Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did. Had an abortion.
+1 Best decision I ever made
That’s pretty sad.
It’s true.
Ending the pregnancy let her get a degree and possibly graduate school which probably led to a good job and meeting her spouse. The kids she has now are a product of that healthy and happy union.
Childbearing is something that affects everything else in your life - usually in a prohibitive way. Read any thread on here about new moms having a hard time with self care, or dealing with work and family. These women already have established lives - just imagine how much harder it would be to date, to job hunt AND take care of a baby. All this when you can’t afford a babysitter and are constantly broke.
Most people can’t truly grasp what it means to have a child until it happens. Of the women I know who have had abortions in college, many felt conflicted about it - until they got married and had children. It was then that they understood that it truly was the best decision they could have made. A child turns your life upside down - life circumstances are the determining factor if it’s a huge blessing or an enormous obstacle. Maybe if we lived in Europe, this wouldn’t be the case, but there is no social safety net in this country. For anyone who is not wealthy, an unplanned pregnancy in college means a significant drop in living standards for you AND your child. It’s a lifetime of hardship for both of you.
PP could have placed the baby for adoption instead. And I know woman who have had abortions who had a very difficult time dealing with it later after having children.
Anonymous wrote:I got pregnant my junior year. I married my husband, had an amazing daughter and over the next five years I finished my degree, got a masters, and had two more kids. My husband and I worked hard to be good parents. He graduated that year and worked a supported us while I finished me education. After I got my masters I got a job and when my kids were old enough for school I began working full time and had a great career. Next year we will have been married 50 years. We have seven teenage/ college agre grandkids whom we adore. When we married everyone thought it was a huge terrible mistake.
Anonymous wrote:I got pregnant my junior year. I married my husband, had an amazing daughter and over the next five years I finished my degree, got a masters, and had two more kids. My husband and I worked hard to be good parents. He graduated that year and worked a supported us while I finished me education. After I got my masters I got a job and when my kids were old enough for school I began working full time and had a great career. Next year we will have been married 50 years. We have seven teenage/ college agre grandkids whom we adore. When we married everyone thought it was a huge terrible mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Very sweet story PP!

Anonymous wrote:This thread just reinforces that I will make sure my daughter is on reliable birth control. Has bags of condoms available.
And knows that if by some chance an accident still happens while young we will help her terminate no questions asked.
We’re still in a free country. Quick trip to the doc, and life goes on. And hey Canada’s a quick drive or flight too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did. Had an abortion.
had a couple scares, was prepared to do that as well.
Anonymous wrote:I did. Had an abortion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adoptions are now mostly handled privately through lawyers, not agencies. The birth mother is often able to choose the adoptive couple and set some "terms" including annual updates on the child and possibly even visits as the child ages. I don't personally think it's a great idea but that is how adoption happens these days. There are many couples who are desperate to adopt healthy infants and they will agree to almost any terms.
Yes, but... once the baby is born, it is hard to make the adoptive parents stick to the terms. People move. Circumstances change, and what is the birth mother going to do? Take the baby back. These situations often don’t go the way the birth mom planned.
A woman I went to college with told me the couple she gave her baby to send her and the sperm provider (not involved beyond college hookup) pictures and invitations to holidays and vacations. They seemed genuinely eager to have the bio parents in the picture, which seemed beyond weird to me. The woman thought it was too much to bear and distanced herself, literally, after college - moving to the other side of the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adoptions are now mostly handled privately through lawyers, not agencies. The birth mother is often able to choose the adoptive couple and set some "terms" including annual updates on the child and possibly even visits as the child ages. I don't personally think it's a great idea but that is how adoption happens these days. There are many couples who are desperate to adopt healthy infants and they will agree to almost any terms.
Yes, but... once the baby is born, it is hard to make the adoptive parents stick to the terms. People move. Circumstances change, and what is the birth mother going to do? Take the baby back. These situations often don’t go the way the birth mom planned.