in a panic-stricken state until I agree to do it.
|
||
For once he has to eat humble pie. No matter how well he pays me
|
||
he's asking me a favor and I let him know that. The law can't do
|
||
anything to his girl for the operation. But it can do something to
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
He worries until everything is over and the girl is all right.
|
||
Then the cold sweat dries off and there is a reaction. Probably the
|
||
girl cools off a little. Her, scare is over, too, but her nerves
|
||
have been shot to pieces and the usual effect is that she's
|
||
irritable and quarrelsome. What she wants is a lot of tenderness,
|
||
but the man in his relief tries to laugh the whole business off. So
|
||
the man begins to think that he hasn't cut a very impressive
|
||
figure, and he wants to justify himself.
|
||
|
||
Usually he talks a lot about what he would have been willing
|
||
to do. He figures he's safe in doing that. I don't mean that he's
|
||
always a cad, because he isn't. Men are usually a little frightened
|
||
by pregnancy. It's one thing they can't quite understand, in spite
|
||
of the graphic descriptions of childbirth that have been written by
|
||
masculine authors. He's had his nervous ordeal, too, and he'd like
|
||
to forget it but a nagging feeling of being made to appear a coward
|
||
and a fool makes him talk about it, sometimes to the girl and often
|
||
to the doctor.
|
||
|
||
Some of the men who send girls from other towns and have
|
||
friends make all the arrangements tell me that they'd have been
|
||
glad to see me personally beforehand but they couldn't get away
|
||
from business or they felt that it was too big a risk when secrecy
|
||
was necessary. And some of the men get a little sentimental abut
|
||
the unborn child and say that if circumstances had been different
|
||
they would have been glad to do the proper thing.
|
||
|
||
Even when they foot the entire bill and make the arrangements,
|
||
they sometimes have a feeling that they haven't exactly done their
|
||
share in this and that makes them angry. And they feel that they've
|
||
lost caste.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I've seen a lot of couples who were genuinely fond of each
|
||
other quarrel bitterly after the worst apparently was over, simply
|
||
because neither of them knew enough to allow for the inevitable
|
||
aftermath of such an ordeal. In the first place the man usually
|
||
minimizes what the girl is going through. A pregnant married woman
|
||
gets a lot of attention. She complains about her health, she goes
|
||
regularly to the doctor, she is petted and pampered. She gets a
|
||
special diet. She isn't allowed to do any heavy work. She is
|
||
honored by stork showers. Her husband is supposed to be especially
|
||
gentle with her. And usually he keeps up a pose, at least, even if
|
||
he is having an affair with another woman while his wife is
|
||
pregnant. He knows if he doesn't, he'll get hell from his wife's
|
||
relatives and her friends; and while men are freer from the
|
||
domination of society than women, they're just as particular, if
|
||
not more so, about cutting a good figure in the eyes of the world.
|
||
|
||
It makes me laugh sometimes when I read masculine authors who
|
||
say wives are too strict with their husbands, just to please their
|
||
vanity and to cut a good appearance in the eyes of their friends.
|
||
Those men ought to be in my trade for a while and see some of the
|
||
things that go on under the surface.
|
||
|
||
The girl who has an abortion doesn't dare complain about her
|
||
nausea, or her pains, or her dizziness. She has to pretend to be
|
||
bright and happy for fear people will suspect what is wrong with
|
||
her. And she has to go through an operation that is a severe
|
||
nervous shock. An abortion is not the easy thing that people who
|
||
haven't had one seem to think it is. Married mothers talk loudly
|
||
enough about how they went through the valley of the shadow of
|
||
death for their children.
|
||
|
||
But these women can go to a good hospital and have the best
|
||
doctors and can lie in bed for the proper time afterward. And
|
||
they've got the child after they're through. The girl who has an
|
||
abortion frequently goes back to work or to her daily life before
|
||
she's ready. She can't explain too much mysterious absence. Her
|
||
first reaction is one of relief. Then she wants to talk about it
|
||
and get sympathy. Usually the only person she can talk to is her
|
||
lover. Naturally, he isn't fond of listening to her go on for hours
|
||
about how sick and scared she was. It makes him sound like a cad
|
||
for getting her into this condition. And sometimes he worries a
|
||
little about the money and that makes her mad and sometimes he
|
||
tries to justify himself by making her share the blame. If he's any
|
||
sort of a man, he feels that he was a worm for getting the girl
|
||
pregnant.
|
||
|
||
But the girl isn't in any mood for arguing about whose fault
|
||
it was. What she wants is to be told that she is an unsung heroine,
|
||
that her lover appreciates the gallant way she went through it,
|
||
that she was humiliated by being asked a lot of questions, by
|
||
having to admit that she was, to all outside appearances, a scarlet
|
||
woman having a criminal operation. She wants to be told that her
|
||
lover admires her for what she did and loves her all the more.
|
||
Above all else, she doesn't want to have flung at her what she
|
||
usually knows, that the affair is not serious enough and their love
|
||
not deep enough for her and her lover to throw everything overboard
|
||
and go away together, get respective divorces or eliminate any
|
||
other obstacles to marriage.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She realizes the situation and that's why she went through a
|
||
nasty, disagreeable business. But right at the moment she wants to
|
||
pretend that this is a grand passion and worth any amount of
|
||
suffering and humiliation.
|
||
|
||
For despite what the moralists say, a lot of "nice" women have
|
||
abortions. When you consider that doctors estimate the abortion
|
||
rate in any city as being about five times the reported birth rate,
|
||
you must realize that all these cases cannot come from the dregs of
|
||
society such as gang molls and prostitutes. As a matter of fact,
|
||
few prostitutes have abortions. They are too smart, and frequently
|
||
they get so they cannot have children, even. Then they want them
|
||
Nature has made them sterile.
|
||
|
||
Sometimes I think that these after-quarrels are the saddest
|
||
part of the whole business. Usually the couples are reconciled
|
||
because they are genuinely fond of each other. But sometimes they
|
||
aren't, and there is bitterness over what nature intended as a
|
||
means of bringing a man and woman closer together.
|
||
|
||
Usually my clients try to bring me an iron-clad reason why I
|
||
should perform an abortion. Sometimes I know they're lying.
|
||
Sometimes it simply happens that an affair is drifting to a close.
|
||
And at the wrong psychological moment, an accident happens, love
|
||
has died or is dying and neither the man nor woman wants marriage.
|
||
Sometimes, as Dorothy frankly admitted, the man is not the marrying
|
||
kind. More and more young and eligible men seem to be panicky about
|
||
marriage. And it is in these cases that emotional disturbances
|
||
almost invariably follow the abortion. The man and woman resent an
|
||
accident disturbing the smooth course of their love affair. Their
|
||
love is not old enough and deep enough to stand much strain, and
|
||
when the emergency is over there is a quarrel. However, I do not
|
||
moralize about such affairs. I have seen many affairs that lasted
|
||
as long as most modern marriages. Some of the couples drifted into
|
||
marriage as they grew older. And I have about as much respect for
|
||
such liaisons as for a marriage. Frequently there is more honesty,
|
||
and more fidelity, and more genuine love than in the average legal
|
||
union.
|
||
|
||
Not long ago, I heard a young girl say glibly, "Oh, abortions
|
||
are nothing. I know a girl who had one in the morning and played
|
||
bridge that night." She may have played bridge that night, but I'll
|
||
bet she was gritting her teeth under her smile. If she did it, she
|
||
was a fool. She should have been in bed. I'll bet that after her
|
||
guest's left she burst into nervous tears. And probably for weeks
|
||
before and after the abortion it seemed to her that the
|
||
conversation was filled with joking references to pregnant women.
|
||
The truth is very rarely evident in such matters. Naturally the
|
||
girl is not going to talk about what a hard time she had. That girl
|
||
obviously had had the knife used on her. She may have felt pretty
|
||
good at the time and then weeks or maybe months later suffered
|
||
pains and discovered that she had not escaped so easily. The knife,
|
||
I maintain even in the face of those who still use it, is
|
||
dangerous.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
VI. I HAVE A PROSTITUTE PATIENT
|
||
|
||
After Dot, my next case was a country woman who already was in
|
||
a serious condition. Her husband, a hulking man with more
|
||
stinginess than sense, had given her a crude abortion with an
|
||
umbrella rib without even sterilizing it. Naturally the woman got
|
||
an infection. I brought her to the hospital and did what I could.
|
||
But she died. The man tried to save a small amount of money and
|
||
lost his wife.
|
||
|
||
He tried to avoid paying me, saying that I had caused a
|
||
useless hospital bill and his wife had died anyway. But I
|
||
threatened him with complete exposure of the case and he came
|
||
across. I had no pity for him. He was the sort of man who refuses
|
||
to either restrain himself or use any sort of precaution. His wife
|
||
was a small, dainty red-haired woman, and he was a big man, too big
|
||
for her. They were mismated even if he had not been utterly callous
|
||
in his treatment of her. He could be punished only through his
|
||
purse.
|
||
|
||
They had four small boys, the oldest only eight years old, and
|
||
his wife had rebelled against her fifth pregnancy. I gathered that
|
||
she had never really loved her husband, but he had been crazy about
|
||
her and had argued her into marriage. Later he treated with
|
||
contempt the very refinement and daintiness that had first
|
||
attracted him, boasting that there were many women who would be
|
||
glad to have him as a lover. He seemed to think it his wife's fault
|
||
that she had so many children.
|
||
|
||
"She got pregnant when I just looked at her," he said.
|
||
|
||
He married again a few months later but I never saw him again.
|
||
|
||
I managed to save a neighbor of his who had given herself an
|
||
abortion and had a hemorrhage. I packed her and put her to bed.
|
||
|
||
Some of the crude methods used are laugh-provoking; some are
|
||
tragic. I heard of a man who thrust a glass. tube into his wife's
|
||
uterus and pumped her full of air with a bicycle pump. But the
|
||
history of such cases is not completely written when the abortion
|
||
is over. The damage may not appear until the woman is pregnant
|
||
again. Women come into my office and complain of backaches, pains
|
||
in the side, general weakness. They say that they've been taking
|
||
patent medicines with no luck. Eventually I learn that they have
|
||
had miscarriages and I suspect that they were artificial.
|
||
|
||
However, I've known of natural abortions that left no bad
|
||
aftereffects. They may have been caused by sudden shocks, by undue
|
||
exertion, by a jolt, by a nervous condition.
|
||
|
||
It wasn't necessary for me to advertise that I was willing to
|
||
step over the line to help the fallen. Such things get about. A
|
||
pimp soon came in to arrange for an operation for his girl.
|
||
|
||
One of the silliest objections to legalizing abortions that I
|
||
have ever heard is that it would spread vice. Crusaders have been
|
||
trying since the world began to stop vice, and the oldest
|
||
profession still flourishes. It will continue to do so. Personally,
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I'm in favor of it, with strict medical supervision. I would rather
|
||
that my young son go to a bawdy house, where a smart girl would
|
||
wise him up to the use of contraceptives, than have him
|
||
experimenting with some dumb virgin or a pick-up. I think he run's
|
||
less risk of disease if he goes to a high-priced house. He is in
|
||
less danger of being yanked into an undesirable marriage or being
|
||
gold-dug or blackmailed.
|
||
|
||
Not long ago a boy was brought to me with a bad case of
|
||
gonorrhea, His father was tremendously shocked. The boy had tried
|
||
to keep it a secret until he grew too ill to, disguise it.
|
||
|
||
"I've warned him and warned him," the father said.
|
||
|
||
"That's the trouble," I replied. "You warned him against the
|
||
wrong thing."
|
||
|
||
The father was so goody-goody that he wouldn't face the facts.
|
||
He wouldn't admit that a boy of 17 has sexual desires and it is
|
||
natural for him to satisfy them. The boy had been warned against
|
||
prostitutes, and instead of going to a house he went to a "high
|
||
class girl" who was "giving away a million dollars worth of it
|
||
free." The girl was also giving away a lot of valuable medical
|
||
business. She didn't tell the boy, of course, that she had the
|
||
disease. Instead she let him buy her some cheap gin and they went
|
||
out for a ride in the country.
|
||
|
||
He might have got a dose at a $3 house, but I doubt it. If the
|
||
girl saw that he was dumb she'd wise him up about prophylactics.
|
||
And there wouldn't have been so much risk of the boy's trying to
|
||
make some young girl in his own set while he was diseased, if he
|
||
went to such places when he wanted only physical relief. I'm not
|
||
advising young men to go to prostitutes, but sometimes they are the
|
||
lesser of two evils,
|
||
|
||
The pimp made arrangements for the operation in a business-
|
||
like fashion and brought his girl down. She took it for granted as
|
||
one of the risks of her profession, although some girls in the
|
||
business raise hell if they're caught. I had no scruples about
|
||
performing the operation. I didn't feel then that I was spreading
|
||
vice and I don't feel that way now. It seems to me doubly important
|
||
that a house girl should not give birth to a child. Some of the
|
||
girls marry their pimps and get out of the profession when they
|
||
become pregnant. But if they don't marry, it seems to me a crime
|
||
against society to let the child be born. The girl may have a
|
||
disease that seems to be cured and the child may be born horribly
|
||
deformed. Its father may have been diseased and the girl did not
|
||
know it.
|
||
|
||
There have been some romantic tales written -- and some of
|
||
them may have a foundation of fact -- about beautiful young girls
|
||
reared in convents on the wages of sin. There have been more
|
||
unsavory stories of such young girls being pressed into service
|
||
when they were young; of children who led miserable lives because
|
||
of their mothers' occupation. Naturally, the girls usually cannot
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
name the fathers of their children, so no help would come from that
|
||
source. For half a dozen reasons, I don't think a prostitute should
|
||
give birth to a child. And after she's pregnant, there is no time
|
||
for lecturing on why she shouldn't have allowed herself to get in
|
||
that condition.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately, Violet had escaped disease, so there were no
|
||
complications from that source. She derived an ironic amusement
|
||
from her condition, but resented having to pay out hard-earned
|
||
money for the operation.
|
||
|
||
"It's a helluva world," she said cheerfully. "I work all day
|
||
at this job and then for fun I get knocked up."
|
||
|
||
She told me in private that her pimp was not the father, but
|
||
that she didn't want him to know it.
|
||
|
||
"He's always bragging about how good he is to me in giving me
|
||
a rest when I get off work, and it would make him madder than hell
|
||
if he knew I stepped out on him," she said.
|
||
|
||
The next girl I got from the same house wasn't nearly so calm.
|
||
She had a hot temper, and she was wanting to get virtually every
|
||
man in town to pay for the job. Violet brought her down and laughed
|
||
at her.
|
||
|
||
"Fat chance you'd have proving anything," she jeered. "You'd
|
||
have to say, It's either Jones or Smith or Brown or Thompson if it
|
||
isn't some man I never saw before.' Just keep your mouth shut and
|
||
don't be so damned lazy."
|
||
|
||
I got quite a lot of that trade thereafter. Later, I tried to
|
||
discourage as much of it as I could. The girls might be recognized
|
||
coming into my office. They couldn't pay much, and I was out after
|
||
higher class trade. It was bad business having them sit around in
|
||
the waiting room, although most of them were well-dressed, quiet-
|
||
looking girls.
|
||
|
||
However, I will say that I didn't have to pamper along their
|
||
nerves and I didn't have to keep soothing them and impressing the
|
||
need for secrecy. Prostitutes have so many tough breaks that one
|
||
more didn't mean much to them.
|
||
|
||
One day a dainty, petite little blonde came in. She was
|
||
tearful and indignant at the same time. She had such a short vagina
|
||
that douches did her no good.
|
||
|
||
"I can't get to the bathroom quick enough," she said, "and
|
||
that fool of a husband I've got won't do anything."
|
||
|
||
She had had one child and didn't want another one. Her husband
|
||
hated the use of contraceptives, and they were constantly
|
||
squabbling.
|
||
|
||
"I tell him I'll leave him and I will," she said. "He doesn't
|
||
have to worry! The darned fool got me half-drunk or I wouldn't be
|
||
this way."
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She wanted a sterilization operation, but I refused to give it
|
||
to her. "You may want a child later on," I told her. "And then
|
||
You'll blame me."
|
||
|
||
She told me about a friend of her's who was in somewhat the
|
||
same position.
|
||
|
||
"She wants her husband to be made sterile," the woman told me.
|
||
"I've got sense enough not to ask that. But I think I'll get a
|
||
divorce. Jim is an ideal husband in other ways. But it isn't worth
|
||
it. I can't get any pleasure out of sex because I'm afraid of the
|
||
consequences. And I keep resenting Jim's attitude. He'll promise,
|
||
and then at the last minute he says that it's no fun if he has to
|
||
use anything."
|
||
|
||
"Send him in to me," I said.
|
||
|
||
I didn't bother him with any lectures on the mental strain he
|
||
was forcing on his wife. Instead I said, "Which would you rather
|
||
have, a frigid wife or a little less pleasure because you're
|
||
sensible and use precautions? If you're not careful, this abortion
|
||
will finish the job."
|
||
|
||
He really loved his wife, and this warning frightened him.
|
||
|
||
"I didn't know whether she really was telling the truth," he
|
||
said. "We had the first child because we wanted it. That's been
|
||
more than two years ago, and nothing has happened since. Part of
|
||
the time I've used contraceptives and part of the time I haven't.
|
||
I thought," he added, "that she was, just getting a lot of funny
|
||
notions from some of those cats she plays around with, and that I'd
|
||
better not humor her."
|
||
|
||
"Better try humoring her," I told him. "It's a doctor's
|
||
prescription."
|
||
|
||
"I will, doctor," he promised. "I didn't realize that she was
|
||
telling me the truth about the douches. She wouldn't let me go to
|
||
the doctor with her and I didn't know but what she was just panicky
|
||
or lazy. I have a friend whose wife is so sloppy that he has to
|
||
force her to go to the bathroom. Otherwise, she'll just lay there.
|
||
She wants him to do everything."
|
||
|
||
He looked at me. "I don't suppose Anna told you. I'd been
|
||
married before?"
|
||
|
||
"No," I answered, beginning to take an interest in Jim. It
|
||
looked as if there were another side to the story. I'd believed be
|
||
was merely thoughtless to what I deemed an almost criminal point.
|
||
|
||
"I was divorced from my first wife," he said. "And the reason
|
||
I fell in love with Anna was because she seemed to be so gay and
|
||
wholesome about sex."
|
||
|
||
"A man's idea of a wholesome attitude toward sex frequently
|
||
means that the girl is either dumb or too trusting," I interrupted.
|
||
"A woman who runs the risk of unwelcome pregnancy rather than
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
insist that a man use artificial methods to prevent conception is
|
||
going to become nervous and irritable sooner or later. A wholesome
|
||
attitude is one where you can discuss this matter and arrive at a
|
||
decision agreeable to you both."
|
||
|
||
He shrugged his shoulders. "I don't mean that. I'll explain.
|
||
When my first wife, Audrey, and I were on our honeymoon, we went to
|
||
a quaint inn up in the mountains. We had a big room with a
|
||
fireplace and a bearskin rug in front of it. I wanted to make love
|
||
to her on the rug. She objected; said it made her feel like a dog.
|
||
Later I wanted to make love to her in a meadow filled with flowers.
|
||
She thought it was beastly. When we went to visit her people or my
|
||
people, she refused to have anything to do with me because they
|
||
might hear us. And she was always afraid the servants might hear
|
||
something."
|
||
|
||
"It began to give me inhibitions," he said frankly. "I'd been
|
||
brought up in a fairly strict household myself. Audrey's attitude
|
||
ruined our marriage and my love for her. Her idea of the proper
|
||
approach to sex took away most of my pleasure. Finally we got a
|
||
divorce. I was gun-shy of marriage until I met Anna. She Seemed so
|
||
free from complexes that I guess I went to extremes the other way.
|
||
|
||
I remembered Dot who had been so "natural" according to her
|
||
lover. I found myself telling Jim about her. He stared at me.
|
||
|
||
"I knew her slightly," he said. "You mean Dow' and he gave her
|
||
real name.
|
||
|
||
It was my turn to be a little startled. "Yes, but I didn't
|
||
mean to violate a confidence. I hope you'll keep this a secret. I
|
||
didn't suppose you'd ever heard of the girl."
|
||
|
||
He smiled a little grimly. "You're not violating any
|
||
confidence. Or at least you're not spilling any beans. I knew all
|
||
about it. X's wife is my sister. But didn't you know Dot is dead?"
|
||
|
||
"Good God, no," I exclaimed. "What was the matter? The
|
||
operation was a success. I'm positive of that."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, the operation was all right. And X, like a good boy, went
|
||
back to his wife and was the model husband. He gave Dot some money,
|
||
but since he became the virtuous spouse he didn't feel that he
|
||
should keep on paying money to a woman he no longer saw. And Dot
|
||
was too good looking and too carefree to hold a job long. So she
|
||
drifted from one man to another, and finally one of them strangled
|
||
her with her own silk stocking. He caught her being unfaithful with
|
||
another man."
|
||
|
||
"I don't remember seeing anything about it in the newspapers,"
|
||
I said.
|
||
|
||
"Oh, it wasn't in this town," Jim told me. "But she'd kept a
|
||
card of my brother-in-law's all these years. So they notified him
|
||
of her death. He was in a funk. He was afraid they'd learn of the
|
||
old affair. So he sent me to keep him out of it, arrange for the
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
funeral and send her some flowers, anonymously. I told the
|
||
officials that he'd helped to get her a job once. And I managed to
|
||
get her a quiet funeral and send her some flowers without mixing
|
||
him up in it."
|
||
|
||
He was more impressed by my connecting Dot with his wishes
|
||
regarding his wife than by any lecture I could have given him. I
|
||
saw his wife later and she seemed perfectly happy. She told me that
|
||
her married life was now perfect.
|
||
|
||
I had not lied when I told Jim that abortions sometimes made
|
||
women frigid. The same thing often happens with childbirth. Memory
|
||
of the pain soon fades, but there is a vague emotional hangover,
|
||
especially if the woman feels she has been unfairly treated. Women
|
||
who are naturally a little under-sexed may have their emotions
|
||
drained by the experience.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, sometimes it makes women more passionate.
|
||
They feel that they know the worst that can happen to them. And
|
||
usually they have acquired better knowledge of birth-control
|
||
measures, either from the doctor or from realization that previous
|
||
carelessness must be stopped.
|
||
|
||
I talked to a woman recently who had been having an affair for
|
||
several years. Her nerves were shaky. She asked me several discreet
|
||
but leading questions about abortion's.
|
||
|
||
"Do you need one?" I asked bluntly.
|
||
|
||
She shook her head. "I don't think so, but this is one of my
|
||
worrying days. I worry constantly for about the last half of my
|
||
period. I feel safe during menstruation and for some reason feel
|
||
quite safe for the first week or so thereafter. I suppose it's
|
||
relief from having passed another period without danger. But along
|
||
about this time I get nervous and wonder if something could have
|
||
gone wrong and figure out what I'd do if anything happened.
|
||
Sometimes I think I'd feel better if I were caught and had to go
|
||
through an operation. Then Id know that there is no fool-proof
|
||
method of contraception. I'd know what to do in case anything went
|
||
wrong again and just what it would be like. And I could decide once
|
||
and for all whether to go on with this affair."
|
||
|
||
"I don't see how women stand it," I said frankly. "Of course,
|
||
we doctors have our worries, too. But we've got a good stock alibi
|
||
ready if anything slips and we get paid well for our worrying. It's
|
||
bad enough for married women. However, most of them plan to have
|
||
children when they marry. But girls like you --."
|
||
|
||
"Some of us don't stand it." She gave me a wry smile. "I could
|
||
give you a list of some who haven't borne up under it too well. The
|
||
thing that saves the majority of modern mistresses from nervous
|
||
breakdowns is that the affairs don't last more than a year or so,
|
||
and then the couple either marries or they break up and the girl is
|
||
so sick of uncertainty that she marries the first man who comes
|
||
along with a proposal in his hand."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I grinned. "And by then, I suppose they're so tired of
|
||
worrying that it's almost a relief when they get pregnant and stay
|
||
that way."
|
||
|
||
She nodded. "That's why you see a lot of attractive young
|
||
businesswomen -- girls in their late 20's and early 30's -- who
|
||
have been going around with equally attractive men suddenly marry
|
||
sappy-looking eggs who can offer them a home and security but no
|
||
romance. The ones who don't -- well, a friend of mine is in a
|
||
hospital now recovering from a nervous collapse. Other girls drink
|
||
too much. I know one who has taken to drugs."
|
||
|
||
I never have become calloused to hearing stories like that. Of
|
||
course, I took them much more seriously when I first started to
|
||
practice. For a while it seemed to me that I was peculiarly lucky
|
||
in being first too poor and then too busy to have much to do with
|
||
sex except in a professional way.
|
||
|
||
|
||
VII. MY OWN ROMANCE CRASHES
|
||
|
||
After I had launched myself into the illegal side of my
|
||
profession I began to take it for granted. Of course, I solemnly
|
||
warned my sub-resa patients of the danger of talking. But my name
|
||
was mentioned because many of my later patients came to me on the
|
||
recommendation of friends who said that I was discreet, efficient
|
||
and reasonable in price.
|
||
|
||
I didn't object, because such advice was given in confidence
|
||
to persons who were not likely to broadcast the information in the
|
||
wrong quarters.
|
||
|
||
However, it was not until I met Rose that I saw how the change
|
||
in my professional attitude might effect my private life.
|
||
|
||
I had more money now, and could afford to have more
|
||
recreation. I had a bank account, and I was slowly paying my father
|
||
back the loan he had made me. I felt that I was entitled to a
|
||
little fun. So I looked up a friend of college days and he invited
|
||
me to a party. Rose was there.
|
||
|
||
It was a case of immediate mutual attraction. I was girl-
|
||
starved and I was still idealistic as far as my personal life was
|
||
concerned. That was in the days of the short skirts. Rose wore a
|
||
frivolous blue taffeta frock coming just to her knees. Above it her
|
||
blond curls, blue eyes and rosebud mouth looked like those of a big
|
||
doll. Nowadays I probably would dismiss her as insipid. Then I
|
||
thought she was the prettiest girl I had ever seen.
|
||
|
||
I had just acquired a car and was very proud of it. I took
|
||
Rose home. I think she was thrilled by her conquest. Women like to
|
||
display their power, a trait that frequently gets them into
|
||
trouble. They will encourage a man just to flatter their vanity and
|
||
then try to retreat when he gets serious.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I gave Rose a big rush. My intentions were honorable, as the
|
||
old-fashioned phrase has it. I thought it was a good idea for a
|
||
doctor to be married and I thought Rose would make me a perfect
|
||
wife. I see now how foolish that was and how lucky I was to escape
|
||
her, but at the time I was youthful enough to consider beauty all-
|
||
sufficient.
|
||
|
||
I met her father, a pompous businessman, and her mother, a
|
||
minor society woman. The whole thing seemed ideal. I would get a
|
||
young and pretty wife. I would be allied with a respectable family,
|
||
and that would help me in my profession. A few women like a good-
|
||
looking young doctor, but the majority of the patients want a
|
||
middle-aged or elderly man with a lot of dignity. The young doctor
|
||
may be a better physician, but patients believe that the older man
|
||
can be relied upon more because of his experience. However,
|
||
marriage lends an Aura of respectability.
|
||
|
||
Mothers feel better when their children are being examined by
|
||
a gray-haired man with the manner of a priest at confession. And
|
||
with men there is it jealousy of a young doctor. I think they would
|
||
prefer the old Chinese custom of having eunuchs to wait upon their
|
||
women. I have had women tell me that their husbands and lovers were
|
||
jealous because "strange doctors" give them examinations. I know of
|
||
such cases in my own practice, when men reluctantly gave permission
|
||
to have their wives or sweethearts examined, or treated, or even
|
||
submit to an abortion. They seemed to feel that in some fashion I
|
||
have ravished them or had a sexual experience that they had been
|
||
denied.
|
||
|
||
But to go back to my romance. I paid court in the traditional
|
||
fashion. I sent Rose flowers and candy. I took her to the theater
|
||
and to parties. I restricted myself to a few kisses and embraces.
|
||
I intended my marriage to be free from any emotional hangover. I
|
||
wanted a virgin bride, and I wanted an aroma of orange blossoms
|
||
around everything.
|
||
|
||
I had been going with Rose for about six weeks when she
|
||
telephoned that her mother wanted to see me. Rose let me in the
|
||
house and avoided my hasty kiss. She looked pale and somehow
|
||
indignant.
|
||
|
||
"Aha," I thought, "the old lady's been inquiring about my
|
||
intentions and Rose is peeved because I haven't popped the
|
||
question. I'll soon put that right."
|
||
|
||
I felt a little irritated as I smiled in an encouraging
|
||
fashion at Rose. The Garners seemed to be rushing things a little.
|
||
I wanted to propose and receive her acceptance in the best 19th
|
||
Century romantic style -- my literature was old-fashioned -- and
|
||
then go to her father to ask for her hand. I was in favor of
|
||
marrying as soon as possible, but I wanted to arrange the whole
|
||
business in my own way.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Garner rose from her chair when I came into the room. She
|
||
didn't invite me to sit down.
|
||
|
||
"I'm sorry to have to say this to you, Martin," she began. "I
|
||
understand from Rose that you have always treated her with respect
|
||
--"
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Of course," I said hurriedly. "I want to marry Rose, Mrs.
|
||
Garner. Perhaps I should have declared my intentions sooner, but I
|
||
was not sure Rose returned my affection. I can support a wife. I
|
||
haven't much money now, but my practice is growing. If she's
|
||
willing to start humbly --"
|
||
|
||
Her face hardened. "Don't add insult to injury, Dr. Avery. I
|
||
know all about your profession. I didn't want to have to drag that
|
||
in. Fortunately, you hadn't mentioned it to Rose. I have not told
|
||
her the details. As for her affections, she will get over this
|
||
foolish infatuation quickly enough. I have, caught it in time,
|
||
thank heavens!"
|
||
|
||
I was stunned. "What's the matter with my profession?" I
|
||
demanded. "I'm a doctor. I'm not a very good one yet, but I'm
|
||
making a living. It's an honorable calling."
|
||
|
||
"You," she was almost stuttering with cold rage. "You're a
|
||
child murderer! My husband told me all about it. And you want to
|
||
drag our daughter into the filth and slime of your work! You who
|
||
help the hardened creatures of the world with their sins -- only
|
||
you are worse than they are. If it were not for people like you,
|
||
they might reform."
|
||
|
||
"It isn't murder," I retorted angrily, forgetting that I had
|
||
once very nearly shared her view. "It isn't murder any more than it
|
||
was murder when you and your husband decided not to have any more.
|
||
children after Rose was born."
|
||
|
||
"Get out," she shouted furiously. "I won't bandy words with
|
||
you. Get out, and stay away from my daughter!"
|
||
|
||
I got out. I was mad enough not to try to see Rose, either.
|
||
I'd wanted me drama in my romance and I got it. And in my anger I'd
|
||
hit the sorest point in the armor of the righteous.
|
||
|
||
There are very few women who want their children, and there
|
||
are fewer yet who want an unlimited number. I've met a few young
|
||
wives who wanted children immediately, but most of them don't want
|
||
to be tied down. They want to arrange their children. That's
|
||
reasonable and natural. And the crusaders usually don't have many
|
||
children. If they did, they wouldn't have time to run other
|
||
people's business. A lot of them are equally indignant about the
|
||
large, families among the poor. They're not so much against big
|
||
families as they are against the parents having any fun.
|
||
|
||
I used to marvel at the twisted, perverted forms that sex
|
||
took. Nowadays I marvel that there is as much naturalness connected
|
||
With sex a's there is.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Garner hated me because I helped girls out of their
|
||
mistakes. She wanted them to suffer because she hadn't enjoyed
|
||
herself. Probably she was one of those unfortunate women who spend
|
||
the early part of their lives dreading pregnancy so that they never
|
||
enjoy the sex act, the sort of woman who thinks it somehow cheap to
|
||
be caught on her wedding night. Then with her menopause, she
|
||
probably found out that she'd waited too late for sex enjoyment.
|
||
Either her passion had died a natural death or her husband was
|
||
impotent.
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Since the time when Mrs. Garner arbitrarily decided that I was
|
||
not a fit companion for her daughter because I faced the facts
|
||
about sex, I have seen a lot of peculiar things and developed more
|
||
tolerance. Then I was furious at her. Oddly enough I probably
|
||
treated-her daughter with more respect than most other men would
|
||
have, partly because I was still young and idealistic and partly as
|
||
a reaction from the sordid part of my business.
|
||
|
||
I would have made Rose a much cleaner and more romantic
|
||
husband than some man who had not seen the results of sexual
|
||
abnormalities and irregularities and flouting of conventions.
|
||
|
||
Eventually, Mrs. Garner married Rose to a small-time
|
||
businessman who made a household drudge out of her. Rose grew fat,
|
||
peevish and complaining. She came to me several times with minor
|
||
ailments. She didn't have good health. She virtually ruined herself
|
||
by taking too strong medicines and using too harsh disinfectants.
|
||
I could have saved her all that. But her mother was a good woman!
|
||
Afterward, I was thankful that I'd escaped Rose. She and her mother
|
||
drove her husband half mad complaining because he didn't make
|
||
enough money. Finally he became a habitual drunkard. He was weak
|
||
and so was Rose; and Mrs. Garngr ruined their lives by prying and
|
||
dictating. Rose felt that she committed a crime when she became
|
||
pregnant and felt equally guilty when she tried to prevent
|
||
conception.
|
||
|
||
But that day, of course, I didn't know anything about that. I
|
||
went on a binge and wound up in a house of prostitution.
|
||
|
||
And there, ironically enough, I found myself in a room with
|
||
Violet, the first house girl I'd had for a patient.
|
||
|
||
"What the hell are you doing here, doc?" she demanded. "I'm a
|
||
cash customer," I laughed. "What do you think I'm doing, picking
|
||
daisies?"
|
||
|
||
"You're drunk," she told me.
|
||
|
||
"Of course," I agreed amiably. "My girl's mother told me to
|
||
get the hell out of there. She thinks I live in the gutter with
|
||
girls like you. So here I am."
|
||
|
||
Violet sniffed. "Probably her old man comes here, too, for
|
||
half and half. That's what good women do to men." I sobered up and
|
||
went back to work the next day and knocked a lot more silly,
|
||
romantic ideas out of my head. At lunch I met a doctor friend of
|
||
mine, one who sent me some business occasionally. I hear you're
|
||
going to marry," he said.
|
||
|
||
Eventually," I told him, "but I've no prospects in sight just
|
||
now.
|
||
|
||
"What's happened to the big romance?" he asked. "I saw you
|
||
beaming at the Garner girl like a love-sick calf the other night."
|
||
|
||
"The love-sick calf has had a good dose of salts and is
|
||
cured," I told him. "Mamma and papa disapprove of the way I
|
||
practice my great profession."
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
34
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
He grinned. "You've got a clean job compared to some
|
||
psychoanalysts I know. They really get the sex dirt dished out to
|
||
them. I've just been talking to one. A woman came to me and asked
|
||
to be examined, said she wasn't getting any kick out of her married
|
||
life."
|
||
|
||
"Tell her to be glad she's a good woman," I grunted.
|
||
|
||
"I told her she had nothing organically wrong with her," my
|
||
friend went on. "Then I asked her the usual questions. Everything
|
||
seemed all right to me. She said the sex act was completed, she
|
||
loved her husband, nothing is wrong with him, no trace of
|
||
perversion. From her description, it sounded like a perfectly
|
||
normal coition. But she wasn't satisfied. She thought she was being
|
||
cheated out of something. So she went to the psychiatrist. And you
|
||
ought to hear the pay-off."
|
||
|
||
"Go on," I said. "I'm listening."
|
||
|
||
"That was her trouble, too. She'd been listening to a gal in
|
||
the same apartment house, a divorcee. The other woman got a divorce
|
||
because she couldn't or wouldn't sleep with her husband. She
|
||
doesn't have much to do with men nowadays, and when she doe's,
|
||
she's a teaser. Gets a big kick out of the preliminaries, but won't
|
||
go any farther. However, she's been driving two or three of her
|
||
married women friends crazy with descriptions of how thrilling the
|
||
sex act should be. As a matter of fact, she's never got any kick
|
||
out of it at all, not even the normal kind. And she's not a pervert
|
||
or a practicing one at least."
|
||
|
||
"Nice woman," I muttered.
|
||
|
||
"Very," said my friend. "The psychiatrist had a hard time
|
||
convincing my patient that she was getting everything there was out
|
||
of sex and that she should pay no attention to her neighbor.
|
||
Advised her to move, in fact. I'd rather have an out-and-out
|
||
pervert try to Convert my wife than have one of those dirty-minded
|
||
wenches around. They're worse than the so-called good women who try
|
||
to tell a woman that enjoyment of sex is sinful. It's pretty hard
|
||
to convince a woman that it's wrong for her to have a good time.
|
||
But when someone tells her that she ought to be having a better
|
||
time, she's liable to start trying out other men."
|
||
|
||
"The whole business is crazy," I said. "Seems to me that we'd
|
||
be more sensible if we had rutting period's as the animals do and
|
||
got it all over with in a few days."
|
||
|
||
He grinned. "We're the higher order. We can think! We can
|
||
reason!"
|
||
|
||
I went back to the office pretty well soured on the whole
|
||
thing. A woman came in and tried to convince me she was pregnant.
|
||
Most women fight against the idea and keep hoping that even the
|
||
doctor may be wrong, But once in a while there's a nut who's so
|
||
full of symptom's, both genuine and imaginary that she wears a path
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
35
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
to the doctor's office. This woman didn't want a child, but the
|
||
fear of pregnancy obsessed her. If she gained a pound and it showed
|
||
as it usually does, on her breasts and hip's, she decided that She
|
||
was caught and rushed right down to see me.
|
||
|
||
I got rid of her and settled down with a magazine. Then two
|
||
well-dressed, pretty young women came in. One of them looked as if
|
||
she had been crying. Both were nervous. I recognized the symptoms.
|
||
|
||
The prettiest girl introduced herself and her companion. She
|
||
was tall and slender without being either skinny or curved in the
|
||
wrong places. Even in the awkward knee-length dresses of that
|
||
period she looked graceful. She had intelligent-looking gray eyes,
|
||
dark brown hair, combed simply and lips with a tendency to curve
|
||
upward. Her companion was sweet-looking rather than beautiful and
|
||
she didn't have the competent air of her friend.
|
||
|
||
Norma, the prettier of the two, did the talking for herself
|
||
and for Pearl. She came right to the point. She said she understood
|
||
that sometimes I helped girls out of trouble.
|
||
|
||
I was cautious. Neither girl wore a wedding ring. They didn't
|
||
look like street-walker's, but I had to be careful. I told them to
|
||
tell me the whole story, adding that it would be in strict secrecy.
|
||
|
||
"It's a simple story," Norma said. "Pearl is in a jam. She
|
||
isn't married, and so it's important that she get rid of the child
|
||
and do it as quickly as possible. I've heard that she can register-
|
||
in at a hospital and say she's married and have the operation as
|
||
essential to her health. But I don't know how to go about it."
|
||
|
||
"Better not try it," I advised. "It's too risky. In the first
|
||
place, in this State three physicians must certify that the
|
||
operation is essential to her health, And the case would be
|
||
investigated. A good doctor isn't going to risk putting his name on
|
||
record in such a case."
|
||
|
||
"Then what do you advise?" Norma asked.
|
||
|
||
"Where's the father of the child?" I asked. I always want the
|
||
men in the case to appear. In the first place, the men usually foot
|
||
the bills. In the second, I want to have a clear understanding
|
||
among all concerned before I risk my career for an operation. A
|
||
hysterical woman may -- and sometimes does -- rush into my office
|
||
and want something done right away. Later She may discover that the
|
||
man would have married her and she blames me. Or the man may have
|
||
scruples against such operations or the family may raise hell.
|
||
Sometimes wives try to get abortions when their husbands are
|
||
absent. The husband may stir up a devil of a mess when he finds it
|
||
out, and the woman may not be able to pay and there may be charges
|
||
that the doctor induced the woman to undergo the operation. If
|
||
something happens to the woman in such a case, the doctor may as
|
||
well buy his railroad ticket and leave before he finds himself
|
||
behind bars.
|
||
|
||
"He's on a business trip," Pearl said, "and it's important
|
||
that I don't bring him back for this."
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
36
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
That sounded fishy and I said so in as tactful a fashion as I
|
||
could manage. I told her that his presence was important. Then the
|
||
story came out. The man was married to an insane woman now in an
|
||
institution. The wife was a Catholic and so were all her people.
|
||
The husband made her regular visits, and he was on one now. He
|
||
occupied a position in a firm largely controlled by his wife's
|
||
relatives. He couldn't divorce his wife, and so they we're waiting,
|
||
patiently hoping that her failing health would end her life.
|
||
|
||
The man's job took him away from our city much of the time. He
|
||
had been gone for about six weeks and it would be several weeks
|
||
before he returned. Pearl wanted to get the whole business over
|
||
before he came back.
|
||
|
||
"I'll tell him, of course," she said. "But it's almost
|
||
impossible for him to return now and it would do no good. I've
|
||
plenty of money and Norma will look after me. He's got troubles
|
||
enough without my adding to them. If I let him know now he'd
|
||
probably dash back here and the whole story might come out. We've
|
||
gone through too much to risk endangering everything because of
|
||
this unfortunate happening.
|
||
|
||
I believed her. She was in a bad spot.
|
||
|
||
"All right," I said. "I'll help you."
|
||
|
||
"We'll pay you in advance," Norma told me eagerly. "Then
|
||
you'll know we're all right."
|
||
|
||
Of course, it is customary in all these cases to get payment
|
||
in advance. No abortionist is going to take the risk without being
|
||
paid, and paid well, in advance. Once the abortion is over, the
|
||
doctor has no hold over the woman. It is the surgeon who commits
|
||
the crime, not the girl.
|
||
|
||
No girl needs to be blackmailed by a quack abortionist if she
|
||
will keep that in mind. He may threaten to expose the whole thing;
|
||
may produce documents from his files. But if she pays him in cash,
|
||
pays him in advance, and then bluffs, she'll be all right. He won't
|
||
dare say anything about it. He'll not only let himself in for a
|
||
prison sentence but he'll also kill his practice at once. Once he
|
||
has come out in the open about one abortion, no one else will trust
|
||
him.
|
||
|
||
But that day I forgot my strict rules. "No hurry about that,"
|
||
I told them "You can take your time."
|
||
|
||
They looked a little relieved. I learned afterward that they
|
||
had brought every cent they had in the world and were prepared to
|
||
offer it to me. My charges then were not so high as they are at
|
||
present, when I never accept anything less than $125, and sometimes
|
||
my fees are as high as $500.
|
||
|
||
The girl had arranged to take a short vacation. She moved into
|
||
a small apartment with Norma. It may be that I called there oftener
|
||
than professional purposes required. But the appreciation expressed
|
||
by the two girl's helped to soothe my vanity, wounded by Mrs.
|
||
Garner's outburst.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
37
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"It's ridiculous," Norma exclaimed, "that we have to hide in
|
||
here in order to prevent a tragedy. Oh, I know we have to do it,"
|
||
she added quickly. "But here is Pearl, trying to get a little
|
||
happiness. Here you are, trying to do some good. Here I am, just
|
||
standing by. And all three of us would be disgraced if this got
|
||
out. If someone wrote a play about the situation and a beautiful
|
||
woman did it on the stage, she'd be a heroine. But in real life the
|
||
fiction Situations don't work out so well."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I said. "Camille is a figure of romance and all the
|
||
women in the audience weep when she dies. But if Camille were
|
||
working hard to earn her living and trying to have a little
|
||
pleasure in the evening and got caught and went to an abortionist,
|
||
she'd be that 'wild little French girl' and the good ladies would
|
||
sniff and say it only went to show that foreigners couldn't be
|
||
trusted and they've been thinking that their husbands should fire
|
||
that dark-haired, dark-eyed girl in the office. She's too pretty to
|
||
be a really efficient typist."
|
||
|
||
I told Norma about my brief fling with Rose Garner.
|
||
|
||
"Even my love affair aborted," I Said grimly.
|
||
|
||
But Norma was laughing. She choked and waved her hands. "I
|
||
don't mean to laugh at you. It's just that I remembered what Mr.
|
||
Garner does."
|
||
|
||
"He's a druggist. He's something in a wholesale company."
|
||
|
||
"And he's also a big stockholder in a company that
|
||
manufactures hot water bottles and syringes," Norma replied. "It's
|
||
all right to buy a douche bag. And you can buy all the salves and
|
||
jellies and everything else for 'feminine hygiene' that you want.
|
||
A lot of them may be dangerous; a lot of them may be worthless. But
|
||
nothing is done about that. The ounce of prevention is perfectly
|
||
legal, and if the prevention isn't any good, the manufacturers are
|
||
safe. Mr. Garner sells plenty of disinfectant that is less powerful
|
||
than soap and water and some that's so harsh the solution ruins
|
||
your hands. But when people actually need help, he's moralizing
|
||
somewhere."
|
||
|
||
"Well," I said, "no statues are being erected to me. And a lot
|
||
of the time I don't get any thanks for what I've done."
|
||
|
||
Of course, no doctor expects thanks. He's supposed to do his
|
||
best even if he feels the patient isn't worth saving. He's supposed
|
||
to work when he feels that he isn't going to get paid. But he isn't
|
||
risking his future and a damned disagreeable prison sentence for
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
A lot of my patients come in virtually on their knees. They
|
||
continue to be abject until the operation is a success. Then they
|
||
may hear about a quack who would have done the same thing for $10
|
||
or $15. Why shouldn't he be cheap? He hasn't had any expensive
|
||
medical training. He hasn't got half as much to lose as I have. He
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
38
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
may be good. There are men who can perform abortions skillfully and
|
||
can't do anything else. Some of them are doctors who have already
|
||
lost their licenses to practice; Some are premedical student's who
|
||
dropped out. And there are old women with an uncanny skill at the
|
||
business.
|
||
|
||
So when it's all over and the money has been paid in advance,
|
||
a patient, or more often the man who footed the bills, may get to
|
||
thinking that that was a lot of money for what little was done. And
|
||
he feels wronged. An abortion has no permanent effect like the
|
||
removal of an appendix or tonsil's. The man wants to blame somebody
|
||
for this business just to get rid of surplus irritation that he
|
||
hasn't dared to take out on the girl. So he treats me as a quack
|
||
and a sharper and a few other disagreeable things.
|
||
|
||
It reminds me of a man I knew who went on periodical drunks.
|
||
|
||
"I stay sober for weeks and nobody says that it's fine I'm
|
||
restraining myself," he told me once, "but as soon as I go on a
|
||
toot, everybody says, 'Look, he's drunk again."
|
||
|
||
I told the story to Norma. She didn't laugh. "It's funny, I
|
||
know. But look at us. I mean, Pearl and myself. Outwardly we're
|
||
good girls, nicely mannered, hard working. Nobody brags on us
|
||
because we are behaving ourselves. That"s natural. We're all
|
||
supposed to behave ourselves. But let us, make one slip and we're
|
||
marked for life. Oh, I know, people don't talk about scandal
|
||
constantly as some girls seem to think. And lots of girls who have
|
||
been naughty become nice. But always there's someone who's going to
|
||
say, 'I remember when she got into a jam and they say there was a
|
||
hush hush operation.' Probably that person doesn't mean anything by
|
||
it. It's just casual gossip. But did you ever notice the peculiar
|
||
glint women get in their eyes when the subject of pregnancy is
|
||
introduced. They invariably count the months if the woman is
|
||
married. And if she's not, they lower their voices and start
|
||
discussing the possible fathers."
|
||
|
||
I grinned. Norma and I were good friends by now. I enjoyed
|
||
blowing off steam to her and she talked with amazing frankness to
|
||
me. I told her how I'd started doing abortions.
|
||
|
||
"I suppose vanity was one reason why I hated it," I remarked.
|
||
"Any starving doctor could look down upon me for violating the
|
||
ethics of the profession. Same way any physician rather looks down
|
||
on a dentist. The dentist may be making a lot more money but he
|
||
never has ranked quite so high."
|
||
|
||
"I know," Norma said. "I knew a girl who fell in love at first
|
||
sight with a man. But when she found out he was a dentist, she was
|
||
humiliated and refused to see him again."
|
||
|
||
She looked at me. "I'm not noted for any piety," but I believe
|
||
that your credits and debits will balance on Judgment Day."
|
||
|
||
It was about this time that I turned down my first case. I had
|
||
always told myself that I meant to use discrimination in this
|
||
business and the only way I could maintain my self respect was to
|
||
take only such case's as I felt worthwhile.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
39
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
A very pretty, richly-dressed young woman came into my office,
|
||
accompanied by her mother and her sister. This was unusual. It had
|
||
so happened that my previous clandestine patients before had
|
||
consisted of girls anxious to keep news of the operations from
|
||
their families. It is an indictment of family life and the much-
|
||
touted mother love that girls will tell their troubles to friends
|
||
before they will confide in their parents.
|
||
|
||
Of course, there are several other reasons for that. Sometimes
|
||
it is merely a desire to spare pain and worry. The girls are not in
|
||
a mood to listen to maternal anxiety. It is the same thing that
|
||
causes many girls to want their lovers or husbands away when they
|
||
are going through an abortion. They sometimes prefer the more
|
||
impersonal kindliness of a nurse or a close friend. They know that
|
||
they are going to be in a great deal of pain, that they are not
|
||
going to be at their best and vanity keeps them from wanting anyone
|
||
really close to them around.
|
||
|
||
But I was pleased at the sight of the mother. I felt somehow
|
||
that she lent more respectability to the visit. This thought
|
||
disappeared in a few moments. The girl, I learned, was the wife of
|
||
a wealthy young man in a nearby city.
|
||
|
||
She was annoyed and petulant over her pregnancy. She was just
|
||
starting to have a good time as a young wife in a smart young
|
||
married set, and she hated to have her fun interrupted by
|
||
motherhood.
|
||
|
||
"I know just how Frances feels," her mother told me. "She has
|
||
all those lovely new clothes and the season is just beginning. And
|
||
she has such a beautiful figure. It would never be the same again.
|
||
Men are so selfish about such things."
|
||
|
||
"Then her husband doesn't approve of the operation?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
Both mother and daughter burst into tirades against the
|
||
general selfishness of mankind. Finally I managed to extract the
|
||
information that the young husband did not even know his wife was
|
||
pregnant.
|
||
|
||
"And he isn't going to," Frances said firmly. "He'd probably
|
||
raise the dickens and insist on my going through with it. Men are
|
||
foolish about children, They don't have to get all ugly and clumsy
|
||
and ridiculous-looking. Of course, I did tell Jack that I wanted
|
||
children. But I don't want them right away. Later on, I'd like a
|
||
boy and a girl, right together so they'll be cute to dress."
|
||
|
||
She paused, apparently admiring herself as an attractive young
|
||
mother.
|
||
|
||
"Later on it may be harder for you to have children," I
|
||
remarked.
|
||
|
||
She dismissed that. She was the type who regards everything
|
||
beyond tomorrow as being vaguely in the far distant future and not
|
||
to be taken into consideration.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
40
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Both women annoyed me. They irritated me further by saying
|
||
that they would pay any price "so long as it's reasonable." They
|
||
seemed to regard the whole business in the light of pulling a
|
||
disfiguring tooth. There also was the attitude that they were
|
||
really doing me a favor by bringing the job to me.
|
||
|
||
"I can't do anything about it," I told them. "If your husband
|
||
should find out about it he could send me to prison. Even with his
|
||
consent, it would still be too dangerous. Later, you'll want a
|
||
child, and if you can't have one you'll blame me. You're young and
|
||
healthy and you have plenty of money. Your husband will love you
|
||
even more if you have the child. So go home and forget about it."
|
||
|
||
They burst into torrents of rage then, but I shooed them
|
||
firmly out of my office and gasped with relief. They were the worst
|
||
type of patient. In the first place, they would have made trouble
|
||
all through the case, complaining about any pain and having to be
|
||
pampered.
|
||
|
||
"I usually try to send the mother home," a doctor told me
|
||
later. "She'll raise hell all the time she isn't telling you what
|
||
to do and how she had her children. Mothers make the worst possible
|
||
nurses because they want to do whatever the patient asks instead of
|
||
what is good for her. They'll feed the girl the wrong things,
|
||
refuse to make her exercise and spread the news around at the tops
|
||
of their voices."
|
||
|
||
Another danger is that patients of this type are babblers.
|
||
Secure in their moneyed and social positions, they don't give a
|
||
damn what happens to the doctors. Afterward they are likely to
|
||
regard all abortion in the light of an interesting tea-table
|
||
conversation subject, along with nervous breakdowns and trips to
|
||
Europe. They tell the whole thing, including the doctor's name and
|
||
address.
|
||
|
||
Such frivolous women may manage to keep the abortions secret
|
||
from their husbands for a while, but when it's all over they get
|
||
careless. And when they can't have children, the husbands blame the
|
||
doctor and think he probably performed a sterilization operation in
|
||
secret or did a bad job. There is something mysterious about an
|
||
abortion to the lay mind, anyhow. I've heard people inquire if I
|
||
actually cut out some of the organs. An abortion is simply what the
|
||
name implies, a premature birth, before the woman is more than
|
||
three months pregnant. After that it is more dangerous and comes
|
||
under the term of miscarriage. But I have had girls come to my
|
||
office and expect to go under ether and have ugly abdominal sears.
|
||
|
||
A successful abortion does not prevent a woman from having
|
||
children later on. But some women are not very fertile and one
|
||
pregnancy exhausts them. Or society women, such as Frances, may
|
||
keep their vitality at low ebb by reducing diets or by high nervous
|
||
strain and be unable to bear a child. Or they may ruin themselves
|
||
by use of too strong contraceptives. And in all such cases the
|
||
abortionist is blamed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
41
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
In Frances' case, the fault lay in the lack of understanding
|
||
between husband and wife. It may take some of the roses and
|
||
moonlight and glamour out of young married life to discuss such
|
||
things cold-bloodedly, and one woman told me that she grew to hate
|
||
her. husband because he insisted on analyzing their emotions before
|
||
and after the sex act, but there would be fewer husbands and wives
|
||
drifting apart if they talked things over.
|
||
|
||
Frances probably lacked the courage to tell her fiance that
|
||
she didn't want children for several years. She may have been
|
||
afraid that he would not marry her if he knew her true views. I
|
||
don't think she wanted children at all, but there are other wives
|
||
who actually desire a family but want the first year or two of
|
||
their marital companionship without the complications of a child.
|
||
|
||
A man came to me once for examination. "I want to know if
|
||
there's anything the matter with me," he said. "I've been married
|
||
two years, and we haven't had any children. If I'm sterile, I
|
||
should know it because it isn't fair to my wife. She wants
|
||
children."
|
||
|
||
I suppressed a laugh. I knew that his wife used contraceptives
|
||
regularly because she had come to me about them.
|
||
|
||
"Is she in a hurry for a child?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"No. She's very nice about the matter. But when we were
|
||
married we both agreed that we wanted children. Of course, nothing
|
||
definite was said about when, I thought we'd just let nature take
|
||
its course."
|
||
|
||
I told him there was nothing wrong with him and advised him to
|
||
talk it over with his wife. I also told him to send her to me. She
|
||
came in a few days later.
|
||
|
||
I didn't bother about giving her an examination. She was a
|
||
friend of mine, and I simply told her what her husband had said.
|
||
She sighed.
|
||
|
||
"I didn't know he was in a hurry about having a child. Of
|
||
course I'm willing. I want children and I told Leslie so. But he
|
||
never said anything definite about the matter and didn't appear
|
||
very eater to be a father, So I thought I'd enjoy being carefree as
|
||
long as possible."
|
||
|
||
"You see," she went on, "I know husbands who talk about how
|
||
fond they are of children, but then when their wives become
|
||
pregnant, they are peeved because she doesn't feel well and she
|
||
can't be gay and a good sport. And when the child comes, It's the
|
||
woman's responsibility Even if the man is a good father, it's the
|
||
woman who has to take care of the child all day. I'm not going to
|
||
be one of those women who complain about being tied down by a
|
||
child. Leslie is tied down to a desk all day supporting me, and I
|
||
ought to do my share."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
42
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She grinned a little impishly. "I don't take that too
|
||
seriously, either," she added. "Leslie was tied down to that desk
|
||
before he met me. The only difference is now he has more
|
||
responsibilities. But I didn't see any point in adding to those
|
||
responsibilities unless I thought he wanted them."
|
||
|
||
I smiled at her. "You're a smart woman, Jane. But be careful
|
||
of being too smart and figuring things out too closely. There's as
|
||
much danger in making a slip in too close calculations based on
|
||
human nature as there is in being too careless."
|
||
|
||
"You're telling me," she replied. "I thought I was being smart
|
||
in saving Leslie from the results of his vagueness, and here he is
|
||
dashing around to doctors to find out if anything is wrong with
|
||
him. But you see, Martin, when we were going together, Leslie was
|
||
cursed by a desire to evade being definite about anything. He was
|
||
the sort of man who telephoned and said he might call me later that
|
||
night if he could get away. That kept me at home all evening
|
||
waiting for his call, because I'd rather take a chance of being
|
||
with him than go somewhere else and disappoint him if he did call.
|
||
Or he'd say that he'd call me about the middle of the week and I'd
|
||
stay at home Wednesday and Thursday nights. And he'd say, 'I'll
|
||
come by between seven-thirty and eight-thirty,' leaving me
|
||
twiddling my fingers for an hour."
|
||
|
||
I nodded. Such things often seem unimportant to the man who is
|
||
busy until the time he goes to see a girl, but they may make or
|
||
break the romance. I knew a girl who broke off a love affair
|
||
because of such treatment.
|
||
|
||
"If he can't make up his mind when he wants to see me when
|
||
he's courting me, what will he be like after we're married when he
|
||
feels that he can take me for granted?" She, had said.
|
||
|
||
But Jane was still talking. "And he had a beautiful habit of
|
||
just dropping by in the morning to see me. He'd be out and around
|
||
town on business. He'd find me looking like hell and busy. But he
|
||
thought it nice to surprise me. Same way, sometimes he'd drive by
|
||
at night or call at an hour when I had either decided to stay at
|
||
home or had made other arrangements. I was so much in love that
|
||
this seemed petty. But I decided that after marriage I would take
|
||
things into my own hands a little more. So I did. Leslie was just
|
||
as vague about having children."
|
||
|
||
Shocking as it might seem to their mothers, who preferred to
|
||
Vail the whole thing in reticence and look upon pregnancy either as
|
||
an act of God or a cross to bear, most modern young women prefer to
|
||
plan their romances, their marriages and their children. It's only
|
||
natural. Everything else about their lives is planned. This is
|
||
especially true of businesswomen who marry. They want a certain
|
||
number of children at a time when they can afford them and at a
|
||
time when the birth does interfere with other important things.
|
||
|
||
VIII. I CONTRIBUTE TO THE ARTS
|
||
|
||
Shortly after I turned down the case of the society bride, I
|
||
did perform an abortion on a married woman.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
43
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
A young couple came into the office. They were shabbily
|
||
dressed but there was something clean and vital about them. They
|
||
held hands shamelessly and came into my private office together.
|
||
|
||
The girl was slight with a mop of rumpled curl's and big dark
|
||
eyes. She was not really pretty but she had a vivid charm. The
|
||
youth had a freshly-washed, boyish look that appealed to me.
|
||
|
||
They both started to talk at once, then looked at each other
|
||
and were silent. Finally the boy acted as spokesman.
|
||
|
||
"I'm an artist," he announced, "and my wife here is a writer.
|
||
We've just been married about six months and we're poor as church
|
||
mice. We've got what are known as futures but very little present."
|
||
|
||
I guessed immediately what they wanted but I let them go on.
|
||
The boy, he was just that, introduced them. The girl's name was
|
||
vaguely familiar to me. She had sold some free-lance material to
|
||
newspapers and to a few cheap magazines. I had read one of the
|
||
stories. It was not smoothly written but it had life in it. The boy
|
||
had painted pictures that were hung in good exhibits but thus far
|
||
neither had had any financial success. But they were still hopeful.
|
||
And now they had the chance of a life-time. A magazine had offered
|
||
to sponsor them on a boat trip along several scenic rivers. The
|
||
girl was to write the articles and the boy was to illustrate them.
|
||
They had expended most of their capital on a boat, supplies and
|
||
painting materials.
|
||
|
||
"It might be made into a book afterward," the girl's eyes were
|
||
glowing. "But since we're unknowns, we can't get much of an
|
||
advance. We got a little and spent that on the boat and our camping
|
||
outfit. And then," she flung out her hands, "then I had to go and
|
||
get pregnant."
|
||
|
||
"Can't you go ahead with the tour?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
She gave me a sickly grin. "With me already having nausea in
|
||
the mornings?" she asked. "I'm going to be the type that takes it
|
||
hard. I'm so darned little in the first place and so excitable.
|
||
We'd meant to go ahead and have the child and starve in a garret.
|
||
And then along comes this opportunity. We'd written to the magazine
|
||
about it and sent along sample sketches. And they've accepted and
|
||
want us to start. It would all coincide neatly with baby's arrival.
|
||
I can't bounce over mountain river rapids and sleep in a pup tent
|
||
and eat when and what I can and work when I'm this way. And It's
|
||
our big chance. If we back out now, we'll get a black eye with the
|
||
magazine, especially since we've spent their advance. We've got
|
||
about two weeks, but if we postpone it any longer, there'll be
|
||
another author available. To be frank, we're about third choice
|
||
with the editor, but we were selected because we were footloose at
|
||
the right time."
|
||
|
||
Here was a case where by a little lying I could have got the
|
||
girl into a hospital and said that the abortion was necessary. As
|
||
she said, she was in too delicate health to endure any hardships
|
||
while pregnant. She needed the best of care. And they could not
|
||
afford the best of care.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
44
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
But hospitalization would also have been beyond their means.
|
||
They told me frankly just how much money they could pay me.
|
||
|
||
"It isn't what we can afford but what we have," the man told
|
||
me. "I don't much like the idea of an abortion. But I don't like
|
||
the idea of taking Sally on a trip when she isn't up to it nor do
|
||
I like the idea of watching her work and suffer in a cheap lodging
|
||
house because I can't afford to buy her the proper food and take
|
||
her somewhere where she could rest and have sunlight. Later on,
|
||
when we can afford it, I'm all for having a lot of children."
|
||
|
||
Sally was one of the most gallant patients I've ever had. She
|
||
joked about the matter and made it into an adventure.
|
||
|
||
"I want children," she told me in a more serious moment. "And
|
||
I thought about this a lot before I came down here. I haven't any
|
||
scruples against abortions. Kent and I were just careless. I see
|
||
nothing any worse about what I'm doing than in what we did the
|
||
nights when I wasn't caught. If we had even a little money, I'd
|
||
never let poverty stop me from having this child. But it isn't fair
|
||
to either of us to let this happen now; not fair to me nor to Kent
|
||
nor to the child. If we missed this job, it might be that we'd
|
||
never have another one like it, although I think that sooner or
|
||
later we'd crash into money because we work hard and we've got a
|
||
little ability. But we'd always hold it against the child that we
|
||
lost a big job because of it. And I couldn't bear to have Kent
|
||
think that I held him back when he got his first chance and he'd
|
||
feel guilty about me. We're young and we've got plenty of time for
|
||
more children."
|
||
|
||
The articles caught on immediately. I read every one of them.
|
||
Sally had a blithe style of writing and Kent's pictures were good.
|
||
As they predicted, the articles were put into book form and had a
|
||
good sale. Eighteen months later, Kent and Sally came into my
|
||
office. At first I didn't recognize them. They were deeply tanned,
|
||
healthy looking and were well dressed, They no longer appeared
|
||
hungry and haunted by poverty.
|
||
|
||
Sally handed me a book, autographed by both of them. It is one
|
||
of my treasured possessions now.
|
||
|
||
"We intended to send it to you," she said. "We were in the
|
||
East when it came out. But we meant to come back here after a while
|
||
and Kent said we'd bring it."
|
||
|
||
Kent wanted to pay me some more money. I grinned.
|
||
|
||
"That's the first time anyone has ever come back to make me
|
||
another payment," I told him. "Usually the return visits are to
|
||
make complaints."
|
||
|
||
"You cut your price for us," he said. "I knew about what your
|
||
lowest charge was when we came here. I was so thankful then that
|
||
you left us a little grub-stake that I didn't say anything."
|
||
|
||
"That's all right," I told them. "A lot of doctors charge by
|
||
the income of their patients."
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
45
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Yeah," he grinned. "But they usually charge more than $10 and
|
||
a picture. The picture may be worth Something sometime, but you
|
||
didn't know it when you took it. Anyhow, our income is bigger now
|
||
and I want to make it right."
|
||
|
||
"I'll just keep the picture and watch it increase in value,"
|
||
I remarked.
|
||
|
||
As a matter of fact, later I was offered enough money for the
|
||
picture to more than make up the difference between my usual price
|
||
and what I had charged for the abortion. But I turned it down.
|
||
|
||
"In that case," Sally said, "I want to engage you as my
|
||
physician. I'm pregnant again." Her eyes twinkled up at me. "It
|
||
seems incurable in me. But this time I'm going through with it."
|
||
|
||
I knew that they didn't have much money even then. But they
|
||
had the start they wanted. I felt pretty good about it. I'll admit
|
||
I was a little relieved when I learned that Sally meant to have a
|
||
child. Irresponsibility can become a habit. There is an old saying
|
||
that when a woman has one abortion she will have two more. And
|
||
there's a reason for it. If the first operation is comparatively
|
||
painless and inexpensive, the woman may grow careless. Always in
|
||
the back of her mind is the thought that she can afford to take a
|
||
risk. There's an easy way out for her. That is the type of patient
|
||
I try to discourage.
|
||
|
||
Pearl had long ago recovered from her operation. She moved to
|
||
another city, but Norma remained behind, and I continued to see
|
||
her. Pearl's lover had had his headquarters. transferred, and she
|
||
could be with him more. Two or three months after her departure,
|
||
Norma telephoned.
|
||
|
||
"Come over and Say goodbye to me," she said.
|
||
|
||
I was shocked. I'd gotten into the habit of dropping in to see
|
||
Norma two or three nights a week. "What's the matter?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
Pearl has arranged a better job for me in her city."
|
||
|
||
I hurried right over.
|
||
|
||
"I had a job here I was hoping that you'd take," I told her as
|
||
soon as I got in the door. "I know a doctor who needs an able
|
||
assistant."
|
||
|
||
She stared at me. "But I don't know anything about medicine."
|
||
"You know a lot about this doctor," I said. "It might mean a cut in
|
||
pay, but I wish you'd stay and marry me." She smiled. "You've hired
|
||
a wife." Later she told me that she had planned to jolt me into a
|
||
proposal. "If it didn't work, I'd have gone, of course," she told
|
||
me frankly. "Because I didn't want to stay here any longer if I
|
||
wasn't married to you. But I hoped you'd take the hint."
|
||
|
||
She looked at me anxiously "Are you sure this isn't just a
|
||
rebound from Rose?" She asked.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
46
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"No. Rose was a rebound from life. She was my calf-love affair
|
||
and my revolt against the realities, all rolled into one. This is
|
||
the real thing. I had to get over my rose-tinted spectacles stage.
|
||
It may be unfair to you. This hasn't been a glamorous courtship, by
|
||
any means."
|
||
|
||
She laughed. "We're spared that re-adjustment, at least."
|
||
|
||
And we were. We started with no illusions about each other.
|
||
She knew all about my profession. I knew that she had had to face
|
||
some harsh things. Our love was based on the solid foundation of
|
||
friendship. We had simply become necessary to each other.
|
||
|
||
I'm not against glamour and romance. Every girl feels that she
|
||
has a right to a romantic courtship. But glamour is also frequently
|
||
a trick of nature to lure a girl into fulfilling her biological
|
||
duties, and sometimes it backfires.
|
||
|
||
A Young girl came into my office late one afternoon.
|
||
|
||
"What's the matter with you?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"Too much moonlight and light fiction," she replied.
|
||
|
||
She was about 18, but she looked older and more sophisticated.
|
||
Nowadays young girls dress and act as if they knew everything, and
|
||
men are not always to be blamed if they take them at their face
|
||
value.
|
||
|
||
Patricia, as I shall call her, told me her story with a sort
|
||
of ironical amusement, the attitude of the newly-made cynic.
|
||
|
||
"I'd feel better if I'd been soused to the gills, Then I could
|
||
have waved my hands and said that the cad took advantage of me when
|
||
I was too drunk to know what I was doing."
|
||
|
||
But she had been intoxicated on something headier and more
|
||
dangerous than whiskey. She'd been drunk on the idea of glamour.
|
||
|
||
She was a debutante in a small city, Popular with boys she'd
|
||
known since childhood. Pretty and clever in a superficial way, she
|
||
imitated the mannerisms of her favorite movie stars and mouthed
|
||
risque flippancies with only a vague idea what they meant.
|
||
|
||
Boys had tried to "paw" her, and she was a little intoxicated
|
||
with her power over them. She easily evaded their advances,
|
||
although she said she'd done a good deal of wrestling.
|
||
|
||
"Sometimes I wanted to go ahead," she told me frankly. "But I
|
||
was always glad I hadn't when I got home."
|
||
|
||
With three other girls, Patricia went to a resort to spend a
|
||
week. They had a cabin and no chaperon. Chaperons are out-dated
|
||
today. Anyhow, the girls were all grown and parents had become
|
||
careless.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
47
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
All the girls had vague hopes of meeting someone "really
|
||
exciting" at the resort. They were tired, they said, of the youths
|
||
they had been going with. There was no thrill in dating boys they'd
|
||
known from childhood, boys with only a little pocket money and
|
||
their fathers' cars.
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately for Patricia, she met an "exciting new man" at
|
||
a hotel dance. The girls' cabin was close to a resort, and they
|
||
went over without escorts.
|
||
|
||
It was fun, Patricia thought, to dance with a stranger. She'd
|
||
been rushed by strange youths at college dances, although the man
|
||
introduced himself or was brought up by a friend. This man only
|
||
gave his first name and preserved a glamorous mystery about
|
||
himself. He was well dressed, handsome and danced well. Patricia
|
||
fell for him at once.
|
||
|
||
Girls of that age have an unfortunate tendency to exaggerate
|
||
all their emotions. Patricia decided she had a violent crush on the
|
||
man. She went driving with him and he kissed her.
|
||
|
||
"I'd been kissed before," she,related. "But never like that.
|
||
The boys I'd been going around with were pretty amateurish. I
|
||
didn't have sense enough to know that this was just good technique.
|
||
I thought that it was the real thing." She laughed a little. "Don't
|
||
think I'm so dumb. Men are mighty egotistical about the way they
|
||
kiss or hug a girl, but a lot of them have the idea that the thing
|
||
to do is break a girl's neck or crush her ribs and then aim in the
|
||
general direction of her mouth, This man was different. I wasn't
|
||
such an idiot as I sound in falling for him."
|
||
|
||
She talked a good deal about it. I let her ramble on. It was
|
||
for her nerves and I want to have all the details I can before I do
|
||
anything about these cases. Success as an abortionist depends on a
|
||
lot of things, and skillful handling of the patient is necessary to
|
||
save my own neck. I must learn everything I can before I commit
|
||
myself.
|
||
|
||
"When I was little," Patricia went on, twisting her hands
|
||
nervously, "I used to worry a lot about how I'd feel when I was
|
||
converted to the Church. I thought there'd be a great blinding
|
||
light of some kind. I thought falling in love would be about the
|
||
same thing. Well, I saw the light all right. Or rather I felt as if
|
||
I'd been shocked by a big volt of electricity.
|
||
|
||
She sat there, a pert, lipsticked young girl with frightened
|
||
eyes. Her hair was smoothly coiffed. She was expensively dressed.
|
||
But her manicured fingers twisted constantly with a handkerchief,
|
||
wadding it and then unfolding it. The red lips trembled as she
|
||
talked.
|
||
|
||
The money expended on her personal appearance, exclusive of
|
||
the casual jewelry she wore, must have been at least a hundred
|
||
dollars. Her parents had provided her with a good home. They spent
|
||
money lavishly on her. Yet they had neglected to prepare her for
|
||
life. Sex to her meant dates, dancing, light flirtation's and
|
||
finally marriage to the "right man" to be picked by heaven-sent
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
48
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
inspiration. No one had ever told her to beware of passion, no one
|
||
had ever told her that her own emotions were unreliable, that she
|
||
carried within her enough dynamite to ruin her life. The thing that
|
||
constantly amazes me about such gals is not that they get into
|
||
trouble but that they do not get into more trouble.
|
||
|
||
"It seemed just like something in a story," the girl went on.
|
||
"Meeting a good-looking stranger and falling in love right away. I
|
||
thought about how I'd gloat over the girls. It was just like a
|
||
movie."
|
||
|
||
She had been unresisting in the hands of an experienced man.
|
||
The sex act had been disappointing. She was a little frightened and
|
||
yet a little thrilled at the emotion of the man. She was so sure
|
||
before that this was love that she was almost incredibly reckless.
|
||
He didn't even tell her his entire name until after her seduction.
|
||
He simply touched a match to all the stored-up longing for romance
|
||
and passion in her 18-year old body. I never laugh at jokes about
|
||
girls who don't find out the real names of their lovers beforehand.
|
||
|
||
Patricia had agreed to go to a little cabin he said he had. It
|
||
all seemed thrilling. She had visions of herself, a gingham apron
|
||
tied over her evening dress, cooking his breakfast. It was in line
|
||
with all the silly 'stories she'd read or seen portrayed on the
|
||
screen in which the 'heroine takes refuge in the hero's cabin and
|
||
he nobly surrenders his bed and sleeps on the couch.
|
||
|
||
This, she thought, was adventure, romance. This was heaven.
|
||
|
||
She spent a week end with him. It was a puzzling week end, but
|
||
her faith in her lover persisted until he dumped her back at the
|
||
resort and said he hoped that he'd see her again sometime. Then the
|
||
whole thing burst upon her full force. She'd deliberately avoided
|
||
asking about several things that seemed strange and had reassured
|
||
herself by thinking of his love-making.
|
||
|
||
In a daze, she murmured some sort of excuse, telling her
|
||
friends that she had been swept off to a house party and there'd
|
||
been no telephone or telegraph facilities. Fortunately they hadn't
|
||
notified her parents of her absence. She had meant to surprise them
|
||
with news of her whirlwind courtship and romantic marriage.
|
||
|
||
She went home and tried to conceal her feelings. She was badly
|
||
hit. She had fallen in love head over heels, and the
|
||
disillusionment was bitter.
|
||
|
||
She felt that she had somehow been lacking; that if she had
|
||
been prettier or more interesting or more passionate she would have
|
||
held the stranger and he would have married her. She was especially
|
||
worried about her lack of passion.
|
||
|
||
"He kept telling me that I was a sweet child and lovable," she
|
||
said. "But I didn't want to be a sweet child. I wanted to be a
|
||
woman."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
49
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Then one day she picked up a paper and saw the picture of her
|
||
lover. He was a notorious gangster. He had been hiding out at the
|
||
resort. Most criminal's are careful about the women they pick up.
|
||
They've known of too many comrades betrayed, either intentionally
|
||
or unconsciously, by a girl outside the racket. Their women have to
|
||
be in the know. They must be able to keep their mouths shut when
|
||
questioned by the police; they must know who is safe and who isn't.
|
||
But some of them forget -- as newspaper headlines and pictures of
|
||
"the woman in the case" show.
|
||
|
||
Patricia's hero, however, was notorious for similar episodes.
|
||
He could not resist a pretty face, and he preferred "nice girls."
|
||
He had left a trail of brief romances all through the Middle West.
|
||
He was handsome, usually had plenty of money, was a liberal spender
|
||
and appeared to be a wealthy young businessman on vacation.
|
||
|
||
He was, of course, a scoundrel, and his sexual crimes were
|
||
worse than his robberies. But then a lot of factors contributed to
|
||
Patricia's private tragedy. One is that conventions have relaxed so
|
||
that introductions are no longer necessary and young girls know
|
||
little or nothing about the men they meet at parties and dances.
|
||
Another is that while mother's may warn their daughters vaguely
|
||
against strangers, there has grown up a romantic tradition of the
|
||
fascinating stranger. He is encountered in parks, taxis, at the
|
||
theater, at parties, in lonely mountain cabins, on yachts, and, he
|
||
is always at the scene of any accident. In fiction, he is
|
||
invariably chivalrous and proposes after the first kiss, In real
|
||
life, he's a risky subject.
|
||
|
||
Patricia had not told her mother when she missed menstruation
|
||
and decided she was pregnant.
|
||
|
||
"I can't," she said. "I'll do anything before I'll tell her.
|
||
She thinks I'm such a nice, sweet girl, and it would break her
|
||
heart. If I can keep her from finding this out, I will be a nice
|
||
girl. I've learned my lesson. But she'd never get over it. She'd
|
||
tell me that she'd rather see me dread. And she'd blame herself for
|
||
letting me go on an unchaperoned house party. She'd always be
|
||
suspicious of me afterward, She'd want to keep me under lock and
|
||
key, and she'd be asking questions all the time about my friend's.
|
||
Father would have to be told and he'd say that I've brought
|
||
disgrace on the family."
|
||
|
||
She was crying now. I remembered the young girl who'd come to
|
||
me when I first started to practice and how she'd killed herself.
|
||
Here was my chance to wipe out that old feeling of guilt.
|
||
|
||
"There, there," I said soothingly. "It's all right. Your
|
||
parents won't need to know anything about it." "I've got money,"
|
||
she sobbed. "I've got $200. It's my Christmas and birthday money.
|
||
And I can sell my pearls."
|
||
|
||
"You won't need much money," I soothed her. "But you'll have
|
||
to manage to be away from home for a few days. Can you do that?"
|
||
|
||
She nodded. Then she began to cry again.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
50
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"I'm all right. I'm just relieved. It's been so awful, not
|
||
daring to say anything. I worried all the time even before I knew
|
||
I was overdue. And then I'd dream I was all right and wake up
|
||
believing it."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I told her. Such dreams are common to pregnant
|
||
women, just as women who are worried about themselves may dream of
|
||
pregnancy.
|
||
|
||
I've heard women going into orgies of self-pity over their
|
||
tragic lives when there's been sickness in the family, financial
|
||
distress and even death. And I always think of that gallant, tragic
|
||
army of young women who march into my office on leaden feet.
|
||
There's a vast difference between trouble that can be shared, and
|
||
trouble that must be kept secret.
|
||
|
||
The real tragedies are the young Patricias, who must pretend
|
||
to be gay and guard carefully against any betrayal of their
|
||
worries. Patricia had to stand alone. She had not even dared to go
|
||
to her family doctor. She had got my name by accidentally hearing
|
||
a conversation in which a girl said that I'd arranged an abortion
|
||
for a friend "
|
||
|
||
She had been afraid that her doctor would tell her parents. Of
|
||
course, he would have kept the secret. But it is usually less
|
||
embarrassing to go to strangers with humiliating confessions. Every
|
||
time she saw her doctor thereafter, she would be reminded of her
|
||
sordid episode.
|
||
|
||
It would have been safer for me had I insisted that Patricia
|
||
tell the story to her parents and obtain their permission for the
|
||
abortion. Her father was prominent in the town. If anything
|
||
happened to Patricia, he would raise hell and might charge me with
|
||
anything from murder to being the father of the unborn child.
|
||
Patricia's story, sounded a little fishy, which made me trust her.
|
||
Stories that are too pat probably have been framed. The unexpected
|
||
usually happens in sex.
|
||
|
||
Patricia was sure that her parents would object to an
|
||
abortion.
|
||
|
||
"They wouldn't do anything but make my life miserable," she
|
||
explained. "They'd call me a murderer and they'd make me have the
|
||
child and then put it in an orphanage. An abortion doesn't seem any
|
||
worse than that. And they wouldn't believe my story. They'd think
|
||
I was shielding someone, and they'd talk day and night trying to
|
||
get me to name the man. They're old. They don't understand how I
|
||
wanted excitement and how tired I got of the nice boys who brought
|
||
me home at 10 o'clock. But believe me, I'll appreciate the nice
|
||
boys from now on."
|
||
|
||
I didn't tell her what her parents would do to me if they
|
||
found out. She was going to keep her mouth shut. And it would have
|
||
frightened her needlessly. However, I've seen some "helping hands"
|
||
get slapped.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
51
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
A friend of mine helped his niece by marriage to get an
|
||
abortion. She was an adopted child, and the family was puritanical.
|
||
So the girl went to him, and he gave her the money and brought her
|
||
to me. Her lover was a worthless scamp who went away at the first
|
||
news of trouble.
|
||
|
||
Several years later she died. In her possession, were papers
|
||
that revealed the story, but fortunately, not my name. However, her
|
||
uncle's connection was shown.
|
||
|
||
There was a great uproar. The abortion had nothing to do with
|
||
the girl's death. But her relatives professed to believe that it
|
||
had "ruined" her. Furthermore, they declared the uncle must have
|
||
been the man in the case. Otherwise, why did the girl go to him
|
||
instead of her parents and why did he help her in secrecy?
|
||
|
||
He told his story, but they did not believe him. He had no
|
||
right, they said, to take so much responsibility. His wife left
|
||
him. The name of the poor, dead girl was bandied about by the
|
||
people who had talked so loudly of their love for her.
|
||
|
||
"Everything I ever did with or for her was raked up wrong
|
||
interpretation given it," he told me. "I loaned her my car
|
||
occasionally. She used it for dates. She may have told her folks
|
||
that she was out with me. I don't know. She was of age and I
|
||
figured she knew what she was doing. She would have gone ahead with
|
||
her affairs anyhow. And now, because she came to me when she was in
|
||
trouble, they're trying to make me out an absolute scoundrel."
|
||
|
||
"I'd give her a drink once in a while," he went on. "She
|
||
couldn't drink at home. And I gave her cigarettes. That's dragged
|
||
out now to show that I had a tremendous affair with this girl. I
|
||
gave her the money for the abortion because she didn't have any and
|
||
she needed it at once and she couldn't think of anyone else to go
|
||
to. She knew that I had a good income and could get it for her
|
||
without much trouble. And she knew I'd keep my mouth shut about it.
|
||
She said she'd pay me back but she never got enough money together,
|
||
and she knew I didn't need it badly."
|
||
|
||
"Calm down," I told him. "I could tell the way you behaved
|
||
when you brought her to me that you weren't responsible for it. You
|
||
were worried about the girl and you were fond of her, but I could
|
||
see that you weren't guilty, and you never tried to defend yourself
|
||
then."
|
||
|
||
I thought of this case and what happened to my friend when I
|
||
agreed that it was best that Patricia not tell her parents. I'm not
|
||
saying that it was best. As it happened, it did turn out all right.
|
||
Patricia arranged a "trip," and instead went to a discreet
|
||
apartment hotel where she could have seclusion and be treated for
|
||
colitis.
|
||
|
||
Naturally she was nervous as the dickens and I let her blow
|
||
off to me. She had a nurse, but she liked to talk to me. While she
|
||
was firm in her decision not to tell her mother, she fretted about
|
||
it and conducted debates with herself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
52
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Mother is fine," she said, "but she worries me so with
|
||
questions about little things. Usually it's something I don't mind
|
||
telling her. But she tries to worm it out of me in a tactful
|
||
fashion and I can see through her little tricks and that annoys me.
|
||
She'll try to find out what time I came home. Instead of asking me
|
||
a direct question, she beats around the bush. She doesn't know I've
|
||
ever had a cocktail and she disapproves of my smoking. And she
|
||
talks about my boy friends in such a silly, areh way that it keeps
|
||
me from being honest about my dates."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I said. "All mothers and daughters -- or most of
|
||
them -- go through the same stage. The mother can't become adjusted
|
||
to the idea that her daughter has a right to private thoughts and
|
||
a private life."
|
||
|
||
Sometimes I've thought it would be a good thing if mothers
|
||
could hear some of the things their daughter's tell me -- and I get
|
||
the cases where the mothers apparently have made a failure of their
|
||
job. I told Patricia that.
|
||
|
||
"I don't think it would do any good," she replied, "It might
|
||
change mother in the long run. But she'd be hurt at first because
|
||
I didn't talk to her instead of a doctor. I can't treat mother like
|
||
a human being. She's always reminding me that she's my mother, and
|
||
so I must give everything she says special consideration. For
|
||
instance, if I do something silly, just a little harmless thing, I
|
||
can't tell mother about it and laugh. She will give me a lecture
|
||
from a sense of duty. Even if I know I made a fool of myself and
|
||
admit it, she's still got to go motherly on me."
|
||
|
||
If mother's could only learn to graduate their supervision
|
||
through the teens and concentrate on the bigger things, I'd lose a
|
||
lot of my business but I'd be thankful to do it. But they are so
|
||
accustomed to commanding their children's lives, from what time
|
||
they go to bed and get up to what they eat and wear and think, that
|
||
they can't get used to the idea that their children now have minds
|
||
of their own and that these minds must be respected.
|
||
|
||
Patricia's mother was fairly typical of a certain class of
|
||
well-to-do women. Of course, Patricia's case was unusual in that
|
||
she met an utter rotter. But she might have received virtually the
|
||
same treatment at the hands of a jaded businessman on vacation at
|
||
a resort and a little plastered. Or she might have been knocked up
|
||
by a reckless school boy who would be too frightened to be of any
|
||
help. Such lads get panicky, try to evade the blame and in so doing
|
||
spread the story and do the girl more harm. They rush to their
|
||
parents, deny everything and the story is circulated that way.
|
||
|
||
Patricia's mother lost her daughter's confidence because she
|
||
failed to give the girl the same friendliness and tolerance that
|
||
she would give some one not a relative. She expected perfection
|
||
from her daughter, and even the most modest mothers seem to think
|
||
that this perfection can be attained by implicit obedience.
|
||
Maternal orders usually are so vague or so contradictory that the
|
||
daughter finally ignores them altogether and begins a series of
|
||
minor deceptions which can never be ended because confession of one
|
||
of them would cause the mothers to become suspicious or to discover
|
||
the others.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
53
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Mother is always telling me to be like Mary Warren, and she's
|
||
a pill." Patricia said. "She never gets to go anywhere. Or she
|
||
tells me to be like some girl who plays up to the chaperons and
|
||
gets away with murder on the sly. She never gives me any practical
|
||
advice. She just tells me to be a nice girl and to associate only
|
||
with nice boys and girls and gives me a lot of platitudes. She told
|
||
me once that I shouldn't let boys kiss me. But all the girls pet a
|
||
little, and if I didn't I wouldn't go anywhere."
|
||
|
||
"She never told me anything about --" Patricia stopped rather
|
||
than use any words for sexual intercourse. "She always says that
|
||
she'll tell me more about thing's at the proper time. I suppose she
|
||
means when I marry. She just says for me not to do anything bad.
|
||
But this didn't seem bad when I did it. I couldn't help It. Or I
|
||
thought I couldn't. I got all dizzy when Darrell started kissing
|
||
me, and then I was weak and burning all over."
|
||
|
||
It sounds almost unbelievable that there could be girls as
|
||
innocent as Patricia in the world today. But there are. Some of the
|
||
girls who tell risque jokes so glibly are almost as ignorant of the
|
||
volcanic properties of sex.
|
||
|
||
Patricia went home a sadder and wiser girl. As far as I know,
|
||
she never told her mother about her experience. Later she married
|
||
a young bank clerk whose chief characteristic seemed to be
|
||
placidity. She had lost her taste for excitement and wanted the
|
||
prosaic.
|
||
|
||
A mother I consider far above the average in intelligence told
|
||
me that she had been criticized by her neighbors for bringing the
|
||
confessions magazines home and allowing her daughter's to read
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
"The literary standard may not be high and the stories may be
|
||
written by staff members," she remarked. "I don't mind that. We
|
||
have plenty of good books in the house to offset any lowering of
|
||
literary standards. I told my girls the facts of life as early as
|
||
I thought they would understand them. I was criticized for that,
|
||
too, because the neighboring mothers were still favoring the stork
|
||
theory and the doctor's black bag, and they were peeved because my
|
||
children explained the processes of nature to their youngsters. But
|
||
I never saw any reason for lying to children if I could keep from
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
"I've had mothers say they didn't wish their children to read
|
||
the newspapers because they were so full of scandal. It's my
|
||
experience that adolescents don't read the newspapers enough. I
|
||
encourage that. I may be robbing my children of the bloom of
|
||
innocence, but when my oldest boy has a hangover he tell's me so
|
||
with a sheepish look and I fix him a pick-up and he doesn't need a
|
||
lecture. I know he's going to do a little drinking and I want to
|
||
know what he drinks and see that he doesn't make too big a fool of
|
||
himself. I won't find out if I try the heavy mother act. I let him
|
||
give beer parties at the house and I don't sit around telling the
|
||
boys how nice it is that they come and how I want to know all
|
||
Jimmy's little friends. That went out after his 10th birthday. I
|
||
tell them that the house is theirs, but not to break any furniture.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
54
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I encouraged Jimmy to start dating when he was young because I
|
||
figured he'd be safer with a nice girl than he would be hanging
|
||
around pool halls or running the streets with a gang of sensation-
|
||
hunting boys. I had his father give him a lecture on diseases and
|
||
dangers of picking-up girls, too, with no mincing of words about
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
"I told my girls the same thing. I don't want them to think
|
||
that sex is a sordid matter, but I do want them to be able to
|
||
distinguish between cheap thrills and genuine affection when it
|
||
comes. I don't want my girls to be manhandled and overkissed. But
|
||
I want them to do enough kissing that they won't be swept off their
|
||
feet the first time anyone puts any enthusiasm in the embrace. I
|
||
gossip with them, too, for that's an easy way of putting in my
|
||
opinions without a formal lecture on the style of 'Now mother wants
|
||
to tell her little girls something.' It's just as foolish to let a
|
||
teen-age girl remain ignorant of the dangers of sex as it is to let
|
||
her go motoring without warning her of the dangers of drunken
|
||
driving."
|
||
|
||
"How is it working out?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"Fine," she said. "I have to catch myself from relating to
|
||
neighbor mothers some facts about their dear, pure daughters that
|
||
my girls have told me. They're still trying to keep that virgin
|
||
bloom on the theory that the girls will be more attractive brides
|
||
in the marriage market. But if my prospective sons-in-law are going
|
||
to be frightened away because my daughters know the detail's of
|
||
their anatomy and the difference between a marriage proposal and a
|
||
proposition, they can remain away. They'll find out all the facts
|
||
sooner or later and I'd prefer that they find out from me. That
|
||
way, I know they'll learn the truth and not a distorted version
|
||
from some girl friend. It's easier for them to hear it from me, and
|
||
they won't be afraid of shocking me with confidences. I want them
|
||
to talk easily to me. If ever any of them need your services,
|
||
doctor," she concluded with a smile, "I'll be right along. But I
|
||
don't think they will."
|
||
|
||
And they haven't either. If more mothers were like Mrs. X, the
|
||
world would be a better place for everyone except abortionists.
|
||
Some of the young girls who come to me have been warned
|
||
sufficiently about the dangers of sex but in such garbled fashion
|
||
that they received no practical information and sex held a morbid
|
||
fascination for them. Some of them were frightened to death after
|
||
they had their first sex experience. But when nothing happened,
|
||
they recovered from their scare. They were excited over their
|
||
initiation into womanhood and they went to extremes. Their mothers
|
||
had tried to control them by fright rather than reason. When fright
|
||
left, there was no longer any deterrent.
|
||
|
||
"I try to make chastity something besides just a word to my
|
||
daughters," Mrs. X said. "There are so many jokes about chastity
|
||
and the scarcity of virgins that the mere terms are not enough to
|
||
do any good. Common sense and good taste must be added.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
55
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"I tell them that they're pretty girls and a lot of men are
|
||
going to want them. But they must have a yardstick to measure the
|
||
men and they must think of the future. You can't expect girls to do
|
||
much reasoning when a man is making love to them. But if you can
|
||
get them to ask themselves if they would want to marry this man,
|
||
you have a foundation for good behavior. If he's attractive enough
|
||
to be considered seriously as a husband, then the girl should not
|
||
risk losing marriage by an affair. If he's not husband-material,
|
||
he's not good enough to be taken as a casual lover. My girls must
|
||
learn to make their own decisions, but they must have something on
|
||
which to base their judgment. Just telling them to go around with
|
||
nice men and to behave isn't enough."
|
||
|
||
She is right. Some of the mothers who come weeping into my
|
||
office wondering why their daughters failed to follow their advice
|
||
were always careful to tell their girls to be "nice."
|
||
|
||
Even when confronted with evidence of their failures, many
|
||
such mothers resent any insinuation that they did not follow the
|
||
wisest course. They have the excuse of the weakling, "I did the
|
||
best I could." The favorite alibi is, "My children won't listen to
|
||
me any more," These mothers never pause to wonder why their
|
||
children won't listen to them.
|
||
|
||
Patricia's mother undoubtedly would have wrung her hands and
|
||
justified herself by saying, "But how could I know that Pat would
|
||
meet a horrible gangster?"
|
||
|
||
How could she know Pat wouldn't meet a gangster? She knew
|
||
there were such things. Pat might have received worse treatment. At
|
||
least, she didn't get a disease. How could she know her glamour-
|
||
seeking daughter might not meet a blackmailer who would drug her
|
||
and photograph her nude in an obscene pose? Girls of some of the
|
||
best families have been treated in such fashion. How could she know
|
||
that her daughter wouldn't meet some diseased and reckless youth
|
||
who thought it smart to give a girl a dose or to knock her up! How
|
||
could she know that Pat might not meet some man with emotions so
|
||
jaded that his ardor could only be aroused by fresh young purity or
|
||
a pervert seeking new converts? How could she be so blindly
|
||
optimistic as to think that a young girl guided only by platitudes
|
||
would reach the altar without a single misstep along the way?
|
||
|
||
IX. SOME TRAGEDY AND COMEDY
|
||
|
||
All my cases do not have happy endings. A young country girl
|
||
was brought to me by her father. She was a rather attractive girl,
|
||
but sensitive about her "country" look. She had gone to a town
|
||
high-school and had been embarrassed by her sunburned skin, her
|
||
work-roughened hands, her faded and old-fashioned dresses. She had
|
||
no mother, and she had to work hard. Her father was a prosperous
|
||
farmer, but it never occurred to him to hire a girl to do the
|
||
housework while his daughter went to school.
|
||
|
||
As a consequence, his daughter was always a little harassed by
|
||
the conflict between her housework, her studying and her school
|
||
days. She had little time to devote to her personal appearance,
|
||
even if she had possessed money and taste to buy clothes. I tell
|
||
this because it was important from the standpoint of what happened
|
||
to her.
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
56
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Small town's are more snobbish than cities, because lines are
|
||
more sharply visible. The daughters of the town's leading families
|
||
sneered at Kate. And most of the other girls toadied to them. So
|
||
she was deprived of the normal girl companionship of high-school.
|
||
She had no chum with whom to discuss her crushes, and, anyhow, she
|
||
had no time for walking arm in arm around the town after school,
|
||
going to basketball and football games, having sodas in the drug
|
||
store.
|
||
|
||
This lack of time would seem to prevent her from getting into
|
||
trouble. But, instead, it had the opposite effect. She was So
|
||
hungry for any sort of companionship that she proved a "pushover"
|
||
for the small-town toughs. The high-school boys did not think it
|
||
necessary to treat a "green country girl" with any respect or to
|
||
ask her on regular dates and parties. One of the boys took her home
|
||
one night from a play and "made" her. She was flattered because he
|
||
came from a "good" family, and she was too dumb to realize that he
|
||
was treating her like an unpaid prostitute. He had several similar
|
||
"dates" with her, usually leaving her immediately after --
|
||
sometimes making her walk home. Presently she learned that she was
|
||
pregnant.
|
||
|
||
Her father found her weeping one day and forced her to tell
|
||
him the story. She concealed the name of the boy from him and she
|
||
refused to tell me. I gathered, however, from talking to her that
|
||
she had been with several boys. I think she knew which one of them
|
||
was to blame, but he had apparently threatened her with something,
|
||
and so she protected him. Probably he used the old trick of telling
|
||
her that he would deny everything and that he would prove she had
|
||
gone with other boys.
|
||
|
||
She maintained a sullen, frightened silence most of the time
|
||
she was in my office. Her father wanted me to get the man's name
|
||
from her so that he could either horsewhip him or force him to
|
||
marry Kate.
|
||
|
||
"He won't marry me, papa," the girl said. "I told you that.
|
||
Ain't no use trying."
|
||
|
||
The girl was diseased, too, and I refused to risk an abortion.
|
||
|
||
"I can cure the disease," I told her father. "Then perhaps you
|
||
can send her away somewhere to have the child."
|
||
|
||
He grunted, and they left. Several days later I heard that the
|
||
girl had hanged herself from a rafter in the barn loft. Maybe it
|
||
was for the best. Life would have been a pretty dismal business if
|
||
she had had to remain in the same community. Fundamentally she was
|
||
a decent girl. She had simply been the victim of cheap small-town
|
||
toughs and a social system. Probably she was wise in not telling
|
||
her father the names of her lovers -- although that is a strange
|
||
word to use in such a case. The boy to blame might have been
|
||
frightened into a shotgun marriage. But if he were under age, the
|
||
marriage could be annulled by his parents. There would be an ugly
|
||
quarrel in which the girl's name would be drugged deeper into the
|
||
filth and the whole incident made unforgettable.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
57
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I saw that happen in another small-town case. The boy, a son
|
||
of the local banker, was called "wild," but I have a more blunt
|
||
term for youths of his type. He was spoiled by too much money, too
|
||
much prestige. For several years there were rumors of how he had
|
||
tried to assault various girls, but they were kept quiet for fear
|
||
of parental wrath. The banker could make things financially
|
||
embarrassing for a great many people. The boy behaved himself
|
||
fairly well around girls of his own set.
|
||
|
||
Then he seduced the daughter of a widow. "Seduced" is the
|
||
proper term, for I believe he led her to believe that he meant to
|
||
marry her. Perhaps he didn't say so in so many words, but he told
|
||
her that he loved her, and to her 16-year-old mind that meant
|
||
marriage.
|
||
|
||
He bragged to all the town youth of his conquest of a virgin.
|
||
Some of the other boys tried to follow in his footsteps, but had no
|
||
luck. Then the girl became Pregnant. She went to the boy and asked
|
||
that their marriage be hurried. He took the refuge of such sexual
|
||
cowards. He said that he was not to blame, refused to believe that
|
||
she had been faithful to him and even that she had been a virgin.
|
||
|
||
She was a delicate little thing with an Irish beauty, smoky
|
||
gray eyes, black curls and a fair skin with a few freckles
|
||
scattered over her nose. Ordinarily she was shy, but desperation
|
||
lent her new courage. She tried to see the boy's mother. She
|
||
failed, but the boy heard of it and got the wind up, He went to his
|
||
father and told him that the girl was trying to force him into
|
||
marriage. He painted the girl as a fortune hunter, knowing this the
|
||
most powerful appeal to his money-mad parent.
|
||
|
||
The banker was enthusiastic about his Son's plan of getting
|
||
other boys to swear that they, too, had intercourse with the girl,
|
||
Bessie, and that she had not been a virgin at the time. Then the
|
||
father went to Bessie's mother and accused her of trying to marry
|
||
her daughter to his son. This was the first the amazed woman had
|
||
beard of the whole thing. She knew Bessie had been dating the
|
||
banker's son, but she thought it just a boy and girl friendship.
|
||
|
||
For once, a mother remained loyal. Usually it seems to me that
|
||
those whose love and faith should be bulwarks for our younger
|
||
generation are the first to believe any rumors about their beloved
|
||
offspring. I've had girls fell me that their mothers accused them
|
||
of immorality if they stayed out late at night, and refused to
|
||
believe their explanation of tardiness. Some of these girls
|
||
eventually decided that they might as well play the game if they
|
||
were to get the blame.
|
||
|
||
But Bessie's mother, Mrs. G, refused to believe the banker's
|
||
lurid tale of how Bessie had been playing fast and loose with the
|
||
town boys and was now trying to fasten the blame on his innocent
|
||
son. Part of her loyalty may have sprung from the banker's misstep
|
||
in including her in the accusation. He blamed her for plotting the
|
||
whole business and using her daughter as a willing tool.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
58
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Mrs. G. also refused to believe that her daughter had been
|
||
intimate with any boy other than the banker's son. Bessie told her
|
||
the whole thing, and she upheld her daughter. The town was in an
|
||
uproar. The widow and her daughter were requested to leave. A
|
||
friend of Mrs. G's brought her to me.
|
||
|
||
"I wouldn't want my daughter to marry a boy like that, even if
|
||
he were willing," she said. "What kind of a life could she lead
|
||
with him after this? And I certainly don't want her to have a child
|
||
by him. He isn't fit to be a father. I don't want any of his money,
|
||
and I don't want my daughter to have a child that would be
|
||
supported by such horrible people. I'm going to leave the town and
|
||
I want to get rid of the child. But X isn't going to get off by
|
||
paying me a little money."
|
||
|
||
In the general uproar, some of the boys revealed -- in
|
||
youthful boasts -- how they had lied about Bessie and how young X
|
||
had bragged that Bessie was a virgin. The banker soon saw that he
|
||
had stirred up a hornet's nest. The whole story came out, and was
|
||
whispered throughout the community. The banker's enemies took
|
||
delight in spreading it. Finally he tried to buy off the widow. She
|
||
refused any of his money, even enough to pay for the abortion. The
|
||
banker's son was shipped off to a military academy.
|
||
|
||
The girl got her abortion. I saw to that. There was no time
|
||
for arguing over who was to pay for it and who wasn't. I admired
|
||
the widow's spunk in refusing the money that, according to any
|
||
code, her daughter was entitled to. It was her best way of refuting
|
||
charges that she was trying to gold-dig or blackmail the banker.
|
||
She had to leave the town, of course, for the girl's sake. But she
|
||
was not entirely unavenged.
|
||
|
||
I don't mean to paint all small towns as dens of iniquity
|
||
where a poor girl is never safe. If I exaggerate, it is simply that
|
||
I hear few tales of sweetness and light in my office.
|
||
|
||
Shortly after the case of Mrs. G, I got exactly the opposite.
|
||
A designing mother accused the son of a prominent man of seducing
|
||
her daughter. The son denied it, and the father believed him. They
|
||
forced the girl to have an examination, which proved that she was
|
||
a virgin.
|
||
|
||
In my business, you soon learn that truth about sex is
|
||
stranger than fiction. A prosecuting attorney told me of a 10-year-
|
||
old girl who came into his office with her mother. The child's
|
||
parents were divorced and she divided her time between them.
|
||
|
||
The father lived on a farm. The girl didn't like it, and she
|
||
wrote her mother making accusations of incest against her father.
|
||
The mother rushed to her, and then went to the prosecutor to file
|
||
charges against her former husband and to obtain complete custody
|
||
of the child.
|
||
|
||
"The kid acted mighty funny," the attorney told me. "I could
|
||
see that she didn't like to live in the country. She was used to
|
||
town, where she could go to movies and have plenty of playmates. So
|
||
I had the county physician examine her. Sure enough, he found no
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
59
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
signs that she'd been ravished. The kid then admitted that she'd
|
||
made the whole story up so that she could go back to her mother. I
|
||
told the mother that she'd better drop the charges and work out
|
||
some friendly agreement with her ex-husband.
|
||
|
||
He sighed. "Attorneys and doctors hear some queer things" he
|
||
said philosophically.
|
||
|
||
He was right. When people ask the secret of my marital
|
||
happiness I say that I see enough tragedy in my office and I
|
||
learned my lessons without any experiments at home.
|
||
|
||
A colleague of mine told me about a prominent woman who was
|
||
trying to divorce her husband. She told all her friends he was
|
||
impotent. Just as they succeeded in agreeing on a friendly charge,
|
||
she became pregnant.
|
||
|
||
I don't know how she managed her divorce, but it probably was
|
||
an embarrassing situation. My colleague laughed heartily. I didn't.
|
||
For a somewhat similar case was brought to me.
|
||
|
||
"I'm planning to divorce my husband," the woman, whom I shall
|
||
call Janet said. "I'm going to marry another man. And now to throw
|
||
a monkey wrench into the works, I am pregnant."
|
||
|
||
"Well," I told her, "if you're planning to marry the man, go
|
||
ahead and have the child. You can get the divorce in Reno in plenty
|
||
of time. It may be a bit embarrassing, but that's one of the risks
|
||
you took. You and your lover will just have to face the music."
|
||
|
||
"You don't understand," she said. "My husband is the father of
|
||
the child."
|
||
|
||
With difficulty I restrained a grin. "That does make it a
|
||
problem."
|
||
|
||
"I can't go through with it," she explained desperately. "You
|
||
see, it's like this. I'm divorcing my husband because of
|
||
infidelity. We've been married about five years and I see there's
|
||
no hope of changing his ways. He's fond of me but he can't resist
|
||
women -- and they can't resist him. I don't think these affairs
|
||
mean much to him -- but they mean a lot to me."
|
||
|
||
Janet paused for a few moments, searching for words. I waited.
|
||
You can't just walk into a doctor's office -- unless he's an out-
|
||
and-out quack -- and demand an abortion. All these confessions may
|
||
sound a bit queer, but if a doctor has any standing at all, he has
|
||
to be convinced that for the sake of humanity this case is worth
|
||
taking a risk.
|
||
|
||
"I stood it as long as I could," she said. "Finally I was
|
||
forced to realize that such a marriage would drive me crazy. I like
|
||
security. I want to be respectable. Don made me feel casual,
|
||
unimportant. I was his wife, but there was nothing that we had that
|
||
he didn't share with any woman of uneasy virtue. It was killing my
|
||
love and my self respect. I was tormented by jealousy at first, and
|
||
then I found myself becoming a little resigned. But I never knew
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
60
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
when he'd meet some woman who'd make a fuss. One or two of his
|
||
flames did come to me and demand that I give Don up to them. Don
|
||
was horrified at that. He liked being married to me -- because it
|
||
gave him plenty of freedom. But I hate scenes."
|
||
|
||
"And then," Janet went on. "I met Andy. I admit I poured it on
|
||
a little about being the misunderstood wife. Andy was sympathetic,
|
||
and we fell in love with each other. With Andy I could have
|
||
everything I want, security, comfort. I could be an actual wife. He
|
||
is steady-going and he has high ideals. If I lose Andy, I'll
|
||
probably try the dismal experiment of becoming a philandering wife.
|
||
I'm not cut out for that sort of thing and I'd make a mess of it."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I told her. I'd 'seen plenty of women driven to
|
||
extramarital affairs by unfaithful husbands. Frequently it wrecks
|
||
their marriages because the husbands never feel that anything they
|
||
have done justifies the same action in their wives.
|
||
|
||
"Andy and I agreed that I should get a divorce," Janet
|
||
continued. "I put off telling Don about it. I know Andy won't
|
||
understand that. He's a matter-of-fact person who makes a decision
|
||
and sticks to it. And he couldn't understand how I could still be
|
||
fond of Don and hate to hurt him, even if he has hurt me a lot in
|
||
the past. Finally I just left the traditional note on the pin
|
||
cushion and departed."
|
||
|
||
"And then?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"And then I discover I'm pregnant." She shrugged her
|
||
shoulders. "I've got to do something about it, and I didn't want to
|
||
try any crude things that might keep me from bearing Andy's
|
||
children. It's so early that it should be simple. But you can see
|
||
my position. I could never make Andy understand that after I had
|
||
agreed to a divorce I would take my husband as a lover. I've
|
||
thought of all the possible reasons and none of them would be
|
||
credible to Andy. He'd feel that I didn't really love him -- and I
|
||
do. He'd think it my duty to stay with Don if I loved him enough to
|
||
go to bed with him, and he'd think me utterly a hussy if I told him
|
||
I didn't want to live with Don any more."
|
||
|
||
"And why did you do it?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"I don't know." Janet flung her hands up. "Why do we do
|
||
anything? Why did I marry Don when I knew pretty well what he was
|
||
then? I did it because he was so attractive to me that I felt I'd
|
||
rather risk a little unhappiness than lose him entirely. And oddly
|
||
enough I'm still a little fond of him. We've lived together five
|
||
years. It's hard to wipe all of that out. To be honest," she turned
|
||
and faced me, "I think it was more or less force of habit. He came
|
||
into my room late at night when I was asleep, and the next thing I
|
||
knew he was making love to me. That was always Don's way of
|
||
starting a reconciliation after he'd been unfaithful. And I had
|
||
submitted to him before when I was angry or sad, and, anyhow, there
|
||
wasn't time to think. I suppose I could have made a scene and told
|
||
Don I meant to divorce him. But the fact remains that I didn't.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
61
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Maybe there was a little sentimentalism about it, too. A
|
||
desire to have one pleasant night with Don before our life was
|
||
closed entirely. Anyhow, he stayed the rest of the night with me,
|
||
and I didn't use any preventives. And, of all the nights, it had to
|
||
be that one on which I was caught. I once wanted a child thinking
|
||
it would help me hold Don. Later, I decided it would be bad because
|
||
Don didn't care for children; he would assuredly be unfaithful
|
||
while I was pregnant and I would hate that and the child would make
|
||
me even more helpless. Now, just as I had put an end to the whole
|
||
dismal mess, this had to happen."
|
||
|
||
"Don't you think you ought to tell Andy the truth?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"What is the truth?" Janet asked. "That I, being still a wife
|
||
in name, did not refuse my husband? I can't ask Andy to marry me
|
||
when I'm carrying Don's child. It would be an impossible situation.
|
||
If the child already were born, it would be different. He might not
|
||
object to a two or three-year-old child, although Andy is great on
|
||
doing his duty and there would be difficulty about the custody of
|
||
the child. But I couldn't go to him like this. There would be jokes
|
||
-- he'd be suspected of being the father, of course. It might
|
||
seriously hurt, his business career if there was scandal."
|
||
|
||
"Can't you blame it on Andy?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
She shook her head. "He's too honorable. We haven't been
|
||
lovers, and he won't take me until we're married. I know; I've
|
||
offered myself to him.
|
||
|
||
"He isn't as much of a prig as I've made him out to be. Just
|
||
as I suppose I've given Don a little too much of the worst of it in
|
||
talking to Andy. A woman probably would understand how I
|
||
automatically let my husband make passionate love to me when I was
|
||
half-asleep. And she could understand how, even when I had decided
|
||
it was impossible for me to live with Don any longer, I could have
|
||
a sort of affection for him, a remembrance of our honeymoon days
|
||
and early married life and the fun we have had together, that would
|
||
make it pleasant, even more pleasant when I thought that it would
|
||
be our last time together."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I said. "Over-compensation. You find it in men and
|
||
women who are being unfaithful or have decided to separate. The
|
||
guilty person feels that he or she has taken something important
|
||
away from the other mate and by way of compensation lavishes
|
||
tenderness on them."
|
||
|
||
She nodded. "But Andy's never been married, and I'm afraid
|
||
he's never had any really passionate love affairs. I say I'm
|
||
afraid, because I'll probably make a lot of little slips, such as
|
||
calling him Don or talking about Don without rancor. But he's what
|
||
I want, and he's what I need. I'm not going to let Don or Don's
|
||
unexpected child cheat me out of it."
|
||
|
||
Here was a neat problem. She could have gone back to Don. She
|
||
had not committed adultery, and she said Don would take her back,
|
||
although he did not seem greatly upset over. her desertion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
62
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"He fancies I'll come back of my own free will if he lets me
|
||
alone," she said. "And he's too lazy to exert himself. Out of sight
|
||
is out of mind with Don. If he happened to meet me he'd probably
|
||
make an eloquent little speech urging me to return and saying he is
|
||
broken-hearted. But if he doesn't see me, he'll let the whole thing
|
||
slide and besides he might take the attitude that the child is
|
||
Andy's and I've been jilted by Andy. He couldn't understand Andy's
|
||
attitude in not making passionate love to me. Anyhow, as I said, I
|
||
don't want to go back to Don."
|
||
|
||
Perhaps she should have told Andy. After all, the child was
|
||
not illegitimate. She was not disgraced. She had made Andy no
|
||
promises. Janet was not a loose woman. But, as she said, a bachelor
|
||
of Andy's type could not realize how after several years of
|
||
marriage sex becomes more or less automatic. Don, of course, was
|
||
innocent of blame in that particular instance. He did not know that
|
||
Janet was planning a friendly divorce. The interlude did not change
|
||
Janet's mind. She merely regarded it as the close of her sex life
|
||
with Don, and she felt that it was really no more of an infidelity
|
||
to Andy than any similar experience she had had with Don since she
|
||
had met Andy.
|
||
|
||
On the surface, it looked as if she should take it on the chin
|
||
and go through what would simply be an embarrassing situation;
|
||
perhaps wait until after the child was born before she got her
|
||
divorce. She was still fond of Don and perhaps she should take up
|
||
her married life again. That probably would be the viewpoint of the
|
||
moralists,
|
||
|
||
But Janet was not stupid about herself or her condition.
|
||
|
||
"My pregnancy is an accident occurring at the worst time," she
|
||
said. "I'm not dumb enough to think that it was an act of God at a
|
||
dramatic moment to keep Don and me together. Don doesn't want
|
||
children. I want them, but I don't want Don's. If I stayed with
|
||
him, I should hate the child, hate myself for being a darned fool
|
||
and hate Don for getting me into this fix, although it really isn't
|
||
his fault. I'd think that his selfish desire to have me when he
|
||
wanted me ruined my life. I'd reached the limit of endurance in my
|
||
present existence. If I felt that sex had cheated me out of my
|
||
chance for happiness, I'd fling my cap over the windmill for good
|
||
and try to outdo Don. Then things would be in a mess."
|
||
|
||
So she got her abortion. Then she obtained a quiet divorce and
|
||
married Andy. They seem very happy. She has never told him of the
|
||
incident. I think she is wise. She understands him as well as one
|
||
person can understand another. And so she knows there are certain
|
||
things that he could never understand.
|
||
|
||
A second husband or wife is always vaguely jealous of the
|
||
first. A second wife was pregnant, and came to me -- not for an
|
||
abortion -- but for other medical advice. As it happened, she had
|
||
had an abortion before marriage.
|
||
|
||
"I've never told David about it and I won't," she said. "He
|
||
talks to me a good deal about his first wife and that's bad enough
|
||
without my chiming in with tales of my past lovers. If he were
|
||
jealous, it would be bad, and if he weren't, it would be worse. I
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
63
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
tried asking David not to talk about Alice, his first wife, but he
|
||
looked surprised and hurt and said one of the nicest things about
|
||
me was that he could talk about such things freely. He doesn't see
|
||
any danger in it, because he knows that it is all over. But I am
|
||
forced to realize that he must once have been very fond of Alice
|
||
and wonder if his affection for me will dwindle just as quickly.
|
||
Also, I can't keep from feeling somehow that his first wife had the
|
||
best of it. She had him when he was youthful and idealistic and
|
||
more romantic than he is now. Of course, I know that my marriage is
|
||
safer because my husband wasn't romantic and impulsive when he
|
||
selected me. All the same, I wince, when he talks of some youthful
|
||
and quixotic thing he did with her."
|
||
|
||
The more I see of the mistakes made in sex, the less I think
|
||
of the noble idea of a man and woman telling everything in their
|
||
pasts before marriage. Of course, if there is something that the
|
||
husband is sure to find out, such as a previous marriage or a
|
||
scandal that will be immediately resurrected, then the woman had
|
||
better beat the gossips to it.
|
||
|
||
"When I became engaged, my husband began asking a lot of
|
||
question's, in a joking way," a woman once told me. "He smiled, but
|
||
he was serious behind his light manner. I hadn't given him an
|
||
opening by asking him about his past. I didn't want to know about
|
||
it. I knew he was virile and he was not diseased. I liked him for
|
||
himself, not for any record as a Casanova or a monk. So after I had
|
||
answered or evaded several questions, I said, Look, John, if you
|
||
want virginal innocence in a bride you have asked the wrong woman
|
||
to marry you. I'm not a virgin and you'd be sorry if, at my age, I
|
||
were. I have done a few things in my life that I regret and very
|
||
few that I'm ashamed of. Probably I've been a fool at times, as who
|
||
hasn't? But I've a sense of loyalty to the men who've been in my
|
||
past and I'm not going to talk about them. I took my affairs
|
||
seriously then or I wouldn't have gone through with them and they
|
||
deserve some reticence now.'"
|
||
|
||
"What did he say?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"He was a little offended at first," she replied. "I told him
|
||
that I hadn't asked him any questions because I thought that a man
|
||
I loved would naturally be all right. I thought I deserved the same
|
||
faith. I was 30 years old when I married. It would have been odd if
|
||
there had been no men in my life. Some of the men had asked me to
|
||
marry them. One of my former lovers still lived in my town. Had I
|
||
told John all about my past, it would have risen to haunt me from
|
||
time to time. John would have looked at my former men friends with
|
||
jealous and prejudiced eyes. He would have suspected me of
|
||
lingering affection for my former lover. Or he might have thought
|
||
that I was regretting not having married some more prosperous man.
|
||
Then he would never understand the accidents."
|
||
|
||
"Accidents?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
She nodded. "Yes, accidents. He'd think they were planned or
|
||
I was weak or something was wrong, although he probably has had the
|
||
same type of experiences. I mean things like going somewhere and
|
||
having the car or the motorboat break down and staying the night.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
64
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Maybe you just sleep. Maybe you sleep together. I'll give you an
|
||
example. A man and I went on an all-day picnic to a cabin omened by
|
||
some mutual friends. The whole thing, I warn you, sounds like a
|
||
plot for a romance except for the ending. We went in a car. when we
|
||
started the man said, 'Now remind me to get some gasoline.' I
|
||
agreed. Well, it was one of those trips when you whiz past a
|
||
filling station and the driver says, 'I should have stopped there,'
|
||
and by that time you're a mile on down the road and you wait for
|
||
the next one. Finally we ran out of stations because we were in a
|
||
wooded country and off the highway. Jack thought we had enough
|
||
gasoline to get us there and back to civilization. There wasn't
|
||
anything. deliberate about it. We were just careless."
|
||
|
||
I grinned. "So you ran out of gas."
|
||
|
||
She nodded again. "We didn't discover it until we got ready to
|
||
go home. We'd spent a perfectly congenial day, had our picnic,
|
||
walked around, admired the views and it was dark when we started to
|
||
go back. The car wouldn't start. I was dead tired. So was Jack.
|
||
Something had gone wrong with the gasoline gauge. It showed about
|
||
two gallons. Jack looked at me and laughed and we decided to stay
|
||
there. The next morning Jack could hunt around for a farmhouse. It
|
||
seemed utterly silly to go barging around in the dark when there
|
||
was a snug cabin stocked with wood and groceries.
|
||
|
||
"Plausible enough," I agreed.
|
||
|
||
"Yes. But here comes the part that is hard to explain to a man
|
||
you're about to marry. I'd met Jack about three years before had
|
||
been attracted to him. But he was going with someone else then and
|
||
so was I, and nothing came of it. About a week or so before the
|
||
picnic, I'd met Jack again. He was just back from a long trip, and
|
||
he gave me a rush. I wasn't going with anyone in particular. We'd
|
||
done a little petting, nothing else.
|
||
|
||
"Jack hadn't been with a woman for months. The inevitable
|
||
happened. I liked and respected Jack. He was very attractive
|
||
physically. But I wasn't in love with him and he wasn't in love
|
||
with me and we didn't pretend to be. I like to look back on the
|
||
episode as being an adventure. The next morning, we found a tin of
|
||
gasoline in the back of a woodshed. If we'd rummaged around a
|
||
little more or had a flashlight we'd probably have found it the
|
||
night before. We laughed, but both of us said that we were glad we
|
||
hadn't discovered it."
|
||
|
||
"And you don't intend to tell your husband about it?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"No," she replied. "You see Jack and I had a couple more dates
|
||
and then his business took him away, probably forever. If he'd
|
||
stayed, we might have had a long love affair; we might even have
|
||
been married by now. I don't know. I've heard men say that when two
|
||
nice people meet and have a powerful physical attraction the thing
|
||
to do is, well, to do something about it. But I once ruined a
|
||
beginning love affair by telling this story to the man. He had told
|
||
me of experiences which seemed much more casual to me. But it
|
||
ruined his idealistic view of me, and he couldn't bear that."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
65
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"So I learned my lesson," she concluded briskly. "I've thought
|
||
a lot about that since. I was going to be frank and straightforward
|
||
with that man. I was being idealistic when I told him about Jack.
|
||
I thought the man was so fine and understanding that he deserved
|
||
nothing less than the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
|
||
truth. I thought he'd appreciate my frankness and my confidence. I
|
||
should have known better. He was extremely jealous, and in his
|
||
jealousy he said things that hurt. Afterward he felt that he'd made
|
||
a fool of himself and he tried to salve his vanity by convincing
|
||
himself I was not what he had thought. This is getting a little
|
||
complicated. But it was a matter of his egotism. He took it calmly
|
||
when I first told him, and afterward he started thinking of it and
|
||
began to get more jealous; and he exploded and insisted I had done
|
||
an awful thing, so he could excuse his own spasm."
|
||
|
||
"I agree with you," I said. "There are only a few things any
|
||
woman needs to tell her husband. I think she should say whether she
|
||
had been married before or that she doesn't really love him and
|
||
loves someone that she can't marry for some reason. Then she should
|
||
tell him if she can't have children, if she doesn't like children
|
||
or if she has a child already. I mean, of course, an illegitimate
|
||
child whose existence is being concealed. Chances are, he'll find
|
||
out about the child later and then it will be worse. And she should
|
||
tell him if there is anything wrong with her physically so that she
|
||
can't do her share in the sex partnership. That seems to me all the
|
||
information any woman needs to or should give her husband and all
|
||
any husband needs to give his wife. I include abortions in the list
|
||
of things she doesn't need to tell him, unless there is a big
|
||
chance that he may find out about it or unless the job has been
|
||
bungled so that she can't have children."
|
||
|
||
There has always seemed something grisly and morbid to me
|
||
about raking over the past just as a marriage is about to begin. It
|
||
is unhealthy emotionally. Why drag out the dead on the eve of a
|
||
wedding? It turns it into a wake. An emotional woman probing into
|
||
the past may become upset and wonder if she's doing the right thing
|
||
or start thinking of what might have been. Likewise, tiny doubts of
|
||
the other person must creep in after detailed reminiscences of the
|
||
past.
|
||
|
||
A young girl came to me for a physical examination before her
|
||
marriage.
|
||
|
||
"I'm going to have a clean bill of health for my husband at
|
||
any rate," she told me. "If I'm pronounced sound of wind and limb
|
||
and technically a good girl I think that's enough. I'm not going to
|
||
drag out the love letters. I burn them as soon as I get them,
|
||
anyhow. And any girl past her middle 20's is a fool if she
|
||
confesses her life and loves; If she's been at all popular it's
|
||
going to sound pretty over-whelming to the gentleman in love with
|
||
her, and if she hadn't been popular, she doesn't want him to know
|
||
it."
|
||
|
||
She smiled at me. "Some girls get too modern. But it isn't
|
||
modern to know when to keep your mouth shut. Our grandmothers knew
|
||
plenty about maidenly reticence. The trouble with the modern girl
|
||
is not so much what she does but her habit of talking about it at
|
||
the top of her voice."
|
||
|
||
Which seemed words of wisdom to a man in my profession.
|
||
|
||
66
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
X. MY WIFE LENDS A HAND
|
||
|
||
Ordinarily, as I have said, I tried to keep Norma separate
|
||
from my professional life. Of course, I talked over my cases with
|
||
her and frequently I relied upon her decisions.
|
||
|
||
When we were first married, she wanted to act as my office
|
||
girl.
|
||
|
||
"It would save you money," she insisted. "Then you'd need only
|
||
a nurse for operations. I could keep books and answer the telephone
|
||
and sterilize instruments as well as a nurse could."
|
||
|
||
I shook my head. "No. I've found out by now that most of the
|
||
old platitudes are true. One of them is that you can't touch pitch
|
||
without being defiled. I don't want you to come in daily contact
|
||
with the most sordid side of sex. One of the nicest things about
|
||
our marriage is that I can look forward to coming home at night and
|
||
finding you serene and lovely. I can talk over anything that
|
||
bothers me, but you haven't been upset by seeing these people and
|
||
hearing their stories."
|
||
|
||
She laughed. "Darling, don't think I don't hear about sex just
|
||
because I keep away from your office. When two women get together,
|
||
the conversation goes from clothes and diet to its logical end of
|
||
sex."
|
||
|
||
I grinned. "I didn't know. I know that women talk to me mostly
|
||
of sex, but in a strictly professional way."
|
||
|
||
"I went to a bridge luncheon today," Norma said. "And we got
|
||
to talking about abortions and miscarriages. Don't look shocked.
|
||
These were all nice women. It just happened that one of them had
|
||
had an operation. She said it was a curettage to stop a hemorrhage,
|
||
but we were all a little suspicious, I think. Anyway the
|
||
conversation turned to Women Who Do Things. And such a lot of
|
||
gossip as you wouldn't hear in days, I heard that Doctor B does
|
||
abortions, too. I didn't know that before."
|
||
|
||
"I don't know it yet," I answered. "Doctor B might do one for
|
||
a close friend, but I rather doubt it. He'd probably send the
|
||
friend to me or to another doctor here who has some shady practice.
|
||
Don't believe all you hear about such matters. A lot of women who
|
||
come to me thought that they could persuade their family physicians
|
||
to help them out of jams, but they were mistaken when it came to a
|
||
showdown."
|
||
|
||
"I know," she said. "Women will say something as rumor and
|
||
when it's next repeated it's a fact and next time it's doubled. For
|
||
instance, some one told me that Mrs. G had had three abortions."
|
||
|
||
I grinned again. "Mrs, G had an operation several years ago
|
||
that would prevent her having any children. She had a tumor, and
|
||
she didn't menstruate for some time. What happened was that the
|
||
tumor made her abdomen enlarged and there were rumor's that she was
|
||
pregnant. Since she didn't have any children, a lot of gossip-
|
||
minded women supposed that she was doing something about it."
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
67
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"That's what I suspected. But you know I hadn't been around
|
||
married women much before I married. I am still a little amazed at
|
||
the way the wives all seize a chance to talk about sex. I suppose
|
||
they feel that this is one of the privileges of wifehood, to drop
|
||
all reticence in such matters, and they make the most of it.
|
||
Before, they had to be careful, for nice, unmarried girls aren't
|
||
supposed to know about such things."
|
||
|
||
"That's why my practice grows," I remarked flippantly. "But a
|
||
lot of married women don't know very much about sex, and that
|
||
causes trouble when they go to dishing out advice. A woman who has
|
||
escaped having more than one or two children, chiefly through luck,
|
||
isn't in a position to give much advice to a woman who doesn't want
|
||
them."
|
||
|
||
"I'm very popular," Norma said, "because they know I'm a
|
||
doctor's wife and they all figure they can get some free
|
||
information as well as a lot of gossip from me. I just tell them
|
||
that my husband never discusses his cases with me. But I was
|
||
surprised at how much talk, true or otherwise, there is floating
|
||
around about women. If a woman has a bad time at menstruation, half
|
||
her friends jump to the conclusion that she's had a miscarriage.
|
||
And if she has an abdominal operation, everyone wants to know if
|
||
she had her ovaries removed. If she did, a lot of women think she
|
||
probably was diseased or she didn't want children. And how they
|
||
dwell on the detail's of their menopauses."
|
||
|
||
I grinned. "Maybe you'd better come to the office, where the
|
||
air is pure and clean and disinfected."
|
||
|
||
"I Almost burst out laughing at one fat woman," Norma told me.
|
||
"She has two children, and she said that when she knew she was
|
||
pregnant the second time she was so irritated. I got so mad at
|
||
Frank that I just went out and jumped off the porch two or three
|
||
times, she said. 'But it didn't do any good. Of course, I don't
|
||
think it's right to do anything about such things.'"
|
||
|
||
"What she meant," I interrupted, "was that she didn't think it
|
||
right to go to a doctor for such things because that would cost
|
||
money and she'd probably have to tell her husband and it might get
|
||
out. So she's willing to risk her health by some such silly trick.
|
||
A fall might have caused her to abort and on the other hand it
|
||
might just have injured the child or broken her leg. Probably she
|
||
braced herself for the jump so she landed lightly."
|
||
|
||
"Another woman said that she got nervous and so she took
|
||
something," Norma went on. "It just made her awfully sick and about
|
||
a week later she had a normal menstruation. She said she was
|
||
ashamed of herself and never told her husband."
|
||
|
||
"Of course not. She wouldn't tell her husband, but she
|
||
probably was irritable and nervous and raised hell about something
|
||
else and he wondered what was the matter with her and why she
|
||
didn't seem to want anything to do with him sexually; and he
|
||
decided that she was tired of him. And it may be that at that
|
||
psychological moment he met an attractive woman who didn't seem to
|
||
have many scruples, and the next thing he knew he was having an
|
||
affair. That's the way those things usually go. Then the wife talks
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
68
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
about how she was dishonored and betrayed and men are only animals
|
||
after all. She say's that she's always been faithful and she's
|
||
suffered agonies of anxiety on his behalf and that is the way he
|
||
treats her. But she never let him know about her worrying."
|
||
|
||
"I don't know," Norma mused thoughtfully. "You'd think that
|
||
two people who are married could talk anything over and reach an
|
||
understanding. But sometimes it seems to me that love causes
|
||
misunderstanding. At first the wife hates to do anything that would
|
||
spoil the romantic attitude of the honeymoon. Later she's afraid of
|
||
discussion that will cause her husband to be less ardent."
|
||
|
||
She smiled at me. "We started with less disadvantages than
|
||
most couples, because we had talked over so much of this before
|
||
marriage and understood each other. But I can see how wives would
|
||
hate to bring up such things. You, being a doctor, ask me personal
|
||
questions that an ordinary husband probably wouldn't think about.
|
||
For instance, you check my periods, and if I'm delayed you do
|
||
something about it. But no average husband would think of that. And
|
||
if he comes home worried, the wife hates to add to his worries. If
|
||
the husband seems gay, she feels that she doesn't want to Spoil his
|
||
mood by dragging up a disagreeable subject. So she just lets it go,
|
||
waiting for the perfect opportunity. And the opportunity never
|
||
comes."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I agreed. "And oddly enough, some women resent their
|
||
husbands asking them questions. I've had women say that their sex
|
||
life was marred because their husbands asked them how they felt and
|
||
how they enjoyed intercourse. The men were merely trying to make
|
||
Sure the wives were satisfied. They were unusually thoughtful and
|
||
knew that some women are slower than the man. But the wives got
|
||
self-conscious about it."
|
||
|
||
I used to be constantly amazed at the many mental quirks women
|
||
have regarding sexual matters. But most of them are easily traced
|
||
to a desire to calm their consciences and to the idea that anything
|
||
that isn't found out is all right.
|
||
|
||
For instance, a woman will excuse home attempts to abort
|
||
herself. Going to a doctor seems to definitely ally herself with
|
||
the wrong kind of woman and forces her to come out in the open and
|
||
admit that she doesn't want a child and is willing to enlist
|
||
assistance to get rid of the fetus.
|
||
|
||
She will risk injury to herself by several such attempts, and
|
||
then go ahead and have the child if she fails, rather than go to a
|
||
doctor and do the thing scientifically and safely. Then she may
|
||
preen herself later because she didn't do anything, forgetting that
|
||
it was because of ignorance that she didn't succeed in aborting
|
||
herself.
|
||
|
||
Likewise, many women feel that it is all right to have
|
||
abortions up to about two months, explaining that the fetus is
|
||
"nothing much but a germ." Of course, the danger increases as time
|
||
passes, but five days after conception there is life. What these
|
||
women really mean is that if they wait until they are far along
|
||
people will notice the change in their bodies and suspect something
|
||
if there is an abortion.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
69
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Similarly, women, especially religious women, feel that
|
||
withdrawal on the part of the man or continence during dangerous
|
||
periods is all right, while use of artificial devices to prevent
|
||
contraception is sinful. Here again the fear of being found out
|
||
enters into it. Most women hate to purchase any type of
|
||
contraceptive. Likewise, they hate to ask other women for definite
|
||
advice.
|
||
|
||
Some of them might be shocked out of this false modesty if
|
||
they knew the freedom with which men, both married and single,
|
||
discuss such matters. Men have far less hesitancy about going to a
|
||
doctor for an examination or information and they buy
|
||
contraceptives calmly at a drug store.
|
||
|
||
One woman almost broke up her marriage because she refused to
|
||
go to the doctor. She had a physical defect which made intercourse
|
||
painful. Yet she delayed a visit to the doctor. Finally her husband
|
||
forced her to go. Even then she sulked about it. She even tried the
|
||
argument that her husband should be willing to abandon sex life.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, there was another young bride who was a
|
||
virgin before marriage. For several weeks she had intercourse every
|
||
night. Then came a night when her husband was tired and did not
|
||
make love to her. She seemed a trifle upset but he paid little
|
||
attention to that. He thought that she surely knew that there were
|
||
limits to the man's physical powers.
|
||
|
||
The next day she hastened down to my office, greatly
|
||
disturbed. She had been filled with the usual mass of
|
||
misinformation that seems to be dished out to virgins by their
|
||
feminine relatives and friends and she thought that her sex life
|
||
was over just because she had missed one night I assured her that
|
||
her husband's love hadn't cooled, and that he hadn't suddenly
|
||
become impotent. She went home a wiser wife.
|
||
|
||
I told Norma about it, but she didn't laugh.
|
||
|
||
"That isn't so uncommon," she said. "And on the other hand,
|
||
there are girls who have been told that once a week is the limit
|
||
and they are afraid their husbands are over-sexed if they want
|
||
intercourse more often. This girl's case was no joke. A friend of
|
||
mine divorced her husband because she wanted intercourse every
|
||
night and he couldn't stand it."
|
||
|
||
Such women are usually dismissed lightly as over-sexed, but in
|
||
many cases that isn't true. The man may be too hasty, and the woman
|
||
therefore does not get satisfaction. The partly-completed act on
|
||
her part leaves her restless, nervous and irritable and desiring
|
||
intercourse again as soon as possible, Some men cannot tell when
|
||
their wives have had an orgasm, and if the woman doesn't tell them
|
||
they may postpone the second act. Too, some types of contraceptive
|
||
devices prevent the normal culmination of the sex act.
|
||
|
||
As I said, I tried to keep my home life separated from my
|
||
practice, although I discussed things freely, with Norma. After the
|
||
birth of our first child, of course, she was too busy at home to
|
||
want to work in my office. But from time to time she did bring
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
70
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
cases to me. I objected, because I didn't want her placed in the
|
||
position of a go-between for an abortionist. She laughed when I
|
||
told her that.
|
||
|
||
"Don't you remember how we first met?" she asked.
|
||
|
||
The first case she called to my attention went smoothly. A
|
||
friend came to her and said that another woman, whom I shall call
|
||
Gladys, was pregnant and wanted to do something about it.
|
||
|
||
Gladys was married, but she already had four children, and she
|
||
and her husband could not afford any more. She was not in good
|
||
health and she hated her present condition.
|
||
|
||
She had told her friend, Anna, about it and Anna had gone to
|
||
her own doctor. The doctor refused to take the case. It was another
|
||
example of how a woman optimistically declares that her doctor will
|
||
perform an illegal operation and then is turned down. The doctor,
|
||
I gathered, had been a little indignant and had asked if Anna had
|
||
used his name in any way. Fortunately Anna had not -- or at least
|
||
she said she had not.
|
||
|
||
The next time she tried a more round-about way, by approaching
|
||
Noma. Anna said that Gladys had tried the more common home methods,
|
||
without success. She was desperate, and was in a continual nervous
|
||
state. She had been warned at the birth of her last child that it
|
||
would be better for her to wait several years until she had another
|
||
one.
|
||
|
||
"She's one of these helpless women who don't know how to
|
||
manage anything," Anna said with a shrug of her shoulders. "You
|
||
know the kind. She means well, but somehow she always manages to
|
||
muddle things. She didn't have sense enough to insist that her
|
||
husband be more careful, and now she's with child again."
|
||
|
||
Norma saw Gladys and was upset at her weeping. So she, came to
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
"She'll keep on doing things until she gets herself in such a
|
||
condition that she'll either die in childbirth or she'll kill the
|
||
child beforehand," she told me. "She's in that hysterical state
|
||
where she's willing to try anything. And, you know, old women can
|
||
offer more methods of abortion than they can for curing colds.
|
||
She'll keep it a secret, and Anna has promised to see that you will
|
||
get your money."
|
||
|
||
I told them to bring Gladys in. She was what I call the "faded
|
||
petunia" type of woman. She worked so hard fixing things for her
|
||
husband and her children and keeping her house clean that she never
|
||
had any time left for herself. Her skin was wrinkled and her hair
|
||
lacked luster. She was not the "good manager" type, and it showed
|
||
in her last year's clothes and her bedraggled hair and work-
|
||
roughened hands. Of course, her husband did not make much money.
|
||
But some women seem to be able to keep themselves up in spite of
|
||
being pinched for funds. She was the sort of woman who will make a
|
||
martyr of herself and then wonder dumbly why she isn't appreciated,
|
||
why her husband doesn't stay home and why her children, when they
|
||
grow up, seem to lack respect for her but give her, instead, a sort
|
||
of pitying affection.
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
71
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I told her I would help her out. Her husband didn't object,
|
||
although he was the sort of man who didn't exactly approve of
|
||
abortions, just as he liked to pretend that he didn't use
|
||
contraceptives because he "disapproved" of such things. He was
|
||
willing, it seemed, as long as he did not have to do much about it.
|
||
There was nothing to do but give Gladys temporary help by aborting
|
||
her and then try to frighten her into being a little more firm with
|
||
her husband.
|
||
|
||
"Isn't there a way that you could fix it so Gladys wouldn't
|
||
have any more children?" Anna asked.
|
||
|
||
I looked my most professional. "She could, of course, have her
|
||
ovaries removed. But they are in good condition and I would refuse
|
||
to perform such an operation or to advise it."
|
||
|
||
Anna hesitated a moment. "I've heard that operations can be
|
||
performed on men so that they can't become fathers but they still
|
||
have their normal sexual feelings."
|
||
|
||
"Don't believe all you hear," I evaded. "I wouldn't attempt
|
||
such a thing. If that's what you mean. In the first place, you'd
|
||
never get the man to agree to it. In the second place, the woman
|
||
might regret it later. These people want some children. The
|
||
children they have might die, and then they couldn't have any more.
|
||
I'll give temporary help, but I won't perform sterilization
|
||
operations. And don't let anyone fool you with these theories about
|
||
hypodermic injections that will make the man sterile for a few
|
||
months. Most of the talk about magic and simple operations, is
|
||
quackery, along with sure-fire cheap abortions and positive
|
||
contraceptives."
|
||
|
||
Anna, who had gone to school with her, brought me the money
|
||
beforehand. Gladys got along as well as could be expected. When she
|
||
was well, I sent for Anna.
|
||
|
||
"I know you've impressed the need for secrecy on her," I said.
|
||
"But for some reason I'm upset about the woman. I can't help
|
||
feeling sorry for her. For the love of Mike, try to get her to
|
||
understand that unselfishness is not always a virtue. Too much
|
||
unselfishness makes other people uncomfortable. As long as she has
|
||
that air of hang-dog devotion, she'll be run over. She's made a
|
||
mild rebellion in having an abortion. See if you can keep up the
|
||
good work."
|
||
|
||
I don't know what Anna told her. Probably she hinted that if
|
||
Gladys didn't pay more attention to herself, her husband would
|
||
start straying. There were plenty of examples she could point to.
|
||
Later I saw Gladys and she looked amazingly better. Her children
|
||
were no longer dressed in the most expensive coats and hats and the
|
||
daintiest of handmade frocks and I doubt if she still slaved hours
|
||
over a pet dish of her husband's. I remarked about it to Anna. Anna
|
||
looked vague and mysterious.
|
||
|
||
"Her husband took his stenographer out to lunch and dinner
|
||
while she was "sick," she said. Then she grinned. "But he doesn't
|
||
do it now," she added.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
72
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Which reminds me of a young bride who came to me for
|
||
information about birth control.
|
||
|
||
"I thought I heard you say once that you wanted children," I
|
||
said. "You came in here before marriage for a physical examination
|
||
and said you wanted to be sure that you could bear healthy children
|
||
without much pain. What's made you change your mind?"
|
||
|
||
"Just before I was married, I saw something that gave me a
|
||
decided shock," she replied. "One of my best friends has only been
|
||
married about a year and she's pregnant. She's the sort who takes
|
||
it hard. She had a lovely figure, and she hates to go around now
|
||
that she's big and clumsy. Besides, she's ill, nausea in the
|
||
morning, headaches, general listlessness and all that. Betty was
|
||
the sort who was always the life of the party, and she won't go
|
||
anywhere feeling bad. So she stays at home."
|
||
|
||
"Yes," I told her, "but the chances are you'd got by pretty
|
||
easy if you took care of yourself"
|
||
|
||
"Oh, I'm going to have children. But in my own good time. I
|
||
hadn't finished my story. Betty's husband, Jim, married her because
|
||
they had so much fun together. He likes to dance and get around.
|
||
They decided after marriage that it would be more fun to just
|
||
forget precautions and let nature take its course. Jim fancied that
|
||
it would be fan to have a toddler around the house. And they said
|
||
they wanted to be young enough that they could grow up with the
|
||
children."
|
||
|
||
"Yes," I responded, "I've heard that. It has its points. But
|
||
one of the disadvantages is that children need a civilized adult
|
||
for a parent and not a happy-go-lucky playmate."
|
||
|
||
"Well," she said, "I saw Jim lunching with an attractive girl
|
||
the other day, and then I saw him dining with another girl. I know
|
||
it's no fun for him to go home and find Betty moaning on the couch
|
||
or to learn that she's at her mother's and have her mother looking
|
||
reproachfully at him for what he's done to her darling girl. But at
|
||
the same time, Jim is doing considerable partying and in the
|
||
company of a good-looking divorcee who always had her eye on him.
|
||
I don't know how far the affair has gone, and I didn't tell Betty,
|
||
because I'm not the sort of girl who rushes to her friends and says
|
||
'I think you ought to know.' Betty isn't in any condition to have
|
||
to face too many facts."
|
||
|
||
"Anyhow," I suggested, "her husband probably will repent
|
||
sooner or later and rush back to her."
|
||
|
||
"Maybe. But I'll admit I didn't like to see this on the eve of
|
||
my own marriage. For Jim and Betty were one of the good examples
|
||
that caused me to take the leap. But I'm no babe-in-the-woods. I
|
||
realize that it's fairly common for a man to do some playing around
|
||
while his wife is pregnant. I know that a lot of men feel that it's
|
||
unfair for them to be denied sex life for three or four months.
|
||
Personally I feel that's a selfish viewpoint. But I believe in
|
||
facing facts. I thought it over and decided that my husband was a
|
||
normal male, and that, being so, the wedding ceremony was no
|
||
insurance that he really was going to cherish me forever and be
|
||
blind to all other women."
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
73
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"Yes," I agreed. I like to encourage these girls to talk to me
|
||
because I may be able to pass some of their good advice on later.
|
||
|
||
"So I decided that since I loved the man and had gone this far
|
||
with the engagement, there was no point in being a coward. But
|
||
there was no point either in making things too hard for myself.
|
||
What I want is to have as much fun with my husband as I can for a
|
||
year or two. We can't keep the rose-colored spectacles on forever.
|
||
But I want to have a little care-free youth together first."
|
||
|
||
"And," I said, "You want your husband to get into the habit of
|
||
thinking of you as his permanent partner in fun so that you'll be
|
||
more certain if he does stray a little he'll come back to you."
|
||
|
||
"Certainly," she agreed. "And I don't believe that six or
|
||
seven. months is enough time for that. I want our marriage to be
|
||
well established before I take on any risks. If after two years of
|
||
married companionship I get pregnant, I can more easily condone any
|
||
lack of attention from my husband. I'll remember that we've had a
|
||
lot of fun and maybe a slight marital vacation wouldn't hurt either
|
||
of us. Furthermore, Bill would be used to regarding himself as a
|
||
married man. He'd have got in the habit of making small adjustments
|
||
and sacrifices for our mutual welfare. And people would be
|
||
accustomed to regarding him as a married man, which is important.
|
||
|
||
"I don't want to wait too long. For if I do, I may wait until
|
||
our marriage is beginning to pall a little on Bill and my pregnancy
|
||
would be the one thing needed to cause him to seek diversion
|
||
elsewhere. It's all very well," and she grinned at me, "to talk
|
||
about baby hands bringing people together and husbands rushing back
|
||
to their wives when they find them sewing tiny garments. But while
|
||
the husband may be pleased, he may also be annoyed. And he isn't
|
||
going to enjoy having a wife who is just a human incubator for
|
||
several months."
|
||
|
||
"Well," I told her, "I'm thankful that you're thinking of this
|
||
before and not after you're pregnant. I don't think you'll have any
|
||
trouble with Bill. Just remember that it's important not to go to
|
||
thinking you're too smart and let the iron hand come out of the
|
||
velvet glove. Don't ever let your husband know that you're managing
|
||
him. You can be too modern in this sex game.
|
||
|
||
And you can. Which brings me back to my wife again. I came
|
||
home one knight to find her laughing.
|
||
|
||
"I think I've got other case for you," she announced. "I
|
||
demand, of course, that you split your fee."
|
||
|
||
"Split fees are unethical," I said sternly, and then kissed
|
||
her, "Who's been bothering you now?"
|
||
|
||
"It's really funny and yet it isn't. Kitty was over here
|
||
today."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
74
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I knew Kitty and I grimaced. The last time I saw her she was
|
||
playing her usual good Samaritan role. She married a wealthy man
|
||
and the marriage turned a little sour. So she finds her pleasure in
|
||
doing as much good as she can with her social prestige and her
|
||
money. I like Kitty, but she usually finds good works for her
|
||
friends to do.
|
||
|
||
"She hasn't found another old woman trying to trick a young
|
||
man into marriage, has she?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
Kitty had once brought me a middle-aged widow who urgently
|
||
wanted to marry. She'd started an affair with a young man, taking
|
||
him as her protege. The man was a young artist; and she bought some
|
||
pictures from him and also got some of her friends to help.
|
||
|
||
Then she'd used her help to get the man to become her lover.
|
||
it was a disagreeable story. The woman appeared very pleasant and
|
||
cultured, but she really was an unscrupulous hell-cat. The artist
|
||
was a handsome young idiot, and, like many creative workers, he had
|
||
little common sense about finances or about his social life. It was
|
||
simply that most of his intelligence went into his work. He drifted
|
||
into the affair, and the woman persuaded him that she was using
|
||
contraceptives. Then she told him that she was pregnant and they
|
||
must marry. I gathered that she had used other wiles without
|
||
success. Part of the time the boy simply did not know what she was
|
||
getting at. He really thought she was interested in his work and in
|
||
himself only as an artist. He became her lover because he thought
|
||
that would make her happier. He never dreamed of marriage until she
|
||
came out flat-footed with the demand.
|
||
|
||
He went to Kitty in horror. She felt responsible, for she'd
|
||
bought some pictures from him and had introduced him to the other
|
||
woman. Kitty came to me.
|
||
|
||
"The old hag has her hooks on him and she won't let him go,"
|
||
she said with brutal frankness. "And he's still got enough ideals
|
||
and chivalry to think that he must marry her if she wants him to.
|
||
He knows that it's her fault, but he feels that if she loved him
|
||
enough to do a thing like this he ought to marry her and give her
|
||
what happiness he can. Then he feels indebted to her.
|
||
|
||
"Understand," she went on. "He isn't the gigolo type. He
|
||
really has talent, if not genius, but he had a lot of hard luck.
|
||
And this old dame looked like a god-send to him. She's clever and
|
||
she arranged it so that he wasn't suspicious of what she wanted
|
||
until too late. I should have guessed what she was up to, but I
|
||
didn't think that he was so dumb, and I thought she merely wanted
|
||
an affair."
|
||
|
||
"Well," I asked, "why doesn't he marry her, and play her own
|
||
game. He can wait until after the child is born and then sue her
|
||
for divorce."
|
||
|
||
"You don't get it," she responded. "I told you he wasn't the
|
||
gigolo type. Probably she'd soon tire of him, but I don't know.
|
||
She's the sort who would feed on youth. But even if she'd let him
|
||
get a divorce soon, she'd absolutely ruin him first. Alone, he
|
||
might get to be a great artist, but he won't if he marries her."
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
75
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I talked to the boy, and I saw some of his work. He hadn't
|
||
fallen yet for his patroness talk about an easy road to fame and
|
||
fortune. He was bewildered at her failure to understand that he had
|
||
to have rest and solitude to do any work. He was already in a bad
|
||
physical condition from too much drink, late hours, rich food and
|
||
hectic gaiety.
|
||
|
||
"You see," Kitty told me, "the boy's not spoiled yet. But it
|
||
isn't good for young artists to have too much money. He's got to
|
||
work hard. What he needs, if he marries, is a woman who will
|
||
sacrifice herself to his art, see that he eats, sleeps and has
|
||
plenty of time to work. Mrs. D will ruin him forever in a year. And
|
||
he's good. I know about such things."
|
||
|
||
He did have a picture of a young alums madonna that haunted
|
||
me. But Mrs. D wanted him to paint pretty women, society ladies. He
|
||
didn't want to. He said there was no truth, no art, in that.
|
||
|
||
So I agreed to help Kitty. She brought Mrs. D to me, and I
|
||
examined her. She was pregnant, all right. Then I told her vaguely
|
||
that she was going to have a bad time. I gave her some medicine
|
||
which increased rather than helped her nausea. Kitty laid it on
|
||
pretty thick about how she'd lose her figure -- she was one of
|
||
those women who dieted and massaged in order to keep slim. And she
|
||
was afraid of pain. Her idea seemed to be that with enough
|
||
specialists she could somehow slide through, but I really believe
|
||
she had never intended to go through with childbirth. She probably
|
||
meant to have an abortion as soon as the marriage was performed.
|
||
|
||
But she had an abortion first. I performed it. She wanted it
|
||
kept secret and this fitted in fine with Kitty's plans. The
|
||
engagement hadn't been announced, and I pretended ignorance of the
|
||
whole business. I was simply a doctor who had been called in. As
|
||
soon as the abortion was completed, Kitty got the boy away. Mrs. D
|
||
suspected some underhanded work, but she had no comeback. She'd
|
||
asked for the abortion, and she got it. She certainly wasn't going
|
||
to picture herself as a jilted woman. And when the young idealist
|
||
learned that his fiancee had had an abortion rather than lose her
|
||
figure, he forgot everything she'd said about the sacredness of
|
||
their perfect love and its culmination in the birth of their child.
|
||
|
||
Naturally, however, I was wary of any more of Kitty's plans
|
||
for saving humanity. My role is not persuading women to have
|
||
abortions.
|
||
|
||
"What did Kitty want this time?" I inquired bluntly.
|
||
|
||
"It's a little complicated," Norma explained.
|
||
|
||
"All Kitty's stories are complicated. And I don't like your being
|
||
mixed up in them. You can get burned putting out a fire as well as
|
||
playing with one. But go ahead."
|
||
|
||
Kitty, it seemed, had a friend, a small town girl who had run
|
||
away from home, come to the city and drifted in with a Bohemian
|
||
set. Like most girls of this type, she went to extremes, or wanted
|
||
to. She got a good job and she had a couple of love affairs broken
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
76
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
off before they really got started. That gave her a sort of phobia.
|
||
She felt that she must have a really modern liaison. She talked the
|
||
usual hooey about liberating herself and being utterly free.
|
||
|
||
Her set did a lot of preaching about free love and the
|
||
advantages of illegitimate children. Most of them practiced free
|
||
love all right, but they confined their love children to writing
|
||
pamphlets about them and long discussions in cigarette-smoke filled
|
||
garrets and tea rooms.
|
||
|
||
Then the girl, Clara, met a middle-aged man who was married
|
||
and had three children. He was satisfied with his marriage, but he
|
||
was still handsome and since he worked in town and his home was in
|
||
the country, he took advantage of "business conferences" to have a
|
||
series of love affairs.
|
||
|
||
Blair usually pictured his wife as a dull housewife whose sole
|
||
thoughts were about the children. He was whimsical about his own
|
||
"dreary" existence, and he kept a flat in town where he entertained
|
||
his lady-loves in the best romantic fashion.
|
||
|
||
He met Clara, and in an exceedingly short time took her for
|
||
his mistress. She was filled with ideas about the beauty of free
|
||
love and she thought it romantic to have an affair with an older
|
||
and a married man. Blair, on the other hand, had just been given
|
||
his dismissal by a married woman who preferred not to risk losing
|
||
her husband, and it soothed his vanity to immediately take a young
|
||
and good looking girl.
|
||
|
||
Kitty said that he was a romantic lover, having his meetings
|
||
in a flat decked out like an Oriental harem and going in for
|
||
poetical thoughts and tenderness. Clara immediately fell deeply in
|
||
love with him, so much so that he began to get worried, for she
|
||
wanted to go away on week ends with him and finally asked him to
|
||
desert his wife. This didn't suit him. Like most men of that age
|
||
and type, be, wanted adventure, but wanted it adjusted to a
|
||
comfortable routine, one that did not interfere with his business
|
||
or his family.
|
||
|
||
Clara suspected that he was tiring of her a little, and she
|
||
conceived the idea of having a child by him: Then, she thought, he
|
||
would remain her lover forever, she could move into his flat or
|
||
perhaps have a little place in the country. The latter idea seemed
|
||
more romantic; he could go out there for week ends and nights and
|
||
they could be closer than ever. It would keep him from having to go
|
||
to parties, which, he said, bored him, and save him from too much
|
||
time with his wife. Eventually she thought they might be married,
|
||
but that was not important.
|
||
|
||
She didn't tell Blair this until she actually got with child.
|
||
As soon as she had missed her period she informed him of it and
|
||
waited for his gratitude for what she had done. It didn't come,
|
||
Blair was tiring of her and of her demands. It had been fun to
|
||
initiate this girl into sex life and watch her respond and her
|
||
passion grow. But she was becoming too demanding, and he was no
|
||
longer as young as he used to be. He was about ready to break it
|
||
off.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
77
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
He was horrified when she told him. He urged her to do
|
||
something immediately, and offered to make all the arrangements or
|
||
to give her the money. She refused, and he then jumped at something
|
||
she'd said and broke up the affair.
|
||
|
||
Since then, she'd tried to see him but failed. And she
|
||
couldn't decide what to do.
|
||
|
||
"Tell Kitty to let her make up her mind," I growled irritably.
|
||
"You know, Norma, that I lean over backward in this business rather
|
||
than have any insinuations that I try to build up my practice by
|
||
urging abortions or even consenting to do them without A very good
|
||
reason."
|
||
|
||
"Anyhow," I added. "the girl sounds like a fool."
|
||
|
||
"She isn't a fool. She's just got some silly radical notions.
|
||
Kitty said that Blair is an utter cad, and he will deny all blame.
|
||
And Blair's wife is a fine woman. She knows about Blair, but she
|
||
takes it rather than break up the home and ruin her children's
|
||
lives. Clara just needs a little time to settle down."
|
||
|
||
"I'll talk to Kitty," I promised.
|
||
|
||
Kitty had about persuaded Clara that giving birth to a free-
|
||
love child was not the noble thing she'd thought it would be. She'd
|
||
lose her job and it would be hard to find another one when she was
|
||
burdened with the child. She was thoroughly disillusioned now about
|
||
Blair, and there was no point in having a child as a souvenir of
|
||
the affair.
|
||
|
||
"Clara had a pretty hard time when she first came to town and
|
||
I hate to see her make a fool of herself," Kitty told me. "But I'm
|
||
really thinking more about Blair' wife. If Clara has this child,
|
||
it's going to be pretty hard to keep Dorothy from finding out about
|
||
it. Clara had some haywire ideas about going to Dorothy and asking
|
||
her to give up Blair. But Blair knocked that out of her head."
|
||
|
||
"I can't see it, Kitty,", I said. "It's too risky. I'm not
|
||
going to be put into a position of persuading this girl to abet me
|
||
in a crime. If she's the fool she sounds, she'll spread it all over
|
||
town as evidence of her emancipation."
|
||
|
||
"You trusted my judgment once before," Kitty reminded me. "I
|
||
think this will teach Clara a lesson. But to be frank, I'm afraid
|
||
that she'll later go to Blair's wife and demand help in taking care
|
||
of the child. Dorothy has had enough punishment. I'm willing to pay
|
||
the fee to spare her constant humiliation, either directly or
|
||
indirectly, from Clara."
|
||
|
||
I hesitated. "You talk to the girl again," I urged.
|
||
|
||
She did, and Clara agreed to the abortion. I was nervous about
|
||
it. I figured it was a case in which we were meddling too much. And
|
||
I was right.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
78
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
But I never suspected what would happen. Clara went through
|
||
the abortion all right, although she had orgies of self-pity. She
|
||
did have some intelligence, but she was so filled with silly ideas
|
||
and so self-centered that she was doomed for trouble. I've seen
|
||
many people like that. They are so absorbed in themselves that they
|
||
utterly disregard other people until too late.
|
||
|
||
To please Kitty, I was pleasant to her. And I stressed that
|
||
this was a favor I was doing her and was not my usual practice.
|
||
That was, of course, just a line that I used on most patients to
|
||
keep them from spreading the news indiscriminately that I was an
|
||
abortionist.
|
||
|
||
But Clara took the whole affair the wrong way. She'd been
|
||
badly upset by her affair with Blair, and sympathy went to her
|
||
bead. So she fell for me on the rebound.
|
||
|
||
It was the first time this had happened to me, to my
|
||
knowledge, at least. A great many of my patients became my friends.
|
||
But the very nature of the work kept sentiment out of it.
|
||
|
||
Clara, however, was so filled with the idea that she must be
|
||
ultra-modern that she felt it dramatic for there to be some
|
||
physical-bond between us. She exaggerated everything I said to her.
|
||
She kept coming back to my office when there was no need. She
|
||
twisted what I said to mean that I considered myself her guardian.
|
||
She invited me to lunches, to dinners. She would call for me to
|
||
come to her apartment.
|
||
|
||
I was irritated, but I didn't take it seriously. I knew other
|
||
doctors who had to be diplomatic about calls that were obviously
|
||
subterfuges. I kept myself impersonal and was as polite. to her as
|
||
I could be.
|
||
|
||
Then she went to Norma and made a scene. She told my wife that
|
||
the needed my perfect understanding and sympathy; that Norma had
|
||
had several years of marriage with me, had a child by me and should
|
||
share me with her. She was positive that it was only Norma's mid-
|
||
Victorian scruples and selfishness that kept me from having an
|
||
affair. And she wanted Norma to consent to it. She said that she
|
||
had made a mistake before in not going to the wife, but she wanted
|
||
this to be open and aboveboard.
|
||
|
||
Norma kept her head and, thank God, had sense enough not to
|
||
lose her temper or to take it too seriously. But she was upset
|
||
about it and told me.
|
||
|
||
"I'm telling you this, darling, because I trust you," she said
|
||
to me when I came home. "I know that you're not having an affair
|
||
with Clara because you have more sense. I'm egotistical enough,
|
||
too, to think you have better taste. But I don't want Clara
|
||
broadcasting that I'm interfering with your life."
|
||
|
||
She grinned at me. "Darling, if you ever do have an affair,
|
||
for God's sake pick out a woman who is so charming and so beautiful
|
||
that I can see she's superior to me and you couldn't possibly
|
||
resist her. Otherwise, it will ruin my self-respect.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
79
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I was furious. I called Kitty and told her the whole Story.
|
||
|
||
"Quit pampering that fool," I demanded, "and shut her up
|
||
somehow. Make her understand that I don't want to see her. I'll go
|
||
with you to do it. She's had too much done for her. I thought this
|
||
was a mistake."
|
||
|
||
And for once I didn't use any tact. I took Kitty along, for I
|
||
didn't want Clara to have any excuse to misinterpret that visit.
|
||
And I told Clara frankly why I had helped her and what I thought of
|
||
her. She started to act, but Kitty put an end to that by telling
|
||
her not to be a fool; that she'd done enough emoting off the stage
|
||
to last the rest of her life.
|
||
|
||
I never saw Clara again. Kitty was deeply apologetic. I heard
|
||
afterward that Clara went out to the country, got good and sick of
|
||
the rural peace she'd wanted, came back to town and got a job. She
|
||
kept her mouth shut about the affair. and that was all I wanted.
|
||
|
||
XI. DANGER SIGNALS AHEAD
|
||
|
||
At first I had been constantly amazed at my lack of trouble.
|
||
I had feared in my first case that the sheriff would come in any
|
||
moment.
|
||
|
||
Gradually I began to take it all as a matter of course and to
|
||
think myself a pretty clever fellow. I grew more prosperous. Norma
|
||
and I moved into a nice little house in the better part of town. We
|
||
felt that we could afford children.
|
||
|
||
I took as many precautions as I could in my business. My
|
||
apparent immunity was also due to the fact that any girl who goes
|
||
to a doctor instead of a quack or a midwife in such cases usually
|
||
is intelligent enough to keep her mouth shut.
|
||
|
||
Then I had a whole series of lucky breaks. Not in my actual
|
||
work. I was constantly improving my technique and I never lost a
|
||
patient. But in other ways I was lucky.
|
||
|
||
My home life continued serene. Norma and I started out with
|
||
few illusions, and we followed the French idea of a marriage for
|
||
happiness rather than pleasure. I was teased a great deal when we
|
||
had our first child.
|
||
|
||
"So you don't let your practice interfere with your home
|
||
work," a colleague told me.
|
||
|
||
Once a woman asked Norma if she wasn't jealous of my many
|
||
women patients. She had come to me professionally and noticed that
|
||
there were several unusually pretty girls in the waiting room each
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
"Most women who come to see my husband are not feeling
|
||
flirtatious," Norma said calmly.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
80
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Not long after that, she did have a disagreeable experience.
|
||
An acquaintance of ours came to me for an abortion. She was a
|
||
married woman, she could afford the child and I saw no reason why
|
||
she should have the abortion, especially as she was very anxious to
|
||
keep it a secret from her husband. I declined to have anything to
|
||
do With it. The woman was healthy, and I told her that she
|
||
exaggerated her fears of childbirth and that if her husband had any
|
||
objections he'd forget them after the birth of the child.
|
||
|
||
I had a feeling that Mrs. C was lying to me. It usually is
|
||
easy for a doctor to tell when a woman is keeping something back.
|
||
Sooner or later, the patient makes a slip. The "friend" for whom
|
||
they are making these embarrassing inquiries becomes a pronoun in
|
||
the first person.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. C made her slip when she said that she and her husband
|
||
were not getting along well.
|
||
|
||
I remembered the case when a woman was planning to divorce her
|
||
husband and became with child by him.
|
||
|
||
"Do you intend to divorce him?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"Oh, heavens, no," she said hastily.
|
||
|
||
Her husband had a good deal of money and I thought that any
|
||
temporary fuss probably would be settled soon. Anyhow, I refused to
|
||
take the case.
|
||
|
||
Then she went to my wife and threw a hysterical scene, begging
|
||
Norma to interfere and get me to perform the abortion. As a final
|
||
argument, she told Norma that I was the father of the child. Norma
|
||
merely laughed.
|
||
|
||
"I said it was your business," she told me afterward, "and
|
||
that if It were your child you'd undoubtedly perform the abortion
|
||
or divorce me and marry her. That frightened her. I regret to say,
|
||
darling, that she didn't seem to desire your private attention's --
|
||
only your professional services."
|
||
|
||
I heard the whole story afterward. Mrs. C and her husband were
|
||
not getting along well, and Mrs. C had taken a lover. Since
|
||
marriage, she had let her husband take care of contraceptives and
|
||
she expected her lover to do the same. He was careful in the early
|
||
stages of their affair. Then the mutual ardor cooled. Mrs. C was
|
||
afraid her husband would hear of the romance, and the man soon
|
||
tired of her. I can't believe that he was deliberately responsible,
|
||
but, anyhow, she was caught.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. C and her husband had not lived together as man and wife
|
||
for several months. They were amiable enough, and Mrs. C hoped for
|
||
a reconciliation. Like a great many philandering wives, she was
|
||
much more cowardly about paying for her fun than the unmarried
|
||
woman. She wanted to have her cake and eat it, too.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
81
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She finally went to a quack, he bungled the job, and she
|
||
almost died. Probably it was the best solution she could have
|
||
arranged, for her husband was so anxious about her health that he
|
||
took the blame for everything and there was no divorce. I think she
|
||
may have told him that she tried to commit suicide and that caused
|
||
a miscarriage. Faking or threatening suicide to force a
|
||
reconciliation with a husband is a fairly common trick of the
|
||
neurotic.
|
||
|
||
It may sound as if I were quibbling in this case when I had
|
||
performed abortions on married women. But Mrs. C was a thoroughly
|
||
selfish person, and there was no question of wrecking a subsequent
|
||
marriage as in Janet's triangle. C had not been unfaithful. Mrs. C
|
||
had merely tired of him and sought thrills elsewhere.
|
||
|
||
I draw a distinction between a married woman who has affairs
|
||
with single men and a single girl who has affairs with married men.
|
||
The married woman usually allows her husband to support her while
|
||
she's being unfaithful. She takes his money to make herself
|
||
attractive to her lover, and frequently uses his home for her
|
||
assignations. She usually has her affair with some man who shirks
|
||
the responsibility of matrimony. She is secretly taking away from
|
||
her husband what she has publicly promised him. Sometimes she is
|
||
endangering the future of her children.
|
||
|
||
The bachelor girl who has an affair with a married man may be
|
||
almost forced into it for social reasons. Most such girls hold jobs
|
||
which are not good enough to give them much money and prestige.
|
||
They usually come from families having little social standing. They
|
||
are unable to get single men who attract them. They come in contact
|
||
with intelligent, attractive and married businessmen. They know
|
||
better than to have such affairs but when the alternative is to sit
|
||
alone in a tiny apartment or bedroom or go to the movies with a
|
||
girl friend. I don't blame them overmuch for succumbing to the
|
||
overtures of the man and their own natural desire. Women cannot get
|
||
physical relief from prostitutes. Frequently the single men they
|
||
meet treat them with less respect and consideration than the
|
||
married men. So they drift into liaisons with an attractive and
|
||
moneyed husband.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately, Norma did not believe Mrs. C's wild accusations,
|
||
but it did start a time of trouble for both of us. I am not
|
||
superstitious, but I do believe that every person gets a few good
|
||
breaks that are due as much to chance as to hard work, and I think
|
||
we all get some bad breaks we don't deserve.
|
||
|
||
Immediately after Mrs. C's outburst, I began getting mine!
|
||
|
||
Police found the body of a once-beautiful young blonde girl in
|
||
the river. She had apparently died as the result of an illegal
|
||
operation. Detectives took her photograph to all the doctors to see
|
||
if we could identify her. She had not come to me and I said so, but
|
||
the police asked me to go to the morgue and look at her.
|
||
|
||
Eventually she was identified as an out-of-town school
|
||
teacher. Her mother saw her picture in an old newspaper and claimed
|
||
the body. If the detail's of the crime were discovered, they were
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
82
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
never published. But there was a howl about quack doctors preying
|
||
on young girls, editorials in the newspapers and one minister
|
||
preached a sermon on abortionists.
|
||
|
||
It was comparatively easy to guess what had happened. The girl
|
||
had gone to a quack and had died as the result of his ignorance and
|
||
carelessness. Then either her lover or the quack had become
|
||
frightened at the responsibility and had dumped her body into the
|
||
river. I don't believe she was physically able to kill herself. Nor
|
||
could she have destroyed all the clues to her identity and effaced
|
||
her trail so skillfully alone.
|
||
|
||
I didn't like detectives snooping around, and I got the wind
|
||
up. My legitimate practice was growing and I couldn't afford to
|
||
jeopardize it as much as when almost all my livelihood came from
|
||
illegal work.
|
||
|
||
It was while the investigation into the girl's death was still
|
||
going on that the head of a vice combination came to me with a
|
||
proposition.
|
||
|
||
He beat around the bush for quite a while, but the general
|
||
gist of his offer was that I should devote all my time to his
|
||
combination which included a variety of rackets.
|
||
|
||
I was amazed at the information he had about me. He knew the
|
||
exact state of my finances, that I was paying for a new house, that
|
||
I had a wife and a child and was expecting another. He also knew
|
||
that I had performed many abortions. He made me a flattering offer
|
||
as far as money was concerned. But I declined it.
|
||
|
||
Although he'd been purposefully, vague, I knew what my duties
|
||
would be. I'd treat diseased prostitutes, perform abortions,
|
||
extract bullets and probably have to do a little facial surgery.
|
||
|
||
A year or so before I'd pulled a few wires attempting to get
|
||
a job as city inspector of houses in my town. He knew that. He
|
||
pointed out that this would be about the same thing, only on the
|
||
wrong side of the law. I am in favor of strict supervision of
|
||
houses and I'm in favor of preventing childbirth among women who
|
||
are still in the profession. But I did not intend to become a
|
||
gangster physician. Such doctors have a way of disappearing
|
||
mysteriously.
|
||
|
||
"Better think this over again," the vice lord told me. "That's
|
||
a lot of money, and people who go against us have a way of being
|
||
sorry."
|
||
|
||
"You mean you'll take me for a ride?" I asked. "Don't be
|
||
foolish. I'm certainly not going to go to the police and report
|
||
your visit. For you to kill me would be a pointless murder and
|
||
dangerous. I could leave a message to be opened in case of my
|
||
death. You don't wait a doctor who is against your organization and
|
||
would betray you if promised protection from the police. And if you
|
||
mean to rake up a scandal about me, try to do it! You may have some
|
||
vague rumors but no proof and you're not likely to go to the police
|
||
or the medical association just to satisfy a small grudge."
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
83
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
He grinned at this, said that he was only bluffing, but that
|
||
I was a smart man and if I ever changed my mind to insert a
|
||
personal advertisement in a newspaper in another city and leave it
|
||
in for a week.
|
||
|
||
"No hard feelings," he said, and sauntered out.
|
||
|
||
But he left me with some hard feelings. I smelled danger. I
|
||
didn't like to be in a position where detectives called on me when
|
||
bodies were found. Of course, their excuse was that the girl might
|
||
have come to me for an examination or to ask me to perform the
|
||
operation. I didn't like to be in a position where gangsters felt
|
||
that they could approach me. I couldn't express too much righteous
|
||
indignation. To the criminal mind, I was outside the law and the
|
||
gangster was outside the law and why didn't we get together? My
|
||
fine shading of gray between the black of crime and the white of
|
||
law would be lost on my caller,
|
||
|
||
There was a chance that he had proof from some patient of mine
|
||
and could make me serious trouble. I resolved to temper my sail's
|
||
to the wind and turn down all such cases for a time.
|
||
|
||
And the very next day, I had a chance to try my new
|
||
resolution. A man and woman came into my office. They were not
|
||
recommended, that is, no other doctor had sent them to me,
|
||
notifying me by telephone beforehand and sending a letter of
|
||
introduction with the patient. Those were the cases I liked best
|
||
because another doctor shared the responsibility and the patients
|
||
were hand-picked. Such persons were responsible citizens who went
|
||
about an illegal business as discreetly and efficiently as
|
||
possible.
|
||
|
||
the situation. He was married, he said, and the man explained
|
||
while he and his wife did not live together, she would not divorce
|
||
him and he had no cause for divorce against her. She was willing to
|
||
live with him, and had never been unfaithful. He meant to keep away
|
||
from her until eventually she decided it would be simpler to
|
||
divorce him.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime, he had met this girl and they had drifted
|
||
into an affair. He meant to marry her if he ever got the divorce.
|
||
But now she was with child and he was willing to pay for an
|
||
abortion for her.
|
||
|
||
I didn't like either the man or the woman. And when all is
|
||
said about questions and promises, I must trust a great deal to
|
||
personal judgment of patients. The average doctor may not like his
|
||
patients, but it really isn't going to hurt him if they blab all
|
||
over town that his medicine did them no good.
|
||
|
||
The girl sat in sullen silence. She was unattractive, thick-
|
||
browed, with small gray eyes, too big a mouth and thick, bushy
|
||
hair. She had a chunky, peasant's figure. She stared at the floor,
|
||
her lower lip protruding. The man was glib and talkative; a little
|
||
too talkative. He was nervous, and said too much about how be was
|
||
"Willing" to pay for the abortion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
84
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
He was rather flashily dressed, and wore a big diamond ring on
|
||
his little finger. I stared at that ring and wondered if this were
|
||
a frame-up job designed to force me into the vice combination. But
|
||
I doubted that. The girl looked too dumb and inexperienced to be
|
||
associated with a vice syndicate.
|
||
|
||
The girl didn't seem to be taking any interest in the
|
||
conversation, and I didn't like that. Unless she were anxious to
|
||
have an abortion, she might be a trouble-maker. Nothing was said
|
||
about whether she was a virgin when she met this man. That's
|
||
usually important. A girl who's had several lovers regarded
|
||
pregnancy as one of the risks of the game, and isn't so likely to,
|
||
try to force marriage. She's probably had to worry about an
|
||
abortion before, and she takes it more or less for granted. Her
|
||
feeling usually is that she's been lucky to escape one so far, and
|
||
it's up to her to stick her chin out and take her punishment.
|
||
|
||
If the man was so anxious to brag about how he was "willing"
|
||
to foot the bills, he'd probably be the sort to quibble over the
|
||
price. Besides, as I said, I had the wind up. So I told them curtly
|
||
that there was nothing doing. I offered to examine the girl to make
|
||
sure that she was pregnant but I told them they had been
|
||
misinformed if they thought I took such cases.
|
||
|
||
The man was nervously apologetic, and I went on stressing the
|
||
enormity of the act he was asking of me.
|
||
|
||
"Do you know of any other doctors who would do it?" he asked.
|
||
"I'd pay anything."
|
||
|
||
I shook my head. "No registered doctor would do it," I said.
|
||
"You might find a man whose license has been taken away from him
|
||
but who still does some hole-in-the-wall practice. However, I don't
|
||
know of any."
|
||
|
||
They went away, then, the girl still sullen, the man trying to
|
||
placate her. I felt sorry for him. It didn't look to me as if that
|
||
girl had been seduced. I couldn't imagine her believing anything
|
||
but an affidavit. I could see that he was afraid of her.
|
||
|
||
He had good reason to be frightened. Two days later the news
|
||
papers were full of the story. She had shot and killed him. She
|
||
surrendered meekly to the police and told her story. She worked at
|
||
a cheap lodging house where the man stayed. She claimed that he
|
||
promised to marry her, but I've always doubted that she was seduced
|
||
in the literal meaning of the word. Also, I didn't believe her
|
||
statement that she was a virgin when she met him.
|
||
|
||
At any rate, when she became with child she demanded immediate
|
||
marriage. Then, she said, he told her that he was already married.
|
||
Police discovered that his story of his separation was false. His
|
||
wife had divorced him several years before. However, I can't blame
|
||
him for trying to evade marriage with the sullen, black-browed
|
||
girl.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
85
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
The girl did not want an abortion, She was the animal type,
|
||
insensitive to everything except pain and passion. She was afraid
|
||
of an abortion and she wanted to hang on to her man and had sense
|
||
enough to see that if she got rid of the child she'd probably lose
|
||
him. So she proposed that they go away and live as man and wife and
|
||
have the child. He refused, saying that it would cost him his job.
|
||
She found him packing his clothes, and killed him.
|
||
|
||
I heaved a sigh of relief that I'd followed my intuition. The
|
||
man already was tired of the affair, and he would have fled as soon
|
||
as be arranged an abortion. The girl would have raised hell and
|
||
either followed him or gone to the police. Then the story would
|
||
have come out and I would have been implicated in a much more
|
||
dangerous fashion.
|
||
|
||
As it was, the police came to me and I had a straight story
|
||
for them. I simply said that the man brought the girl to me, wanted
|
||
an abortion and I refused to take the case. My Story tallied with
|
||
that of the girl.
|
||
|
||
"He promised to marry me and then he wouldn't do that," the
|
||
girl told the police. "Then he said it would be easy to fix me up,
|
||
and the first doctor we went to said that he wouldn't do it for
|
||
anything, that no good doctor would and that it would be dangerous
|
||
to go to a bad doctor."
|
||
|
||
So unwittingly my warning against abortions had sent a man to
|
||
his death. Everything I had said about quacks was true of course,
|
||
but it had been the one touch needed to set aflame the shouldering
|
||
wrath of the girl. I had made her lover a liar on all counts.
|
||
|
||
I can't say that I felt sorry. The man was no loss to
|
||
humanity. He would have left me holding the bag if I had done what
|
||
he wished. And I would have been in a damned awkward position if
|
||
the girl had killed him after I'd performed an abortion and perhaps
|
||
had shot herself, too.
|
||
|
||
All the same, it gave me a bad scare. The defense brought me
|
||
into court. It didn't do me any good to appear as a witness for the
|
||
defense in a sordid sex murder and have it broadcast that the
|
||
murdered man brought his mistress to me for an illegal operation.
|
||
|
||
I talked it over with Norma after the trial closed, with the
|
||
woman receiving a light sentence. Her counsel had pleaded emotional
|
||
insanity.
|
||
|
||
"Maybe it would be better for me to stick to straight practice
|
||
now," I argued. "After all, a lot of young doctor's do this stuff
|
||
just to get started. I've paid my debt to my father and we've got
|
||
a little money ahead."
|
||
|
||
"I don't know," she said slowly. "Remember how we met?"
|
||
|
||
Of course, I did. She had come in with a friend who wanted an
|
||
abortion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
86
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"You seemed to us an angel in disguise. Pearl had expected
|
||
some rather nasty man who'd treat her as if she were a prostitute.
|
||
You were so gentle and considerate that you made the whole thing a
|
||
lot easier."
|
||
|
||
"So," I grinned, "that's why you fell in love with me."
|
||
|
||
She took it seriously. "Partly," she admitted. "I could see
|
||
that it wasn't entirely for money that you were breaking the law.
|
||
You actually wanted to help people in trouble. And you did it with
|
||
gentleness and consideration and courtesy -- all admirable
|
||
qualities in a husband. It looked to me as if you had tolerance and
|
||
a breadth of vision."
|
||
|
||
She looked at me. "I'm feminine enough to hope that other
|
||
women who come to your office won't think so much of the same
|
||
things. But at the same time it doesn't seem to me that because
|
||
none of my friends happen to be in trouble now, I should urge you
|
||
to quit that part of your practice and force girls to go to other
|
||
doctors who are in need of money and aren't good enough to get a
|
||
legitimate practice."
|
||
|
||
"I was quitting chiefly for you," I said. "I didn't want you
|
||
to have to tell the children that their papa is in prison."
|
||
|
||
"You haven't been in any serious trouble yet," she reminded
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
I knew that, but I still had the feeling that trouble was in
|
||
the air. I'm not superstitious, and there had been three times I
|
||
had skated on thin ice, the girl in the river, Mrs. C's hysterical
|
||
visit, and the trial. I have heard people say that suicides go by
|
||
threes, explaining that there usually are several persons thinking
|
||
about suicide. The publicity given the first one to take the leap
|
||
serves as an impetus for the others.
|
||
|
||
However, I began taking abortion cases again. A prominent
|
||
businessman brought his daughter to me. His story was one that was
|
||
all-too-familiar to me, although I heard it from the girl more
|
||
frequently than from the parent.
|
||
|
||
The girl was a high-school student, who had got mixed up with
|
||
a set of sensation-hunters. They were all sons and daughters of
|
||
well-to-do families and had liberal allowances. There were two or
|
||
three leaders who, had they come from less wealthy families, would
|
||
have been the moving spirits of juvenile gangs. Some of them were
|
||
children of divorce, given cars and too much spending money in lieu
|
||
of parents.
|
||
|
||
They started going to dances too soon, drinking too much,
|
||
driving too fast for a thrill. Then they took up marijuana. It was
|
||
considered a great joke to give a girl a marijuana cigarette
|
||
instead of the regular variety.
|
||
|
||
Jane Alice had received bids to all the Christmas dances given
|
||
by high-school fraternities and sororities. I have always felt that
|
||
these high-school organizations are a mistake. Their members
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
87
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
attempt to imitate the college Greek-letter 'Societies' but do not
|
||
have strict supervision by national authorities, nor are the
|
||
members old enough to know how to take care of themselves.
|
||
|
||
The Christmas dances in my city were marked by a lot of
|
||
drinking, usually bad liquor, since the Christmas expenses put such
|
||
a drain on the purse of a high-school boy that good liquor could
|
||
not be included. A lot of the girls drank because they were afraid
|
||
if they were not "good sports" their escorts simply would not call
|
||
to get them or they would be wallflowers at the dance. This "good
|
||
sport" fallacy causes more trouble than any one other thing in
|
||
modern youth. The idea that popularity must be had at all costs is
|
||
another road to heartbreak.
|
||
|
||
"Her mother and I knew there were chaperons at the dance's,"
|
||
Mr. B told me. "And we were slightly acquainted with most of the
|
||
other youngsters who went. We knew that Jane Alice came home pretty
|
||
late, but then the dances lasted until 2 o'clock. Most of the kids
|
||
usually went somewhere for coffee and sandwiches after the dance..
|
||
We didn't want to keep Jane Alice from being popular by making her
|
||
punch a time-clock."
|
||
|
||
Jane Alice was one of those "average" girls who must work hard
|
||
for popularity. So she had weakly submitted to a high-school boy,
|
||
drunk and amorous. He had given her a brief rush and she felt that
|
||
she must pay with her body.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately for the girl, she was a weakling and accustomed to
|
||
going to her mother with all her complaints, her need for a new
|
||
dress, her desire for a party, for a new permanent, for an increase
|
||
in her allowance. She didn't have the courage or self-reliance to
|
||
keep her secret. The boy had dropped her after he found her "easy."
|
||
so she went to her mother and told the whole story.
|
||
|
||
The mother was shocked, but luckily she had sense enough to
|
||
keep the matter quiet and consult with her husband. They decided
|
||
that Jane Alice was far too young to marry, even if the boy were
|
||
willing, which was doubtful. Besides, Jane Alice now had a nervous,
|
||
hysterical hatred of the youth. There is a superstition that a girl
|
||
always has a special tenderness for her first lover. But this is
|
||
not always true. Jane Alice now regarded the experience as virtual
|
||
rape.
|
||
|
||
The affair had seared her back into a desire for normal
|
||
girlhood. She had a glimpse of what it meant to be a woman, and she
|
||
was thoroughly frightened and disgusted. She hadn't got any
|
||
pleasure out of her sexual experience. And the boy, who had
|
||
appeared glamorous when she was tight, now seemed only a pimply-
|
||
faced, callow high-school youth.
|
||
|
||
I have seen the same thing happen after a hasty elopement. The
|
||
girl, who was all for being an adult, wants to hurry back to the
|
||
warm protection of her family and her care-free adolescence.
|
||
|
||
So the B's decided not to tell the youth or his parents.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
88
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"He isn't old enough to be married," Mr. B said, "and even if
|
||
Jane Alice did act the fool, he isn't good enough for her. His
|
||
parents might stir up trouble by believing the boy if he denied the
|
||
charge. We figured that the less said about the whole thing the
|
||
better."
|
||
|
||
I agreed. There was no point in letting the boy know the
|
||
results of his carelessness. It might have frightened him into
|
||
being more careful thereafter, and then again it might have made
|
||
him think that he needn't take any precaution's because if the girl
|
||
were caught her parents would take care of everything. Too, he
|
||
might have started boasting about what a man he was and how he had
|
||
knocked up the daughter of one of the town's leading citizens. The
|
||
much-vaunted chivalry of man usually comes only when he has
|
||
acquired enough sense to see the value of silence -- not only to
|
||
protect the girl but for his own benefit.
|
||
|
||
The abortion was a success. Afterward Jane Alice wanted to go
|
||
away to a girl's school, but I advised against it.
|
||
|
||
"You're asking me and I'm telling you," I said frankly to Mr.
|
||
B "Jane Alice is just a kid, but she's woman enough to get herself
|
||
into a mess of this type, and so she ought to be adult enough to
|
||
face some of the less disagreeable of the consequences."
|
||
|
||
"I know," he agreed. "That's what I told my wife. Sooner or
|
||
later Jane Alice must learn to take things on the chin. She's got
|
||
to learn that she can't run away from everything. She may not spend
|
||
her life in this town, but on the other hand she may live here for
|
||
several years. The only way she can get over the idea that she
|
||
can't face her friends is to force herself to do it. She wanted to
|
||
resign from her sorority, but I told her that would cause talk. I
|
||
think that she'll be able to avoid any wild parties and that she's
|
||
learned her lesson. I've promised her that if she finishes this
|
||
year here, she can go away to a girls' boarding-school."
|
||
|
||
I nodded. "But there's still another reason. I don't agree
|
||
with people who say that all boarding-schools are hotbeds of
|
||
perversion. But I do think that it is unhealthy to bottle up girls
|
||
who have had dates and a few sex thrills just at their most
|
||
dangerous adolescent period. It's natural for a young girl to be
|
||
restless and to seek excitement. And if she's subjected to too
|
||
strict discipline and her normal contact with boys is taken away,
|
||
she may find the wrong outlet for her energy.
|
||
|
||
"And that is particularly true in Jane Alice's case. She is
|
||
slightly over-sexed. Right now, she feels a natural aversion to men
|
||
and to sex. She feels that she got a dirty deal. That might recoil
|
||
into Lesbianism. I've seen young girls turn pervert from being
|
||
jilted, the death of their fiances or through unpopularity at a
|
||
sensitive period. Too, Jane Alice doesn't want to forget this too
|
||
easily for fear she may decide that the whole business wasn't so
|
||
bad. She needs a normal life, but she also needs the supervision of
|
||
people who know what she's done."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
89
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Mr. B was a sensible man, as I have said. "I see what you
|
||
mean," he agreed. "I've given this matter a lot of thought, because
|
||
Jane Alice is an only child and it looks as though two fairly
|
||
intelligent persons ought to make a success of one child."
|
||
|
||
He sighed. "I've tried not to be the sort of father who
|
||
forgets all about his youth and does a lot of aimless preaching.
|
||
That's why I gave Jane Alice as much freedom as possible and didn't
|
||
blame her over-much for what happened. And I'm relieved that Jane
|
||
Alice isn't posing as a sort of young Madame X, betrayed before she
|
||
was of age and being very dramatic in the best motion picture form.
|
||
She admits it was partly her fault. I'm under no illusion about my
|
||
child. She isn't overloaded with brains. She's too docile, and I
|
||
should have realized that and instead of trying to develop
|
||
initiative I should have relied more on obedience. But it's hard
|
||
for a man to judge his own child, and it's hard to remember the
|
||
damn-fool things I did when I was young. I never got any girls in
|
||
trouble," he added, "but it's a wonder I didn't."
|
||
|
||
"Sometimes," he went on, "I think the savages handle these
|
||
things better. They pay more attention to puberty. They make a
|
||
ceremony of it and the girls have their womanhood more forcibly
|
||
impressed on them. Here we pass by puberty with a little bygienic
|
||
lecture and continue to regard the girls as children until they're
|
||
16 or 18, forgetting that from the ages of 12 to 14 they are,
|
||
physically, women."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I told him. "Parents hate to see their children grow
|
||
up. It's worse in the mothers. They feel they've gone through more
|
||
for the children and they resent their sons' and daughters' leaving
|
||
home as soon as they're able to take care of themselves. A mother
|
||
bird will push her fledglings out of the nest. But the human mother
|
||
is more possessive. The children usually are ready to leave about
|
||
the time the mother's own sex life is going or gone. And somehow
|
||
that makes it harder for the mothers. So we get a mother who wants
|
||
her big son to escort her around and tries to behave like his
|
||
sister. And we get the type of mother who keeps her daughter at
|
||
home, preaching duty to her, and begging her not to marry until
|
||
after the mother's death. What she usually means is that she can't
|
||
bear the sight of her daughter having a happy sex life when she is
|
||
lonely and her own life is virtually ended as far as personal
|
||
pleasure is concerned."
|
||
|
||
Mr. B went out after thanking me again. I heard afterward that
|
||
Jane Alice stayed in school and went in for athletics, hiking and
|
||
all sorts of outdoor sports which used up her dangerous energy. I
|
||
have never believed in the creed that children should be seen and
|
||
not heard, and I wince when a nervous mother urges her daughters to
|
||
sit in the corner and be quiet. The girls should be taught to be
|
||
well-mannered, of course, but they should have some outlet for that
|
||
well of restless energy. Otherwise they may come to me.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
90
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
XII. STRANGER THAN FICTION
|
||
|
||
About a week later I got a case that admirably illustrated Mr.
|
||
C's sympathy for the daughters of neurotic mothers.
|
||
|
||
A very pretty young girl, with a defiant look in her soft dark
|
||
eyes, came in to see me. She had refused to give the office girl
|
||
her name, and I suspected immediately what she wanted.
|
||
|
||
"You're going to say that my story sounds exactly like the
|
||
hokum in cheap magazines," she began.
|
||
|
||
I smiled. "That doesn't mean it isn't true. Nor that the
|
||
stories in magazines aren't true to life. I know a writer who gets
|
||
all his material from the correspondence of a 'lovelorn' editor.
|
||
He's accused of being unreal and melodramatic, but he told me that
|
||
almost invariably he had to tone down the facts."
|
||
|
||
"I'm in one of the usual triangles," she said. "And I'm in the
|
||
usual jam."
|
||
|
||
"Tell me about it," I invited.
|
||
|
||
"I want to begin way back. Because," she paused and gave me a
|
||
teary smile. "You see, I know something about you and I was told to
|
||
tell you the entire story because if I didn't you'd turn me down.
|
||
So I'll start with my very beginning. I was an unwanted child. My
|
||
mother had been a belle, and she made a good marriage. And then
|
||
right away I came along to spoil the fun -- and my mother's figure,
|
||
as I've had dinned into my ear's since childhood."
|
||
|
||
It was a pathetic story she told, but I don't believe it was
|
||
exaggerated. She had been paraded around as a baby and her mother
|
||
had posed as a martyr to motherhood. But when she outgrew the cute
|
||
roly-poly stage and began to have long legs and arms and be a big
|
||
girl, she was shunted off to school in winter and camp in summer
|
||
rather than spoil her mother's lies about her age.
|
||
|
||
"Mother has always claimed that she was a mere child when she
|
||
married," Dorothy said bitterly, "As a matter of fact, she wa's 24,
|
||
and getting pretty nervous about being an old maid. I was kept in
|
||
short socks as long as possible. Finally father died and left me
|
||
some money, but in mother's care, and I wasn't to get it until I am
|
||
21. I'm 20 now, but I'm still mother's little girl. I'd started in
|
||
school so early and had it so concentrated that at 18 there wasn't
|
||
any place except college she could send me. And mother was afraid
|
||
of college. I don't know exactly why. She had the old-fashioned
|
||
idea that college made blue stockings out of women and I'd never
|
||
marry. She is vain enough not to want an old maid for a daughter,
|
||
although at the same time she doesn't want me to marry because then
|
||
she'd be a mother-in-law and perhaps a grandmother. She was afraid,
|
||
too, that college would make me strong-willed. Too, when I was away
|
||
at boarding-school it sounded as if I were about 12. She never had
|
||
any pictures made of me after I was 10. But a girl at college
|
||
sounds grown-up.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
91
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She smiled again, a smile with no mirth. "That sounds awfully
|
||
bitter, but you never had it drilled into you that it was a crime
|
||
for you to grow up normally. Mother is always talking about what a
|
||
pretty child I was and sighing. And she worries for fear I'll be as
|
||
pretty as she was. I won't. I look more like father. Well, I came
|
||
home and I started dating a little in spite of anything mother
|
||
could do. I went away to visit some school friends and I met a
|
||
young engineer. I fell for him -- hard. He loved me, wanted to
|
||
marry me. But he wanted to do everything in the traditional
|
||
fashion. He wanted to ask my mother for my hand. I was against
|
||
that. After all, I'm 20. And, I forgot to tell you, if I marry
|
||
after I'm 18, I get full control of my money without waiting until
|
||
I'm 21. Sometimes I think father put that clause in to encourage me
|
||
to marry and escape from mother."
|
||
|
||
I nodded. "Go on," I told her. I knew the girl either had to
|
||
tell her story or go into hysterics. She'd been bottling it up too
|
||
long.
|
||
|
||
"I fought against telling mother," Dorothy went on. "I knew
|
||
she'd do something to spoil it. Sandy couldn't understand. He
|
||
wanted me to meet his mother, who is also a widow. He thought it
|
||
would be nice for our mothers to get to be good friends. His mother
|
||
is a dear, old-fashioned but sweet. I knew mother wouldn't like her
|
||
and would make fun of her and I couldn't bear that. Sandy had a job
|
||
offered him with an engineering firm here and he wanted to take it
|
||
so that we could live close to our relatives. He'd been wandering
|
||
over the world, but he said it was no way for a woman to live.
|
||
Anyhow, he wanted children."
|
||
|
||
"I knew it wouldn't work," she said, almost hysterically.
|
||
"Mother would fight it. She couldn't bear to have me living in the
|
||
same town and raising a family. She'd break up our marriage, if we
|
||
were allowed to be married. I wanted to elope and go to South
|
||
America where Sandy could work. But he was tired of living there."
|
||
|
||
She smiled ironically. "Finally, I did get him to go away with
|
||
me for a week-end or so. I told him that I was modern and believed
|
||
people should find out if they are sexually mated before they were
|
||
married. He was a little shocked at first, but he wanted me, too.
|
||
After that, he insisted that we must be married right away just in
|
||
case anything happened. And he was more determined to meet mother.
|
||
So he came here. I thought that I could tell mother that we had
|
||
been lovers and shock her into letting us marry. But she beat me to
|
||
it."
|
||
|
||
She shuddered. "Oh, it's too horrible to talk about!" "I can
|
||
guess," I said. "You mother is shrewd and she saw what sort of a
|
||
man your lover was. So she told him you weren't a good girl."
|
||
|
||
"Worse than that. She first told him that I was under 18 and
|
||
couldn't marry without her consent. But he knew better than that
|
||
because I'd told him about all the schools I'd gone to and pretty
|
||
well outlined my life. But I'd never told him the truth about
|
||
mother. His own mother was so different, you know, and I hate to
|
||
play the mistreated daughter. I thought he'd think less of me and
|
||
might wonder if I weren't like her, or if I were exaggerating.
|
||
Anyhow, I am well dressed and well fed and fairly well educated. I
|
||
don't look mistreated."
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
92
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"And you were too happy to want to spoil it by talking about
|
||
your past sorrows," I suggested.
|
||
|
||
She nodded. "They seemed somehow unimportant if I could escape
|
||
them with Sandy. But when mother saw that the under-age gag
|
||
wouldn't work, she went on. She got panicky and she didn't really
|
||
mean to say as much as she did. She's apologized since. But she
|
||
told him that I didn't want children and that I was over-sexed and
|
||
she'd had to send me to girls' schools to keep me out of trouble.
|
||
That wasn't true, of course, although," she hesitated for a moment,
|
||
"I'd done some rather indiscreet things in rebellion, such as
|
||
getting drunk with the wrong people, and going on wild parties. I
|
||
hadn't been a plaster saint, but I'd never had any sex experience
|
||
before. Mother is charming, she's, a good actress, and of course
|
||
Sandy believed her. It all fitted in neatly with my frantic desire
|
||
that we have each other before marriage. Mother even told him that
|
||
doctors had talked of giving me a sterilization operation but she
|
||
had refused, thinking I'd outgrow my indiscretions."
|
||
|
||
The tears were rolling down her cheeks. She cried naturally.
|
||
like a child, not bothering to wipe away the drops. "I suppose I
|
||
behaved in a peculiar fashion, too, and that made things worse. I
|
||
knew mother was lying to him, but I didn't know what about and I
|
||
made some silly explanations designed to cover virtually everything
|
||
or anything. The next thing I knew, he told me that perhaps I was
|
||
right in saying it was all a mistake -- I told him that when I saw
|
||
him regarding me oddly. Now he's gone to South America. And," she
|
||
spread out. her hands, "here I am."
|
||
|
||
"Have you told your mother you're pregnant?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"For God's sake, no. She'd use it as a lever over me all my
|
||
life or she'd ship me off to South America. As soon as she found
|
||
out that Sandy had gone away to work, she was sorry for what she'd
|
||
done. she'd thought, of course, that we'd live here. Then she told
|
||
me part of what she'd said and I guessed the rest and made her
|
||
admit It. Of course, it was partly, my fault. I was nervous, and
|
||
when Sandy began acting strangely I flared up instead of telling
|
||
him the truth. I was so upset I didn't know what I was doing."
|
||
|
||
"Look," I said. "You came here for an abortion, but you don't
|
||
really want one, and so I'm not going to give it to you."
|
||
|
||
She stared at me hopelessly. "You must. I thought at first I'd
|
||
have Sandy's child and salvage that much of him. But it's
|
||
impossible. I won't have any freedom until I'm 21. Oh, I've got a
|
||
little money, and I can pawn some things and pay your fee. But I
|
||
haven't enough to support me somewhere and take me through all the
|
||
trouble mother would make for me. She'd ruin it somehow."
|
||
|
||
"I don't mean that," I told her. "You're going to follow your
|
||
man. You still love him or you wouldn't want his child. The trouble
|
||
with you is that all your life you've been afraid of your mother.
|
||
You were scared, or you would have saved yourself a lot of misery,
|
||
told Sandy the truth and gone with him to interview your mother.
|
||
You were a coward then. You went away and hid while he talked to
|
||
her. So now you've got to do something more courageous. You must go
|
||
to South America and find him."
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
93
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"I couldn't. I've got only the vaguest idea where he is. And
|
||
I don't want to force him into marrying me because I'm pregnant."
|
||
|
||
I shrugged my shoulders impatiently. "And how do you think he
|
||
would feel if he ever heard the real story and knew that because of
|
||
false pride and cowardice you cheated both of you out of happiness?
|
||
You come home with me and my wife will talk to you."
|
||
|
||
The upshot of it was that Norma went with her to Sandy's
|
||
mother.
|
||
|
||
"She'll be horrified," Dorothy protested, "She's one of those
|
||
sweet, old-fashioned women."
|
||
|
||
"Old-fashioned women know a lot about life," Norma told her.
|
||
|
||
And Norma was right. She told me about it on her return.
|
||
|
||
"I almost lost my nerve when we got there," Norma related.
|
||
"The set-up was too mid-Victorian for words. And there was Mrs. S,
|
||
a grandmotherly woman with white hair and an apple-blossom akin.
|
||
Dorothy got cold feet and I had to tell the story. I meant to skip
|
||
about Dorothy's wanting an abortion, but she blurted it out. The
|
||
old lady just clucked her tongue and kissed Dorothy.
|
||
|
||
"Then she said it reminded her so much of an old woman who
|
||
wanted her daughter to look after her and so she told the poor
|
||
girl's beau that Maisie wasn't a nice girl. She wound up by saying,
|
||
'But poor Maisie didn't have your courage, my dear, or your money
|
||
and so there was nothing she could do about it.' She wasn't shocked
|
||
that Dorothy was pregnant. She just said, 'Such things happen to
|
||
the young, dear, and we who are old should be ready to help. That's
|
||
why we are here after our child-bearing duties are over.'"
|
||
|
||
Mrs. S took things into her own delicate hands, and when Norma
|
||
left she was busy getting passports for them. She had introduced
|
||
Dorothy everywhere as her daughter-in-law and she had cabled her
|
||
son that she was coming to see him and bringing along her new
|
||
daughter.
|
||
|
||
"I just told him that I'd explain later," she said. "I don't
|
||
think it best to surprise him. Sandy knows and trusts me, and he
|
||
probably has had time to think things over by now and realize his
|
||
mistake. But he's a wee bit stubborn, like all the Scotch."
|
||
|
||
I like to think of Dorothy and her happiness. She and Sandy
|
||
were married upon her arrival, with Mrs. S beaming on them. It
|
||
helps Whenever I hear abortionists described as monsters who fatten
|
||
on child murder. I have never performed an abortion unless I felt
|
||
that it was best for humanity. And I have prevented many of them,
|
||
especially in the last few years.
|
||
|
||
As methods have improved and women are wiser in birth-control
|
||
methods, more and more young women have lost their horror of the
|
||
whispered, "She got rid of the baby somehow." They come into my
|
||
office seeking an easy way out of their difficulties. But a lot of
|
||
them have gone out convinced that the hardest way might be the best
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
94
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
after all. To many of them I said, "Bring your man in here and let
|
||
me talk to him. This is his business, too. Don't get too modern.
|
||
You're not modern enough to escape the oldest of all biological
|
||
traps."
|
||
|
||
There is something about a doctor's office that make's people
|
||
more humble, more ready to listen. I think it must be that each
|
||
sick, hopeless or hopeful patient leaves something of his patience
|
||
or his despair or his resignation in the atmosphere. People will
|
||
listen to things from a doctor that they will not take from anyone
|
||
else. Possibly it is because few doctors ever preach, and the
|
||
patient realizes that the doctor knows what he is talking about.
|
||
|
||
When marriage to possible, I refuse to perform an abortion
|
||
merely to cover up carelessness. The patient may regret it later.
|
||
I am not in favor of shotgun marriages, but I have had literally
|
||
dozens of cases where abortions were refused and the marriages were
|
||
normally happy. Sometimes there is a difference in social position
|
||
and moneyed prestige. A society girl has an affair with a
|
||
workingman and is caught. She hates to face the disapproval of her
|
||
family, the possible ridicule of having married beneath her. If it
|
||
was purely momentary passion, I am not in favor of forcing a union
|
||
and allowing a child to be born when a divorce is inevitable and
|
||
the child will always be under a handicap.
|
||
|
||
But if the affair has been going on for several months -- and
|
||
despite all the stories of conception after one sex act, it is a
|
||
rare thing -- then it seems to me that there is no reason why
|
||
marriage shouldn't follow, and I say so. And when two young working
|
||
people are selfishly intent on leading their own lives and want an
|
||
abortion for the girl because they are afraid the child and
|
||
marriage might interfere with freedom, I refuse to act.
|
||
|
||
There has grown up in recent years a group of modern
|
||
mistresses, workingwomen who are afraid that marriage might
|
||
interfere with their jobs, who want to artificially prolong their
|
||
youth by not having children or other responsibilities. They say
|
||
that they intend to have sex anyhow, and they indulge in affairs of
|
||
long duration. Sometimes these women actually would make poor
|
||
mothers, and in that case an abortion is advisable. At other times,
|
||
I try to exert the slight pressure that is necessary to overcome
|
||
the idea that marriage would interfere too much with the designs of
|
||
their living.
|
||
|
||
I have tried in this casebook to present a random selection of
|
||
patients. I have made mistakes. I have had women come in and blame
|
||
me for their sterility. They do not believe me when I tell them
|
||
that they have undoubtedly done something since the abortion to
|
||
cause their barren state.
|
||
|
||
Likewise, I have had wives blame me for urging them into
|
||
marriages which proved unhappy. It did no good to point out that
|
||
there are many divorces not caused by the handicap of premature
|
||
childbirth.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
95
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I played God a little in the case of Dorothy and Sandy because
|
||
I thought it worth the risk. If she had stayed with her mother, she
|
||
might have become promiscuous out of sheer rebellion. She admitted
|
||
having gone on wild parties as an emotional relief after a quarrel
|
||
with her mother. I wanted to avoid what happened in one case that
|
||
came to me.
|
||
|
||
June's mother had been a pretty, spoiled village girl. She had
|
||
married a city man and lived happily for a while. But eventually
|
||
June's father was unfaithful to her mother. The mother discovered
|
||
it, and they were estranged. Denied his wife, the man went in for
|
||
a series of affairs. The wife had expected to find her husband at
|
||
her feet, begging for forgiveness, and became bitter when he was
|
||
not abject.
|
||
|
||
She eventually separated from her husband and he gave her a
|
||
handsome settlement. The mother now exacted the utmost in slavery
|
||
from the daughter. June in rebellion took the obvious course. She
|
||
began a clandestine affair with an utter cad. She knew what sort of
|
||
a man he was, that is, she knew that he was reputed to be "wild."
|
||
But that lent more glamour to the affair. She went farther than she
|
||
intended, and found herself in a jam. So she came to me.
|
||
|
||
"I didn't really love the man," she explained, "and I knew I
|
||
Was cutting off my nose to spite my face, but somehow I just went
|
||
on and on. If I tell mother, she'll say I'm my father's, daughter
|
||
and all the rest of my life she'll talk about how I ruined myself
|
||
and broke her heart."
|
||
|
||
"When you get out of this mess, get a job and a little more
|
||
independence," I told her. "You're too old to be so childish. I can
|
||
understand how your mother drives you to do wild things. But you
|
||
don't want to spend your life playing the fool just because you
|
||
feel you're getting even with her. You can't be happy that way."
|
||
|
||
"I know," she answered meekly. "I know i've made a darned fool
|
||
of myself. And I don't understand why I picked out this way of
|
||
trying to get even with mother. I just did. It seemed the worst
|
||
thing I could do to her."
|
||
|
||
I didn't find that extraordinary. Sex is used frequently as a
|
||
weapon by the woman. The young girl, angry at her mother, thinks
|
||
"I'll run away" and adds as a postscript, that she'll run away with
|
||
some boy her mother dislikes. The angry wife withholds her caresses
|
||
and looks around for someone to whom she can give her body as
|
||
additional punishment to her husband.
|
||
|
||
A young woman who frankly admits to 30 was talking to me the
|
||
other day about woman's use of sex,
|
||
|
||
"People talk of feminine wiles and age-old tricks," she
|
||
remarked scornfully. "They talk about women not being
|
||
straightforward about sex. How can they? You've seen what happened
|
||
to girls who tried to meet man on his own ground."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
96
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
She paused a moment. "Probably I'm malicious. But I've got so
|
||
sick of men who want my body for a night or a few nights and expect
|
||
me to be delighted because they say so and because they admit that
|
||
they like me and are attracted by me. They feel that the mere fact
|
||
that they want me should cause me to submit immediately. They never
|
||
bother to inquire whether I feel the same way or whether I object
|
||
to being shopworn. But I'm going to have my fun some of these days.
|
||
There are two or three men I'm watching and I mean to have some
|
||
quiet laughs at their expense in about 10 years."
|
||
|
||
"What do you mean?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"I know about half a dozen attractive men in their late 20's
|
||
and early 30's. They're all earning enough to support a wife but
|
||
they don't want one. They say that they want sex as an adventure.
|
||
They usually want one girl as a self-supporting mistress and then
|
||
perfect freedom to date any other girls they are attracted to. The
|
||
women don't like the idea; it robs them even of the security of a
|
||
steady boy friend. They can't even count upon an escort whenever
|
||
they want one; they have to find out whether their lovers have
|
||
other plans, and it keeps them from getting a matrimonial-minded
|
||
man. I know a couple of these gay dogs who are past 40. One already
|
||
has lost his manhood and another is losing his. Now they're
|
||
beginning to see the woman's viewpoint. They have to stand by and
|
||
watch younger men get the women they want. The women their own age
|
||
don't appeal to them, and they're having the novel experience of
|
||
being a little abject, of pleading to see women, of asking small
|
||
favors."
|
||
|
||
I grinned. "I know what you mean. I've seen some of those
|
||
birds who claim they're prematurely impotent. Some of them are, of
|
||
course. But you'd be surprised to know how many men in their middle
|
||
40's, men who haven't taken any care of themselves and are in
|
||
generally poor physical condition, are hollering their heads off in
|
||
the privacy of a doctor's office."
|
||
|
||
"Sure," she agreed. "I know one man who wasn't willing to make
|
||
any sacrifices to insure a lasting companionship. He didn't see any
|
||
women worth marrying or worth giving up his freedom for. Now he's
|
||
consumed with self-pity. He sees old age approaching and not much
|
||
more fun. So he wants some attractive woman to fall in love with
|
||
him and spend her life taking care of him. There are still women
|
||
who would marry him, but he doesn't want them. He's used to the
|
||
best. And he can't adjust himself to the idea that he's no longer
|
||
in a position to take what he wants. he's like a woman now. He has
|
||
to take what he can get.
|
||
|
||
"A man told me the other day that he'd always been fair to
|
||
women; he'd never promised to marry any of them; they knew what
|
||
they were getting into when he had a sex affair with them. And he
|
||
never got them into any jams. Now he's full of self-pity because he
|
||
wants a woman and can't get her. She has never promised to marry
|
||
him, either. It never occurred to him that some of these women who
|
||
gave him pleasure may have fallen in love with him -- he was a
|
||
handsome devil -- and concealed it from pride. If a man tells a
|
||
woman he loves her, she usually feels that sometime he may get
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
97
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
around to proposing. And a man has no compunction about asking the
|
||
girl if she loves him. That puts the whole affair on a higher
|
||
plane. And if she doesn't have hysterics or shoot him, he feels
|
||
that this is all right with her."
|
||
|
||
"I know," I said. "A man cane to me the anther day and asked
|
||
if I could predict how much longer he could have an active sex
|
||
life. He was beginning to weaken. I told him it was impossible for
|
||
me to tell. He was about 50, and wasn't in very good physical
|
||
condition. He said that he wanted to marry a girl of about 25. He
|
||
would do it if he thought he could have sexual relations with her
|
||
for four or five years. He said that if he became immediately
|
||
impotent, he would not feel right about marrying her, but he
|
||
thought that after four or five years of married life he could
|
||
expect her to be faithful.
|
||
|
||
"He was an old friend of mine, and I told him that he was just
|
||
laying up misery for himself. I asked him if he expected a girl of
|
||
30 to be faithful to a man of 55. He hemmed and hawed and said that
|
||
he knew she must have a sex life -- he thought in terms of sex
|
||
still rather than love -- and he wouldn't object as long as he
|
||
didn't know about it. He was willing to condemn the girl to
|
||
clandestine' affairs, to being the unfaithful wife of an old man,
|
||
in order to have four or five years of happiness. And, of course,
|
||
he would be jealous and suspicious. Most of these old men with
|
||
young wives are."
|
||
|
||
"Naturally," the woman said. "He'd tell her that he understood
|
||
her need for sex, but he'd see that she felt guilty, and he'd
|
||
torment her by trying to find out about it and telling her that all
|
||
her men friends were scoundrels."
|
||
|
||
I chuckled. "You've got him right. He then told me that he'd
|
||
let her divorce him if she wanted to -- but I didn't take that too
|
||
seriously, either. Men in that condition will promise virtually
|
||
anything. Then he said that she'd be left a moneyed widow when she
|
||
was a little past 30, and she could have plenty of time to have her
|
||
fun."
|
||
|
||
"It would serve him right if he married her and she was
|
||
flagrantly unfaithful and let him know she was waiting for him to
|
||
carry out his promise to die and leave her his money," the woman
|
||
exclaimed. "I told you I was a little soured on this sex business.
|
||
In the past 10 years, I've had several affairs. Some of them have
|
||
left pleasant memories and some not so nice. But when I try to
|
||
count the men of all ages, descriptions and previous, condition of
|
||
servitude who have made me proposition's, and men who have let me
|
||
get into trouble through their carelessness and expected me to get
|
||
out by myself, well, it doesn't seem very pleasant."
|
||
|
||
She looked at me and grinned. "I don't mean the time I came to
|
||
you, either. Larry was all right then. He did his duty. But I must
|
||
say that he was content to sit back and furnish his share of the
|
||
money and let me make the arrangements. Which is one reason why I
|
||
didn't use any of the much-vaunted feminine wiles to try to trick
|
||
him into marriage. Of course, I know it was in character for Larry
|
||
to be quiet and easy-going. But I admit that I would have admired
|
||
him more if he hadn't stood back so meekly and let me handle it."
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
98
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I laughed. "You modern girls yell for equal rights, and when
|
||
you get them you're peeved because men don't try to dominate you
|
||
and don't do everything for you."
|
||
|
||
"Well put," she agreed. "But there's another viewpoint,
|
||
Martin, in my world, where sex frequently is a casual matter -- to
|
||
judge from some of the propositions made me -- there are only a few
|
||
ways of knowing when a man really cares for a woman. I'm always
|
||
skeptical of the word, love. There are so many varieties, ranging
|
||
from momentary passion and infatuation or friendly fondness to the
|
||
honest to gosh till-death-do-us-part kind. And this womanly
|
||
intuition business has been greatly overrated. I've heard men say
|
||
that a woman always knows somehow when a man really loves her.
|
||
That's bosh. Women have a keener eye for deception in people they
|
||
don't love; and frequently they try to kid themselves and others
|
||
when they really know better.
|
||
|
||
"When it all boils down, there are only three or four ways in
|
||
which a woman can be reassured that a man loves her. And those
|
||
don't always work. One is when he offers her a wedding ring. Larry,
|
||
for instance, told me that he loved me as much as if we were
|
||
married, I always thought when he said that, 'Well, why don't you
|
||
ask me to marry you, then?' He got angry once when I said I
|
||
couldn't believe in him, and asked me whether a wedding ring were
|
||
the only way I could be sure of him. He pointed out that there
|
||
wasn't anything sure about marriage. I knew that, of course, but
|
||
what he didn't realize was that to a woman a proposal doesn't
|
||
merely meat that the man is signifying his willingness to be
|
||
branded as the woman's property, but that he is anxious that the
|
||
woman be known as his wife.. No woman like's to be told merely that
|
||
she can be sure of the man. She wants the man to want to be sure of
|
||
her. Otherwise, she has a feeling that he's a little
|
||
condescending."
|
||
|
||
"Male egotism," I explained. "So that's why you didn't want to
|
||
marry larry?"
|
||
|
||
"Partly," she admitted. "And he wasn't jealous enough. I had
|
||
no way of knowing whether this was perfect faith or utter
|
||
indifference, and sometimes I needed assurance that it wasn't
|
||
indifference. As it was, at times I got the idea that he didn't
|
||
really give a damn what I did so long as it didn't interfere with
|
||
his having me when he wanted me, or reflect on his reputation, or
|
||
keep him from his other social pleasures."
|
||
|
||
"Marriage and jealousy then," I ticked them off on my fingers.
|
||
"What are the other things a woman needs as proof of love?"
|
||
|
||
"illustrated again by Larry," she replied. "Now Larry said
|
||
later he would have been glad to arrange all the disagreeable
|
||
preliminaries for my abortion. But the point is, he didn't rush up
|
||
with the offer at the time and he didn't insist. God knows how many
|
||
times I've heard men say -- after I've expressed the suggestion --
|
||
'If I had known you wanted to go, I'd have been delighted to fix
|
||
it.' They may have been sincere, but it sounds like lip-courtesy,
|
||
especially since they didn't do anything more about it. Now I will
|
||
ask favors of men who mean little to me -- or who perhaps are good
|
||
friends of mine. But I want my lover to make offers of service
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
99
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
because he wants to, not because I suggested it. And once in a
|
||
while I want him to override my wishes if he thinks it is best for
|
||
me. Now you are a friend of mine. But if I told you I was going to
|
||
get drunk, you'd shrug your shoulders and think it was my business.
|
||
As a matter of fact, you wouldn't care enough to find out who I'd
|
||
be drinking with. I don't expect more from you. But from a lover,
|
||
I'd want a little more interest in my welfare."
|
||
|
||
"You want perfection," I told her.
|
||
|
||
"No," she protested, "I don't mean that I should always be the
|
||
passive member of the couple. But I'd want some assurance that he
|
||
thought of me without my having to call his attention to me.
|
||
Otherwise, I'd never know whether he was genuinely anxious to be
|
||
with me."
|
||
|
||
She grinned. "We sound so smart we ought to write a book about
|
||
clandestine sex."
|
||
|
||
"I am," I told her. "I've kept a sort of casebook and I'm
|
||
compiling an informal record of them. I thought it might show some
|
||
of my stuffed shirt friends there's more to sex than the birth and
|
||
wedding notices,"
|
||
|
||
"How are you going to end it." she asked.
|
||
|
||
"I don't know. I've been lucky so far. I'm happily married,
|
||
with two children. Sometimes I think that the reason I am happily
|
||
married is because other people make my mistakes for me. And so far
|
||
I've been pretty lucky. Of course by the time the book comes out I
|
||
may be in prison."
|
||
|
||
"Let me finish it," she asked eagerly. "I like to come over
|
||
here and talk to you, knowing that you'll regard it as a
|
||
confessional. I can't talk about these things to the men and women
|
||
I know. It might do me some good to get it off my chest, and it
|
||
might do others some good to hear the woman's side of the case.
|
||
|
||
"All right," I agreed.
|
||
|
||
"You can present the sex situation from an impersonal
|
||
viewpoint," she explained with an ironic grin, "and I'll give the
|
||
story of the fallen woman, 20th Century style."
|
||
|
||
"So be it," I said. "I am never satisfied with endings,
|
||
anyhow. The happy ending's make me feel that if I look on the front
|
||
page tomorrow I'll see a divorce suit being filed. And when I see
|
||
tragic endings I know that presently the characters will begin to
|
||
feel that life isn't so bad after all and a good meal or a stiff
|
||
drink is in order."
|
||
|
||
And so my book ends, appropriately enough, with the first
|
||
person story of one of my patients. Its writer will remain
|
||
anonymous, without even the cloak of a fictitious first name. A
|
||
week after our talk my patient brought it to me, neatly typed. I
|
||
found it an absorbing human document. She told me that she had kept
|
||
a diary at the time. I present it in her own words.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
100
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
XIII. ONE GIRL'S STORY
|
||
|
||
When you mention the word "abortion," most people either laugh
|
||
or look avidly interested, depending on whether you are being
|
||
general or personal in the discussion.
|
||
|
||
The discussion won't be in the first person, singular, because
|
||
an abortion is one strictly feminine operation women don't talk
|
||
about. That sounds like a joke. It isn't to one who has gone
|
||
through the hush-hush business of having one.
|
||
|
||
Married women have bored we by dwelling on the details of
|
||
their sacrifice and pain in childbirth. But the unmarried girl is
|
||
silent about the torture, mental and physical, she endured to
|
||
prevent an unwelcome child entering a hostile world. Her silence is
|
||
part of her punishment. And no small part. Not for her the sympathy
|
||
lavished on the ill or the bereaved. She has to smile before,
|
||
during, and after her premature accouchement.
|
||
|
||
By my code of ethic, an abortion was the only possible curse.
|
||
My lover and I had not wished to marry, before I became pregnant.
|
||
There was no reason why accidental conception should force us into
|
||
a repugnant marriage. I had no moral scruple's against ridding
|
||
myself of the "mistake." I could see no difference between an
|
||
abortion and use of contraceptives.
|
||
|
||
At times, I felt that I would like to have a child. I even
|
||
speculated regarding its probable traits and appearance. Even now,
|
||
I sometimes find myself wondering what the child would have looked
|
||
like, figuring out how old it would be and speculating regarding
|
||
any change it would have made in my life. But thus far I'm glad
|
||
that I did not have it.
|
||
|
||
I did not want to bring an illegitimate child into the world.
|
||
I had decided ideas upon what a child's upbringing should be. It
|
||
would not be fair to myself to jeopardize my reputation and my
|
||
possible career, and the same thing was true regarding my lover. I
|
||
did not want the responsibility; neither did the father. It would
|
||
be impossible for me to even support the child decently. I had no
|
||
right to bring a child into the world under such circumstances.
|
||
|
||
I was, I believe, exceptionally lucky. I obtained, easily a
|
||
small amount of ready money. I was able to spend a short time away
|
||
from my home without suspicion attaching to my sudden departure. My
|
||
lover shared the expenses, and we were able to keep the affair
|
||
secret. At times during that dreary period when my family doctor
|
||
thought it best to wait and see if my menstruation had not simply
|
||
been delayed, I wanted to talk about my fears, to argue aloud. in
|
||
order to convince myself that I was being foolish. Again, I wanted
|
||
to try to forget the whole business. I even thought about remaining
|
||
drunk or at giddy parties the remainder of the time I must wait, I
|
||
resent my constant worry. I sought easy physical tasks which would
|
||
occupy my hands and mind and shut out thought. It was a strain to
|
||
carry on a normal conversation. I'd forget for a few minutes. and
|
||
then back would come the nagging worry.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
101
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
The doctor had thought I might have just skipped a
|
||
menstruation period, because there had been a tiny flow. As time
|
||
approached for the deciding period, I was obsessed with a desire to
|
||
get it over with. I was optimistic with the doctor. But I was
|
||
secretly convinced that I was pregnant. Time dragged and then
|
||
spurted. I had the usual wish-fulfillment dreams in which I fancied
|
||
that I was menstruating normally. They caused me unpleasant
|
||
awakenings and a dread of going to sleep. I acquired an unhealthy
|
||
curiosity about my anatomy. Was my indigestion nausea? Was a chance
|
||
abdominal pain the stirring of menstruation? I feared to complain
|
||
about any petty ailment, thinking it might be recognized as a tell-
|
||
tale symptom. Any chance joke about pregnancy made me grow cold.
|
||
|
||
Since childhood I had suffered from nervousness. Now I feared
|
||
that the additional mental strain might cause me to become
|
||
hysterical and blurt out the truth or might cause a nervous
|
||
breakdown which would make more difficult the coming ordeal.
|
||
|
||
I was in a state of complete jitters during the all-important
|
||
few days when I should have been menstruating. Then I bolstered
|
||
courage for a decisive visit to my doctor.
|
||
|
||
An hour's wait in the outer office gave ample time for
|
||
phrasing and rephrasing the essential questions. I eyed the other
|
||
patients and envied them their ailments. They didn't have to hide
|
||
their symptoms or worry about a listening nurse.
|
||
|
||
I told the doctor that nothing had happened. Afterward it was
|
||
odd to think this was the worst of many visits to doctors. Later it
|
||
became a matter of course, the way was smoothed before me, doctors
|
||
were more adroit about relieving nervous strain.
|
||
|
||
This doctor wasted no time in being tactful. He put his
|
||
fingers together and looked thoughtful. "You'd better have an
|
||
examination," he advised.
|
||
|
||
I kept up a running flow of chatter which deceived neither of
|
||
us into thinking that I was taking the matter lightly. All the time
|
||
my mind was repeating, "This can't happen to me. Not to me. This is
|
||
the sort of thing that happens to stupid girls."
|
||
|
||
The doctor probed. It hurt. I winced.
|
||
|
||
"You're pregnant all right," he said. "Two months." I felt a
|
||
little numb, a little relieved. At least I knew. But I wanted to
|
||
get out of there quickly.
|
||
|
||
"So that's that," I remarked. "I'm a fallen woman. How much do
|
||
I owe you?"
|
||
|
||
"Two dollars." He helped me with my coat and gave me a
|
||
friendly slap on the back. "I'm sorry," he observed. "It's just a
|
||
bad break."
|
||
|
||
I went out into the waiting-room. I said something funny to
|
||
the girl attendant. I met some old friends on the street. They were
|
||
genial.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
102
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"How are you getting along?" asked a man who had once had a
|
||
romantic attachment for me.
|
||
|
||
"Just fine," I smiled. It was funny, I thought, how many
|
||
people must be saying "just fine" when they felt like the devil.
|
||
|
||
I flattered myself that I was taking all this very well. I
|
||
hoped that I could maintain my composure when I got into a
|
||
sympathetic atmosphere. I went into the hotel room where my lover
|
||
was waiting for me. I tried to keep my smile from sliding. I was
|
||
afraid my eye's were filling with childish tears. I told myself
|
||
that I must behave like an adult, facing a problem that had been
|
||
met by thousands of persons.
|
||
|
||
"I want a drink," I told him. I held the highball in my hand
|
||
and sipped it while I gave the doctor's verdict. I lit a cigarette.
|
||
I thought that it certainly helped along my appearance as a fallen
|
||
woman to sit in a hotel room with a cigarette and a highball while
|
||
I listened to what, in my hyper-sensitive condition, seemed an
|
||
interminable discussion of plans and the necessity for secrecy.
|
||
|
||
God knows that I didn't want to broadcast the news. But I felt
|
||
so ungodly tired. I wanted bed and rest and the friendly
|
||
unawareness of my family. I knew these arrangements had to be made.
|
||
But it seemed to me that the same things were being said over and
|
||
over again. I suppose they were. My lover probably was nervous,
|
||
too, although he didn't show it. His very calm irritated me.
|
||
|
||
I wonder now if I had to do it over again whether I would try
|
||
to be so gay and gallant. Probably it looked as if I were frivolous
|
||
and didn't take it very seriously. Maybe if I hadn't tried to act
|
||
so brave and efficient, Larry wouldn't have seemed so far away.
|
||
Perhaps I should have gone feminine and helpless. I don't know.
|
||
|
||
Anyhow, it was decided that I should go to a nearby city where
|
||
a friend of mine would arrange things. I live there now. I made a
|
||
suitable excuse and drove away. Ordinarily I like going anywhere
|
||
and part of the day I managed to enjoy the trip. But there was the
|
||
strain of explaining things to the friend, getting his assistance.
|
||
I had told him during my waiting period that I might require his
|
||
help. I knew that he was a friend of several doctors and would be
|
||
in a position to help.
|
||
|
||
I told my friend, and I tried to tell myself that the reason
|
||
Larry did not go along was because it was difficult for him to get
|
||
away from work, it would be doubly expensive for us both and it
|
||
would increase the danger of being found out if we were both away
|
||
from home at the same time.
|
||
|
||
I realized that there was no real need for him to go with me.
|
||
X could handle this business with more efficiency and more secrecy,
|
||
but at the same time I wished Larry had wanted to go or had asked
|
||
to come up and bring me back. That trip home was beastly lonely as
|
||
I remember It.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
103
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I checked in at the hotel and went to see X. He was
|
||
sympathetic but a little brusque about my foolishness in getting
|
||
into a jam. He asked why I didn't marry the man. I tried making
|
||
explanations, and they all sounded foolish, so at last I said
|
||
bluntly that I didn't want to and that was that. He agreed to help,
|
||
and I went back to my hotel. Books I had brought failed to hold my
|
||
attention. The room seemed first too hot and then too cold. My
|
||
dozing was nightmarish.
|
||
|
||
There were moments that first night when the whole thing
|
||
seemed to be only a trifling incident; others when it loomed up as
|
||
a calamity and I broke out in cold sweat, remembering my cowardice
|
||
about physical pain, my utter ignorance of the whole procedure. I
|
||
had to trust blindly to X.
|
||
|
||
I told myself that it was foolish that I should be so upset.
|
||
The morning dragged while I waited for a telephone message from my
|
||
friend. On the radio a laconic female voice chanted, "Everything's
|
||
been done before. I just want to do what's been done before." The
|
||
telephone rang. "Everything is O.K.," X said.
|
||
|
||
I rushed over for a conference. A medical friend had agreed to
|
||
arrange it. But he refused to take my doctor's finger examination
|
||
verdict. There must be a laboratory verification. So I bought a
|
||
rabbit.
|
||
|
||
The rabbit cost me $15 and 36 hours of waiting.
|
||
|
||
Oddly enough this period of waiting, while nerve-wracking, did
|
||
bring a strange relief from other worries. My fate for the next few
|
||
days was in the hands of impersonal scientists. I hoped, of course,
|
||
that the test would be negative. But this was one decision I did
|
||
not have to make. And suddenly it seemed to me that I was
|
||
unutterably weary of making decisions. People had said that I was
|
||
gay and carefree, with 'nothing to worry about' They little knew of
|
||
the complications of my private life, my worrying over whether I
|
||
had made a mistake in turning down a man who loved me and wanted to
|
||
marry me in order to pursue a futile affair with a man who did not;
|
||
the constant speculation over, whether I hadn't better leave the
|
||
hole thing behind and go somewhere else, start life over again.
|
||
|
||
Finally the 36 hours were over. I went back to the doctor's
|
||
office.
|
||
|
||
"We can kill it any time now," he reported cheerfully. "Come
|
||
on into the laboratory. A magnificent rabbit, must weigh four
|
||
pounds. We'll have it for supper tonight, in a stew."
|
||
|
||
The thought of the doctor's family dining with pleasure on my
|
||
rabbit amused and yet slightly irritated me. After all, I had paid
|
||
$15 for that rabbit, and spent 36 hours worrying over its health.
|
||
I Wondered if medical etiquette required my presence while. it was
|
||
being eaten. Apparently not; and I was a little relieved, for it
|
||
would have seemed like cannibalism to me.
|
||
|
||
The doctor killed the rabbit by injecting air into its
|
||
arteries. Then he opened it, and fished out two tiny pink objects
|
||
with purple spots on them. They Were the ovaries.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
104
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"There you are, my dear," he said genially. "Very positive
|
||
reaction. Those purple spots are hemorrhages on the ovary. It's the
|
||
only positive test. You're pregnant. No doubt about it."
|
||
|
||
He carefully put the pink objects away on a piece of paper.
|
||
Then he cleaned the rabbit in the sink and wrapped it in a section
|
||
of brown paper before putting it in a refrigerator, crammed with
|
||
specimens of one kind and another.
|
||
|
||
"I'll save these ovaries," he observed. "Some of the younger
|
||
doctors are interested in these tests, and may want to know what
|
||
they look like."
|
||
|
||
So, indirectly, I was making my contribution to science.
|
||
|
||
He telephoned the surgeon, and they amiably discussed their
|
||
respective healths and when I should appear on the scene. It seemed
|
||
that the surgeon was ready to leave his office, so I should come
|
||
the next day. This meant an extra day's waiting, of course, but
|
||
time and tide in such things mean little to the doctor.
|
||
|
||
"Now cautioned the doctor. "You must remember not to breathe
|
||
a word of this to anyone."
|
||
|
||
"Of course," I agreed.
|
||
|
||
"The surgeon is not doing this for financial reasons," he went
|
||
on. "He is no quack. But he and I feel that there are times when it
|
||
is better for humanity that some children should not be born. I
|
||
understand that in your situation it would mess up the child's life
|
||
as well as your own and that of your lover. It is a racial waste,
|
||
for your child probably would be a fine, healthy one. But I believe
|
||
we are justified in aborting you for sociological reasons."
|
||
|
||
My friend, I think, had exaggerated things Slightly in
|
||
explaining to the doctor why I could not marry. But I did not feel
|
||
it best to say anything Just then. So I went back to the hotel,
|
||
which was beginning to pall on me. I didn't think it best to spend
|
||
too much time with my friend. I realized that at the moment I was
|
||
far from an agreeable companion. I read until my eyelids would
|
||
close in defiance of my will, and my mind would refuse to
|
||
concentrate on the contents of the printed page.
|
||
|
||
The next day I went to the surgeon's office. The first doctor
|
||
had given me a note of introduction. Life seemed to be a succession
|
||
of appointments and introductions and doctors' offices.
|
||
|
||
Doctor A was a likeable middle-aged man with a friendly
|
||
manner. He frightened me at first by telling me briskly that I
|
||
would need a nurse and probably would have to stay in the city for
|
||
at least another week and possibly 10 days. It would be best for me
|
||
to get a little apartment.
|
||
|
||
Obediently I checked out of my hotel and registered in the
|
||
apartment hotel he suggested. Then I returned to his office and
|
||
waited while the reception room slowly cleared of patients. There
|
||
were magazines that I tried to read without much success, The
|
||
office attendant telephoned for my nurse.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
105
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
"You won't need her until tomorrow," she explained casually.
|
||
"You'll get along all right tonight. Then tomorrow, about 11, you
|
||
can come down here and meet her."
|
||
|
||
"Here?" I asked incredulously. I fully expected to be borne
|
||
away from the doctor's office in an ambulance. The next day I
|
||
supposed I would be moaning and tossing in my bed, yelping for
|
||
morphine."
|
||
|
||
"Sure," said the nurse. "You'll be able to walk a few blocks
|
||
tomorrow, all right. Walking's good for you, anyway."
|
||
|
||
Doctor A stood in the doorway.
|
||
|
||
"You're the next victim," he grinned. "I'll give you a little
|
||
treatment and send you on your way rejoicing."
|
||
|
||
I didn't answer. With all the joyous sensations of a condemned
|
||
man -- there wasn't even a hearty breakfast to cheer me up, for I'd
|
||
been too nervous to eat -- I walked into the office. The low tones
|
||
of the nurse and the doctor, the whispered consultations, had been
|
||
entirely too reminiscent of the death room.
|
||
|
||
"Better take off your coat and hat," he suggested,
|
||
|
||
I obeyed, and began unfastening my dress, looking around for
|
||
the traditional white nightgown buttoned down the back.
|
||
|
||
"No need to take off your dress," he explained cheerfully.
|
||
|
||
I sat down on a white table, of a type that was becoming all
|
||
too familiar, and hooked my feet in the stirrup-like circles. The
|
||
doctor squeezed some white salve out of a tube, and then I felt him
|
||
probing. "Don't I take an anesthetic?" I asked, although nothing
|
||
very painful had been done to me so far.
|
||
|
||
"Of course not," he replied, and launched into a discussion of
|
||
the jitters he'd had when his tonsils were cut out.
|
||
|
||
He was probing with some instrument now, and I winced a
|
||
little.
|
||
|
||
"I don't see how you girls stand this," commented the doctor
|
||
cheerfully. "It hurts me just to do it."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, it isn't so bad," I hastened to assure him.
|
||
|
||
He turned away and washed his hands.
|
||
|
||
"You can sit up now," he said. "That's all."
|
||
|
||
I sat up. I stared.
|
||
|
||
"You mean," I paused for emphasis. "You mean that this is all
|
||
you do?"
|
||
|
||
"That's all the first treatment," he answered.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
106
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I felt like laughing. I felt like crying. There was such a
|
||
sudden let-down in all the courage I'd bolstered for a painful
|
||
operation. I didn't feel any different. I didn't feel as if I'd had
|
||
an abortion. It wasn't any more painful than the examinations I'd
|
||
had before.
|
||
|
||
"Sit down and get your breath," the surgeon suggested.
|
||
|
||
"But I thought you had to cut something out, and then stuff me
|
||
full of medicated gauze," I protested. This abortion business
|
||
seemed too good to be true.
|
||
|
||
"Oh, that's the old French method. That's a barbarous
|
||
business, and dangerous. I never do that any more. Nowadays I just
|
||
loosen the membranes, and let nature expel the thing in the
|
||
natural way."
|
||
|
||
He told me the name of this new method, but the word meant
|
||
nothing to me. It seemed to have something to do with heat.
|
||
|
||
"I've had thousands of cases, and never a failure yet. High
|
||
school girls, girls your age, older women -- all ages. You're
|
||
healthy and fit -- you won't have any trouble. Keep on your feet,
|
||
eat and drink anything you want, except alcohol, but don't smoke
|
||
too much. Take these two pills tonight, and your nurse will tell
|
||
you what to do tomorrow. You'll run a temperature tonight, and
|
||
perhaps have a chill, but don't worry. You'll be all right."
|
||
|
||
I was all right. I went jubilantly back to the apartment, too
|
||
jubilantly I learned later. I felt like toe-dancing. Instead, I ate
|
||
five sandwiches, drank a bottle of beer and literally quarts of
|
||
water and felt very good indeed. The high temperature came in due
|
||
time, I took the pills, which were shiny, black, deadly-looking
|
||
things. I learned later that they were merely laxatives. Then I
|
||
settled down to await developments.
|
||
|
||
Developments arrived promptly the next morning. First came the
|
||
original doctor, with the cheering news of the price, which was $50
|
||
more than I had been led to expect. I was to pay $125. But before
|
||
I had much time to worry about that, there came a peremptory
|
||
telephone call, urging, me to hurry down to the surgeon's office to
|
||
meet my nurse.
|
||
|
||
"Better get a rubber sheet," urged the first doctor genially.
|
||
"Be sure to get it right away, before you expel this thing, because
|
||
it won't do you any good afterward. And your worst is yet to come,"
|
||
be added. "You won't get off this easy."
|
||
|
||
The "worst" began within 15 minutes. I perceived now why the
|
||
surgeon had said "your first treatment" on the preceding day.
|
||
Treatment Number Two hurt more. I began to feel less gratitude
|
||
toward the surgeon. He was no longer one of the Lord's anointed
|
||
tome. He was, I thought bitterly, getting plenty for what little
|
||
he'd done. I remembered the first doctor's admonition to keep quiet
|
||
about this matter. It gave me some pleasure to feel that Doctor A
|
||
was partially in my power. I could hurt him, too. I could send him
|
||
to jail. I toyed with the idea.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
107
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
My thoughts were interrupted by the entrance of a tall gray
|
||
haired woman. She was wearing rubbers, and carried an umbrella. She
|
||
was the nurse.
|
||
|
||
"This is Miss K," said the surgeon. "She'll tell you what to
|
||
do."
|
||
|
||
She certainly did tell me what to do, and I obeyed meekly. She
|
||
began immediately by commanding me to walk back to my apartment
|
||
hotel where she ordered some groceries and hurried the maid around
|
||
with a great air of authority. Everybody around the hotel seemed to
|
||
know her. Evidently she had had numerous patients at the same
|
||
place.
|
||
|
||
The first part, and apparently the most important part, of my
|
||
program was to get plenty of exercise. My God! I'd thought that for
|
||
once in my life I'd be coddled. It seemed to me that I'd done a
|
||
God's plenty of walking. Now I felt I should lie in bed and be
|
||
waited on by this scrawny female. Was I paying this homely woman $6
|
||
a day just to make me walk and boss me around?
|
||
|
||
We walked downtown and Miss K ate a hearty lunch at my
|
||
expense. Then we shopped. We bought a pink rubber sheet for 29
|
||
cents -- the clerk said that pink was best for babies. A huge
|
||
package containing four dozen sanitary napkins of a popular brand
|
||
cost me 62 cents, a package of safety pins was 10 cents. Then we
|
||
added a 25-cent bottle of a well-known disinfectant, two shiny pie
|
||
pans at a nickel apiece and two wash cloths ditto. After that we
|
||
walked back. The nurse went to bed.
|
||
|
||
I bought two dollars' worth of groceries to feed her, and 30
|
||
cents; worth of newspapers for her to read. The newspapers would
|
||
come in handy later, anyway, she said. They did. For days I had to
|
||
lie on newspapers atop a crib sheet. A smooth sheet felt utterly
|
||
luxurious to me after hot rubber, rough towels and crackling
|
||
newspapers.
|
||
|
||
Miss K lay comfortably on the davenport while I walked the
|
||
floor, according to her instructions. Occasionally she would
|
||
inquire how I was feeling. I gathered from the conversation with
|
||
one of the maids that I was supposed to be taking treatment for
|
||
hemorrhoids at a nearby clinic. The maid had hemorrhoids, too, and
|
||
I had to listen to a long dissertation on her symptoms.
|
||
|
||
My friend purchased a small bottle of whisky the nurse ordered
|
||
for me. She thought that he was my lover, and called him "your
|
||
friend" with tactful emphasis. This amused me considerably. She was
|
||
always suggesting that I go to the movies or something with him,
|
||
and, I had to tactfully decline and stay at home with her. I surely
|
||
was taking good care of that nurse.
|
||
|
||
I escorted her downtown again at night to fill her to the brim
|
||
with expensive grub. She had a mania for cafeterias, where shed
|
||
displayed an uncanny knack at picking out the most costly dishes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
108
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Accustomed to walking, I took a malicious delight in leading
|
||
Miss K at a rapid pace. She had corns, I learned early in the day.
|
||
Thereafter, I was hell on exercise, except in domestic duties
|
||
around the apartment. She stopped in front of every fur shop to
|
||
gaze in admiration at the mink wraps. I reflected bitterly that I
|
||
could have decked myself in splendor on the costs of my present
|
||
pleasure-excursion. It was getting pretty monotonous, this
|
||
patrolling the city and waiting for The Pains, which were always
|
||
capitalized by Miss, K's slow voice. I vented my irritation in
|
||
malicious thoughts about, my nurse, who wasn't a bad sort at all.
|
||
|
||
Promptly at 9:30, I was sent to bed. Miss K was horrified at
|
||
my suggestion that we leave the light on for a while, so that I
|
||
could read myself to sleep. I lay there in the dark, feeling
|
||
aggrieved. I am accustomed to reading before I go to sleep. It
|
||
helps me to relax. The more I thought of it the more militant I
|
||
felt. I rolled; I tossed. By God, if I couldn't read, she shouldn't
|
||
sleep. I was beginning to have aches and pains, too. I felt very
|
||
bad.
|
||
|
||
I had to lie there in the dark and suffer in silence, because
|
||
this old dame didn't read anything but the newspapers. Naturally
|
||
she had no sympathy with night consumption of great literature. I
|
||
began thinking of all the nasty things I could say about her.
|
||
Greatly pleased with these fancies, I drifted off into a series of
|
||
hellish nightmares and chill's. My nurse had appropriated two-
|
||
thirds of the blankets. In the morning I was delighted to learn
|
||
that she had slept badly and that her head hurt. My head hurt, too.
|
||
I, hurt all over.
|
||
|
||
She cooked my breakfast and washed the dishes. Meanwhile, she
|
||
informed me that the doctor almost had pneumonia. I was overjoyed.
|
||
She forced me to walk to the doctor's office. I grew sick to my
|
||
stomach sitting in the close, hot room. My pains were worse but as
|
||
yet I knew I had not had The Pains.
|
||
|
||
I viewed with interest the entrance of a pretty young girl I
|
||
had noticed with an elderly couple at my first visit. I had thought
|
||
it odd the way they had entered the doctor's office, first papa,
|
||
then mama and daughter while papa came out. Then mama and daughter
|
||
stood in the hall while papa went back in. Daughter hadn't looked
|
||
very happy.
|
||
|
||
Today she whispered something to mama and remained standing.
|
||
I glanced downwards. By their feet ye shall know them! Her trim
|
||
pumps had been replaced by scuffed oxfords suitable for walking.
|
||
|
||
She looked worried. She glanced at me curiously. I resisted an
|
||
impulse to say, "Walking certainly is fun in this damned cold,
|
||
rainy weather, but if you get tired of it you can climb stairs or
|
||
get some lovely jolting on street cars. Come over to my place.
|
||
We've got a roof garden and we can walk together."
|
||
|
||
The doctor treated with glee the news that I felt terrible. He
|
||
gave me another treatment. I was getting along beautifully he
|
||
observed. A doctor doesn't believe beauty is only skin deep. When
|
||
be wants to flatter you, he talks about your healthy liver and
|
||
kidneys, A doctor's courtship ought to be a novel experience.
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
109
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
We walked, Miss K ate a delicious lunch at my expense. I was
|
||
getting it in the neck for all the times I'd been entertained at
|
||
lunch. I couldn't remember ever having paid the cheek for any woman
|
||
before and I sure wouldn't pick out this half-deaf woman for a boon
|
||
companion. I brought her home and put her to bed. I was sick to my
|
||
stomach and couldn't sleep. It was no hardship to keep from
|
||
smoking. I couldn't even consume the three cigarettes a day I was
|
||
allowed.
|
||
|
||
"That's fine," the doctor exclaimed, clapping me on the back
|
||
next day. "We want you to be sick to your stomach. Are you holding
|
||
your meals?"
|
||
|
||
"Yes."
|
||
|
||
"That's fine," he commented. "You must eat to keep up your
|
||
strength. But we want you to be sick to your stomach. And ache. You
|
||
must ache. You're doing fine."
|
||
|
||
I wasn't really sick to my stomach, anyhow, he added. It was
|
||
my uterus being disturbed. I didn't know anything about cause, but
|
||
I knew how I felt.
|
||
|
||
Nausea returned three-fold that night. I refused to go to a
|
||
restaurant, and my nurse allowed me to purchase half a grocery-
|
||
store. She had told me previously that she had lived for years with
|
||
her mother. Mama must have done the marketing, for Miss K, who was
|
||
quite at home in a cafeteria, was nonplussed by the absence of
|
||
price signs in the grocery. She couldn't pick out the most
|
||
expensive items. It seemed to me that in my nervous condition I
|
||
should not be required to struggle with menus and marketing, along
|
||
with The Pains.
|
||
|
||
I won my fight to read in bed and I went to sleep like a baby,
|
||
after my reading, while Miss K tossed restlessly all night. She won
|
||
her bacon for breakfast, but I absolutely refused the cooked
|
||
cereals. Abortions are bad enough, without oatmeal.
|
||
|
||
The next day was Sunday, and the nausea became much worse.
|
||
About noon, we went to the surgeon's office again, and he gave me
|
||
another treatment -- like the others but much more painful this
|
||
time. During the process I burst into tears. Doctor A patted me
|
||
comfortingly on the back.
|
||
|
||
Then came the long street-car ride which the doctor
|
||
prescribed, the idea being that the jolting movement was good for
|
||
what ailed me. After that I strolled through a zoo, where I peered
|
||
at a hippopotamus in a tank of water, and watched some kangaroo's
|
||
scratching themselves. That's what their small front legs are for,
|
||
I was told: to convey food to their mouths, to scratch themselves,
|
||
and to clasp the mate.
|
||
|
||
I began to feel like hell on the way home. My nurse chattily
|
||
decided which of the town's most exclusive restaurants. would be
|
||
best, and we got off the car. Miss K lost interest in my jolting as
|
||
soon as her stomach began to feel empty., Once off the car, I
|
||
became so ill that I could hardly stand. I burst into tears again,
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
110
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
and I felt a cold, deadly fury against the nurse. Was I paying her
|
||
$6 a day to drag me about to expensive restaurants, when all I
|
||
wanted was to lie quietly in bed? She suggested that I sit down on
|
||
the cold, concrete curb and relax, but it didn't appeal to me.
|
||
Finally she hailed a taxi, and I wept quietly all the way back to
|
||
the apartment.
|
||
|
||
Once in my flat, I gave Miss K a dollar and invited her to go
|
||
out for her own lunch. As soon as she was out of the room, I
|
||
defiantly ate some cheese out of the refrigerator, and began to
|
||
feel a little better. Her starched smock, the general air of
|
||
neatness and what she called genteel conversation was getting on my
|
||
nerves.
|
||
|
||
That night The Pains began. There was no difficulty in
|
||
recognizing them. They began slowly around the back and side, and
|
||
worked up to a grand climax in front. Miss K gave me a few lessons
|
||
in the ancient art of "bearing down." All the positions she
|
||
recommended seemed rather silly to me. I should stand up and put my
|
||
hands on the edge of the bed and "work!"
|
||
|
||
Early in the evening "the Water burst." This seemed to please
|
||
the nurse. I hoped that everything would come to pass immediately,
|
||
but I wasn't to be a lucky patient. I had to "work" for what I got
|
||
and hard work, too. I spent a night of feverish agony and finally
|
||
went to sleep in the wee hours. I awakened very early, deathly sick
|
||
and having more pains than ever.
|
||
|
||
"That's fine," said the nurse. She always hailed any symptom
|
||
of excruciating agony with pleasure. "I hope you vomit now," she
|
||
added. But I didn't. Just gagged and moaned loudly.
|
||
|
||
"You mustn't make so much noise," she told be, when I wanted
|
||
to read the newspapers while I was "bearing down." "The people next
|
||
door will hear you."
|
||
|
||
I felt like saying "To hell with the people next door," but I
|
||
didn't. You don't talk back to the nurse. But in my torment it
|
||
seemed a small matter whether the people next door heard me moaning
|
||
or rattling papers.
|
||
|
||
Then she made me walk. When my whole body ached horribly, I
|
||
had to pace up and down the room until I collapsed on the bed with
|
||
a chill. The apartment seemed frigid, but Miss X was a fresh-air
|
||
fiend. She cheerfully invited me to breakfast.
|
||
|
||
"Eat heartily," she urged. "It'll be good for you. You must
|
||
keep up your strength."
|
||
|
||
But the thought of food nauseated me. I lay limp on the bed.
|
||
It seemed to me that Heaven could be no more than a bed and sleep.
|
||
"If you haven't done anything by 11 o'clock, you'll have to dress
|
||
and walk to the doctor's," the nurse threatened. I chilled again at
|
||
the thought.
|
||
|
||
She gave me some quinine, but I was unable to swallow the
|
||
first capsule. It floated around in my mouth until it melted and I
|
||
got the full benefit of the flavor. But I managed to down the
|
||
second one.
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
111
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
The Pains went lower now. I was put to bed and a towel tied to
|
||
the end of the bed was given me to pull. I sat over one of the
|
||
shiny pie pans. I pulled. I grew red in the face. But I triumphed.
|
||
There was a sudden gurgle just as I thought I would explode -- and
|
||
the thing came.
|
||
|
||
A wave of relief overwhelmed me. I felt a tremendous sense of
|
||
personal triumph. But the pain's were not over yet. Nor the
|
||
working. "Don't stop," the nurse warned. "If you have another pain,
|
||
work just as hard. We've got to get the afterbirth."
|
||
|
||
I worked hard, but without success. Miss K sent me to bed.
|
||
|
||
"Keep off your feet," she ordered. "We don't want to risk a
|
||
hemorrhage. Don't move any more than necessary."
|
||
|
||
Her words were needless. I never wanted to stir again. I
|
||
rested. blessed rest, until the doctor came an hour later. But he
|
||
blasted my peace.
|
||
|
||
"What are you doing in bed," he demanded.
|
||
|
||
"The nurse put me here. She said to keep off my feet. The most
|
||
blessed words of tongue or pen. And I'm obeying orders implicitly."
|
||
|
||
"Get back on your feet," he said. "There's some membrane yet
|
||
I want to see. Get up and move around."
|
||
|
||
Wearily I shook the crumbs of toast from my bed-clothes. I
|
||
crawled out of bed, the bed I wanted to remain in the rest of my
|
||
life. I walked. Not much, but I walked. The whole discouraging
|
||
process had to be gone through again.
|
||
|
||
There is a gap in the diary I kept then. I didn't feel like
|
||
writing. I didn't feel like walking either. But I had to walk. Each
|
||
day I had to walk to the doctor's office. He inquired if I were
|
||
flowing. I said I was. Then he told me to go home and walk some
|
||
more. He said I was getting along fine. I felt terrible. I was no
|
||
longer so horribly nauseated, but I was sore in every part of my
|
||
body. I alternately perspired until the sheets were drenched or
|
||
chilled all night long. Sleep was an unknown quantity. So was even
|
||
rest. The nurse had asked me whether I fainted easily. I said I did
|
||
not know; I had never fainted. But I felt if I got in crowds, I
|
||
would soon acquire the art of swooning.
|
||
|
||
I could not eat in restaurant's. I simply groaned and looked
|
||
at the food. Finally Miss K allowed me to eat in the apartment. I
|
||
walked in the roof garden. I refused point-blank to go out except
|
||
to the doctor's office. I didn't want to faint on the streets or be
|
||
overcome by hysterical weeping in a restaurant. I didn't want to
|
||
see healthy, happy people.
|
||
|
||
It is impossible, writing this later, to recapture the spirit
|
||
of dull, weary resignation, alternating with periods of frantic
|
||
worry about whether the afterbirth ever would come. I blindly
|
||
followed the nurse's orders. I even tried to be gay about it. She
|
||
said one patient had an easy time because she did the laundry. So
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
112
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
dizzily I stood in the bathroom and washed out hose and lingerie.
|
||
I even laughed. I marveled at myself. I wisecracked. The nurse
|
||
enjoyed it. She made me repeat it all to the doctor. He enjoyed it,
|
||
too. He called me "darling" and said I was a star patient.
|
||
|
||
The nurse said that I would have fun doing anything. It
|
||
required little effort for me to think of things I would enjoy
|
||
more. But I was determined to be gallant, so I kept up my hectic
|
||
gaiety. It helped. It kept me from weeping.
|
||
|
||
Days lost meaning. I went in the morning or early afternoon to
|
||
the doctor's office. But he gave me no treatments. Then came
|
||
another night of sickening pain. My nerves were shattered. If I
|
||
dozed off uneasily, I had horrible nightmares. I spent a morning
|
||
pacing the floor and groaning. Part of the afterbirth came with
|
||
what seemed to me terrible straining. I took another capsule. The
|
||
doctor came to see me. Again the monotonous repetition of "Stay on
|
||
your feet. It has to come and it will. But it's being stubborn.
|
||
It'll take it's own sweet time. You can't tell from one patient to
|
||
another. It's really better to be slow. There's less danger of
|
||
hemorrhage."
|
||
|
||
Then, unaccountably, I quit worrying. I ceased straining at
|
||
every pain.
|
||
|
||
I knew that there were two things the doctor could do if I
|
||
didn't get results soon. He could give me a hypodermic which would
|
||
cause my muscles to move of their own accord and relieve me of some
|
||
of the pain and perspiration-evoking effort of "bearing down." Or
|
||
he could pack me, and that would bring the afterbirth immediately.
|
||
The last would be painful, but I was past caring about pain. I was
|
||
deadened by pain.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly I felt care-free. They wanted me to walk, didn't
|
||
they? Well, I'd walk. I'd try the doctor's latest position. But I
|
||
was through worrying. Let them worry for a change.
|
||
|
||
I slept better that night than I had for a week. The next day
|
||
I walked in the roof garden with the radio turned, on. I laughed.
|
||
I even danced a few steps. I felt better. I came downstairs and sat
|
||
up all morning. When the nurse asked me if I wanted to lie down, I
|
||
refused. I was tired of lying down. I ate some breakfast.
|
||
|
||
I prepared to go to the doctor's office. But suddenly the
|
||
after-birth came. "I don't have to go to the doctor," I said as
|
||
calmly as possible.
|
||
|
||
My battle was won. I submitted to going to bed, although I
|
||
felt fine. I wanted to go parading up and down the halls shouting
|
||
that the whole business was over. I wanted to go down to the
|
||
doctor's office and laugh in his face about this bearing down
|
||
business.
|
||
|
||
But I went to bed. The nurse telephoned the doctor discreetly.
|
||
She smiled. The doctor came to see me and drank up the remainder of
|
||
the whisky I had not needed. I felt somehow proud that I had got
|
||
through it without drinking any whisky. I told the doctor I felt
|
||
fine. The nurse went out to eat. I lay in bed and read. But I no
|
||
longer wanted to stay quiet and rest. I wanted to get up.
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
113
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Miss K soaked my breasts in camphor and tied me up tightly
|
||
with muslin, like a mummy. I looked thin-chested, The whole
|
||
business amused me. It was to prevent my breasts filling with
|
||
fluid. Some patients have a great deal of trouble with that, I was
|
||
told, and even had high fever. But I didn't. I lay in bed and read
|
||
and asked when I might get up. After all my desperate craving to
|
||
stay in bid for weeks, I now wanted to be up and going.
|
||
|
||
There was one big pain when my uterus contracted. Then there
|
||
was peace. My nurse gave me sponge-baths and washed me with
|
||
disinfectant. I smelled like rotten eggs. But I felt fine. She gave
|
||
me castor oil. I didn't even mind that. I told the nurse it was a
|
||
conspiracy to keep me in the bathroom constantly, on one excuse or
|
||
another.
|
||
|
||
I stayed in bed all that night and the next day. The next
|
||
night I was allowed to get up for a few minutes. I felt shaky and
|
||
weak and I broke out in perspiration when I moved. But there were
|
||
no pains. I had no hemorrhage. I was getting by fine.
|
||
|
||
Next morning the doctor came to see me.
|
||
|
||
"When can I go home?" I demanded. "I feel great. I don't want
|
||
to stay in this bed. My breasts aren't filling. Miss K took off the
|
||
bandage this morning. I'm all right."
|
||
|
||
"Go home now if you want to," he told me.
|
||
|
||
He shook hand's with me and departed. That afternoon I paid
|
||
the nurse. Sixty dollars -- but it, too, was virtually painless. I
|
||
felt a slight regret at seeing her go. Suddenly she seemed pitiful
|
||
to me. Poor Miss K with her life filled with patients and her
|
||
dreary home existence. I asked if she wanted the afternoon off. She
|
||
hadn't had any time off or much sleep.
|
||
|
||
But to my surprise, she wanted to spend the afternoon with me. She
|
||
had another patient moving in that night. She said I had been
|
||
pleasant. We exchanged polite statements about how nice every thing
|
||
had been. She said I got along fine and told me the troubles some
|
||
of her patients had. She didn't even mention the ones who paid her
|
||
$10 a day.
|
||
|
||
I was still weak. When I washed the dishes, I went to lie down
|
||
twice. But I was restless. I couldn't remain quiet. I wanted to go
|
||
home. Now with the ordeal over, and the danger past, I worried
|
||
about trifles. Would I be able to stand the trip? Would I be able
|
||
to carry my luggage into the house? Would my alibi for the trip.
|
||
stand up?
|
||
|
||
Miss K moved out. I read in bed until late. But it seemed odd
|
||
without her lying on the davenport. It seemed so quiet without her
|
||
asking me if I hadn't read long enough. I missed her slow voice
|
||
interrupting my reading with what at the time seemed tedious
|
||
anecdotes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
114
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
My world had been composed of a doctor, a nurse, and a few
|
||
visits from my friend for two weeks. Now that world had
|
||
disintegrated. I felt lonely. I thought about telephoning a few
|
||
persons I knew in the city. But that would be foolhardy. I was
|
||
registered under a false name. I didn't feel like entertaining or
|
||
giving any sort of story. I felt like getting tight. But I didn't
|
||
want to drink alone. Anyhow, I was still on a diet, no milk, no
|
||
cream soups, not much to drink in the way of alcoholic liquors.
|
||
|
||
It was amazing how quickly the ordeal began to fade. It took
|
||
an effort to recall how the pains slowly surged forward, beginning
|
||
at my back and going all over my abdomen and increasing until they
|
||
were almost unbearable and then slowly going away. They had been
|
||
difficult to describe. Miss K would ask if they were worse than the
|
||
day before, but I could not tell. The day before had passed into
|
||
blankness.
|
||
|
||
I cooked a leisurely breakfast. Then I took my crib sheet, my
|
||
pans, the remainder of the castor oil, the muslin I hadn't needed,
|
||
the disinfectant and the groceries I had left, in to the girl next
|
||
door. I felt it would be somehow fitting to make a gift to my
|
||
successor.
|
||
|
||
She was a slim, pajama-clad girl with huge dark eyes and
|
||
jaunty dark curls piled atop her head. She moved restlessly around
|
||
her tiny apartment and smoked incessantly.
|
||
|
||
"You'll have to cut down on cigarette's," I warned her.
|
||
|
||
She gave me a startled look. "They hadn't told me," and she
|
||
crushed out her cigarette.
|
||
|
||
"I'd forgotten," Miss K said. "But you have been smoking too
|
||
much."
|
||
|
||
She looked in bewilderment at the pie pans. Miss K had washed
|
||
and disinfected them.
|
||
|
||
"What are they for?" she asked.
|
||
|
||
"You'll find out," I laughed.
|
||
|
||
Miss K had asked me to tell her to relax. But I knew it would
|
||
be useless. You can't relax just because someone tells you to, You
|
||
can't be calm because someone say's that it's better for you. So I
|
||
told her. "It isn't so bad."
|
||
|
||
"I'm not dreading it," she replied. I knew she was lying.
|
||
|
||
"But she says she'll be home in two or three days," Miss K
|
||
chuckled. We were old-timers together.
|
||
|
||
"That's what I said," I remarked with a grin. "Are you nervous?"
|
||
Miss K gave me a warning glance. She didn't want me to make the new
|
||
patient fretful.
|
||
|
||
"No. I'm not the nervous type. All that worries me is that I
|
||
wish it would hurry up and happen and they won't tell me when it
|
||
will."
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
115
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
I laughed. It was remarkably easy to laugh that morning. I was
|
||
going home that afternoon.
|
||
|
||
"That's all that worries anyone. But you can't hurry it. just
|
||
walk and forget about time."
|
||
|
||
"My feet are sore now," she complained. "They walked my legs
|
||
off yesterday. But I'm going home by Thanksgiving. I've got to get
|
||
home by Thanksgiving."
|
||
|
||
It's a long time until Thanksgiving," the nurse soothed her.
|
||
|
||
"You'll be home then," I said.
|
||
|
||
She thanked me for the stuff . I'll pay you for it," she
|
||
offered. I shook my head. "You'll be paying for plenty of things."
|
||
She reached for a cigarette and then drew her hand back and glanced
|
||
at the nurse. Then she put her arms over her head.
|
||
|
||
"Don't do that," I cautioned. "You've', got to keep your arms
|
||
down."
|
||
|
||
"I didn't know." She meekly folded her hands in her lap.
|
||
|
||
I felt sorry for her, and I wished I could make things easier
|
||
for her. But I couldn't. She looked at me curiously and I knew that
|
||
she hated my leaving her alone with the nurse. There was a strange
|
||
kinship between us. I was introduced to her, but I didn't catch the
|
||
name nor did I ask for it to be repeated. We were part of an army
|
||
of nameless women. I rather wished that she'd been there when was
|
||
and we could have walked together and exchanged complaints. But I
|
||
went away. We both smiled. And that was that.
|
||
|
||
I thought that would be the end of my story, But it wasn't. I
|
||
went home. Everything went smoothly. My parents accepted my story
|
||
of an extended visit with friends. There was not much pain -- a
|
||
little, but nothing serious. But the nervous shock lingered on.
|
||
weak, irritable. I quarreled with my lover. He felt that I blamed
|
||
him. I felt that he blamed me. I wanted to be coddled and he wanted
|
||
to forget it.
|
||
|
||
We had several serious quarrels about it and finally made up.
|
||
I felt that it would make me out a damn fool to go through that
|
||
ordeal for his sake and then quit going with him immediately. And
|
||
he may have felt the same way. But I fancied myself neglected. I
|
||
was sarcastic. My nerves gave way, and I had tantrums, not because
|
||
I wanted to but as a reaction from what I had gone through. I tried
|
||
to stop fussing, but it was a physical and mental condition beyond
|
||
control.
|
||
|
||
I tried to explain this to him, and for a while we drifted on.
|
||
But looking back now at the wreck of our affair, I wonder just how
|
||
much effect it had on our breaking up. I believe a great deal.
|
||
Subconsciously I always felt that he should do something to make up
|
||
to me what I had suffered. I know, of course, that there was no
|
||
reason why he should. Certainly he regretted it and the whole
|
||
affair was an accident.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
116
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
But from time to time whenever I felt that I was being
|
||
neglected I would find myself thinking, "After all I've gone
|
||
through for that man." And if he took another girl out on a casual
|
||
date I resented it. I'd think bitterly, "And what has she endured
|
||
for him?"
|
||
|
||
Before we had boasted that ours was a free and easy
|
||
companionship. Now I rather resented that term. I had refused to
|
||
assert my claims at the logical time but somehow I felt that my
|
||
ordeal should give me some privilege and I was exasperated when
|
||
treated as just the "girl friend." I felt like flaring up and
|
||
saying, "Oh, no, there's nothing really between us. He was just the
|
||
father of my unborn child." But I didn't. And eventually I went
|
||
away. He was a little bewildered and a little angry. But I had been
|
||
bewildered and angry too long.
|
||
|
||
I know that the episode had one lasting effect. It made me
|
||
take sex more seriously. It gave me a horror of "free and easy"
|
||
companionship.
|
||
|
||
One of the first people I looked up when I moved to the city
|
||
was the doctor. One reason was that it gave me mental relief to
|
||
talk over the case. I got rid of a lot of bitterness by dragging it
|
||
out of the past and learning that other girls had quarreled with
|
||
their lovers and that my nervousness and resentment were natural.
|
||
|
||
The doctor says that as long as he continues in his profession
|
||
there can be no logical ending for his "confessions." Likewise
|
||
there can be no real ending for my story, for there always will be
|
||
a tiny mental sear.
|
||
|
||
But now that I have come nearly to the close, there are a few
|
||
things that I would like to say to other girl's. Don't confide your
|
||
own story even to your closest friends unless you have used them
|
||
for alibis. Then better make up some other story if you can. There
|
||
will be a slight coolness or you may imagine there is, which is
|
||
just as bad. You'll be greeted with, "But how did you happen to get
|
||
into such a fix?
|
||
|
||
It's useless to make any explanation other than that accident.
|
||
will happen in the best of families. And it's better to keep
|
||
yourself in a position where no explanations are necessary.
|
||
|
||
Think it over pretty carefully before you tell your future
|
||
husband about it. He might think you didn't want children at all.
|
||
He might believe you had been pretty wild in your youth. It's
|
||
terribly easy to misunderstand these things and sometimes words
|
||
make them worse.
|
||
|
||
When you go home, ask your doctor about birth-control
|
||
information and stick to what he says. Don't change around because
|
||
some woman dishes out a lot of "absolutely safe methods." Usually
|
||
the more positive the woman, the more inaccurate her information.
|
||
I know one woman who discovered a new and pleasant system and
|
||
rushed around telling all her friends. She neglected to say that
|
||
this system depended on the woman being regular in her periods, and
|
||
that it had to be adjusted to her cycle.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
117
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
Likewise, what works with one woman may not work with another.
|
||
I know girls who get along all right with certain douches and
|
||
others who can't risk them. Before any woman convinces you, ask a
|
||
doctor.
|
||
|
||
I know that you will be irritated when you hear people talking
|
||
as if any girl who got into a jam was a fool. But realize that it
|
||
is futile for one girl to crusade against the campaign of secrecy,
|
||
scandal and disapproval waged by society. If you really feel deeply
|
||
about this matter, join an organization for that purpose. I am
|
||
annoyed when I hear women say that abortions are cheap and simple
|
||
affairs and they are confident that their doctors will help them
|
||
out if they need help. But I find it wisest to remain silent.
|
||
|
||
Similarly if you really want to give advice adopt a very
|
||
impersonal, "several friends of mine," instead of the thin "a
|
||
friend of mine" with a mass of details. Be very careful before you
|
||
recommend your doctor to anyone. Never give letters of introduction
|
||
to him. If you really want to help, make the doctor a personal
|
||
visit before you mention his name to the girl.
|
||
|
||
If you haven't become one of the initiated, let me give you a
|
||
few words of advice. Don't wait and worry if you're overdue. Go
|
||
immediately to the doctor, your family doctor. If you are caught,
|
||
ask his advice. He may help you, and thus you'll be saved a lot of
|
||
additional expense.
|
||
|
||
Don't let false modesty keep you from telling your lover about
|
||
it and asking his help. Unless he's an absolute rotter, he'll
|
||
arrange things. If he is a cad, you want to find it out. And if you
|
||
intend to marry him and have children, now is the time to do it.
|
||
|
||
I made a mistake in trying to protect my lover, and so I was
|
||
accused of being bossy. Don't repeat my error. Let him take as much
|
||
responsibility as he is willing to. That will prevent a lot of
|
||
resentment later on. Go to him first, before you go to a friend.
|
||
Then he'll feel that you trust him and later on you won't quarrel
|
||
about that. Furthermore, there's a danger if you go to a man friend
|
||
that your lover will feel that perhaps he isn't the father of the
|
||
unborn child.
|
||
|
||
This sounds pretty disagreeable but it's better than
|
||
bitterness and squabbling afterward. If your lover wants to pay all
|
||
the expenses, lot him do it. You'll have the suffering to do. But
|
||
don't let yourself get to feeling that you are a martyr, that all
|
||
men are selfish, and sex is an ugly trap. When you begin to feel
|
||
that, look around at some of your friends and remember that you are
|
||
only one of thousands of girls with secrets in their eyes and
|
||
smiles on their lips.
|
||
|
||
Don't degenerate into a whiner because you had one bad break.
|
||
But on the other hand, don't make any mistake and try to be too
|
||
brave and too gallant. If you do, your lover may think that you
|
||
don't take this very seriously and he will dismiss it lightly. Let
|
||
him know that you're scared, you are suffering and that you need
|
||
gentleness and consideration. Don't be too modern.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
118
|
||
|
||
CONFESSIONS OF AN ABORTIONIST
|
||
|
||
And another thing. This is not the time to skimp on expenses.
|
||
Go to the best doctor you can, even if you have to borrow the
|
||
money. But don't hesitate to let the doctor know if you're hard up.
|
||
If you are staying at a good hotel, are well dressed and don't
|
||
mention money, he may charge you more than his minimum price, send
|
||
you to an expensive place to stay and give you a more expensive
|
||
nurse. Most good doctors charge according to the estimated income
|
||
of the patient.
|
||
|
||
When you're ready to leave, ask the doctor about any possible
|
||
danger from going back to work, when you can have intercourse again
|
||
and what to do if something happens. Chances are there will be a
|
||
slight flow for perhaps a month. But if you are in pain, rush right
|
||
down to a doctor; don't wait and worry.
|
||
|
||
Your mind is going to be filled with the subject. So be
|
||
careful about drinking. You're not supposed to do much anyhow.
|
||
Remember that there is no subject on which there are so many
|
||
violent opinions. The woman who talks tolerantly of birth control
|
||
and abortions may speak in an entirely different way regarding some
|
||
friend or relative.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
BANK of WISDOM
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
119
|
||
|