The ultrasound that changed my life - Abby Johnson's
pro-life conversion in her own words...
Note:
The following is the first chapter of Abby Johnson’s book “unPlanned.”
CHERYL
POKED HER HEAD INTO MY OFFICE. “Abby, they need an extra person back in the
exam room. Are you free?”
I
looked up from my paperwork, surprised. “Sure.”
Though
I’d been with Planned Parenthood for eight years, I had never been called into
the exam room to help the medical team during an abortion, and I had no idea
why I was needed now. Nurse-practitioners were the ones who assisted in
abortions, not the other clinic staff. As director of this clinic in Bryan,
Texas, I was able to fill in for any position in a pinch, except, of course,
for doctors or nurses performing medical procedures. I had, on a few occasions,
agreed at a patient’s request to stay with her and even hold her hand during
the procedure, but only when I’d been the counselor who’d worked with her
during intake and counseling. That was not the case today. So why did they need
me?
Today’s
visiting abortionist had been here at the Bryan clinic only two or three times
before. He had a private abortion practice about 100 miles away. When I’d
talked with him about the job several weeks before, he had explained that at
his own facility he did only ultrasound-guided abortions — the abortion
procedure with the least risk of complications for the woman. Because this
method allows the doctor to see exactly what is going on inside the uterus,
there is less chance of perforating the uterine wall, one of the risks of
abortion. I respected that about him. The more that could be done to keep women
safe and healthy, the better, as far as I was concerned. However, I’d explained
to him that this practice wasn’t the protocol at our clinic. He understood and
said he’d follow our typical procedures, though we agreed he’d be free to use
ultrasound if he felt a particular situation warranted it.
To
my knowledge, we’d never done ultrasound-guided abortions at our facility. We
did abortions only every other Saturday, and the assigned goal from our Planned
Parenthood affiliate was to perform 25 to 35 procedures on those days. We liked
to wrap them up by around 2 p.m. Our typical procedure took about 10 minutes,
but an ultrasound added about five minutes, and when you’re trying to schedule
up to 35 abortions in a day, those extra minutes add up.
I
felt a moment’s reluctance outside the exam room. I never liked entering this
room during an abortion procedure — never welcomed what happened behind this door.
But since we all had to be ready at any time to pitch in and get the job done,
I pushed the door open and stepped in.
The
patient was already sedated, still conscious but groggy, the doctor’s brilliant
light beaming down on her. She was in position, the instruments were laid out
neatly on the tray next to the doctor, and the nurse-practitioner was
positioning the ultrasound machine next to the operating table.
“I’m
going to perform an ultrasound-guided abortion on this patient. I need you to
hold the ultrasound probe,” the doctor explained.
As
I took the ultrasound probe in hand and adjusted the settings on the machine, I
argued with myself, I don’t want to be here. I don’t want to take part in an
abortion. No, wrong attitude — I needed to psych myself up for this task. I
took a deep breath and tried to tune in to the music from the radio playing
softly in the background. It’s a good learning experience — I’ve never seen
an ultrasound-guided abortion before, I told myself. Maybe this will help me
when I counsel women. I’ll learn firsthand about this safer procedure. Besides,
it will be over in just a few minutes.
I
could not have imagined how the next 10 minutes would shake the foundation of
my values and change the course of my life.
I
had occasionally performed diagnostic ultrasounds for clients before. It was
one of the services we offered to confirm pregnancies and estimate how far
along they were. The familiarity of preparing for an ultrasound soothed my
uneasiness at being in this room. I applied the lubricant to the patient’s
belly, then maneuvered the ultrasound probe until her uterus was displayed on
the screen and adjusted the probe’s position to capture the image of the fetus.
I
was expecting to see what I had seen in past ultrasounds. Usually, depending on
how far along the pregnancy was and how the fetus was turned, I’d first see a
leg, or the head, or some partial image of the torso, and would need to
maneuver a bit to get the best possible image. But this time, the image was
complete. I could see the entire, perfect profile of a baby.
It
looks just like Grace at 12 weeks, I thought,
surprised, remembering my very first peek at my daughter, three years before,
snuggled securely inside my womb. The image now before me looked the same, only
clearer, sharper. The detail startled me. I could clearly see the profile of
the head, both arms, legs, and even tiny fingers and toes. Perfect.
And
just that quickly, the flutter of the warm memory of Grace was replaced with a
surge of anxiety. What am I about to see? My stomach tightened. I
don’t want to watch what is about to happen.
I
suppose that sounds odd coming from a professional who’d been running a Planned
Parenthood clinic for two years, counseling women in crisis, scheduling
abortions, reviewing the clinic’s monthly budget reports, hiring and training
staff. But odd or not, the simple fact is, I had never been interested in
promoting abortion. I’d come to Planned Parenthood eight years before,
believing that its purpose was primarily to prevent unwanted pregnancies,
thereby reducing the number of abortions. That had certainly been my goal. And
I believed that Planned Parenthood saved lives — the lives of women who,
without the services provided by this organization, might resort to some
back-alley butcher. All of this sped through my mind as I carefully held the
probe in place.
“Thirteen
weeks,” I heard the nurse say after taking measurements to determine the
fetus’s age.
“Okay,”
the doctor said, looking at me, “just hold the probe in place during the procedure
so I can see what I’m doing.”
The
cool air of the exam room left me feeling chilled. My eyes still glued to the
image of this perfectly formed baby, I watched as a new image entered the video
screen. The cannula — a straw-shaped instrument attached to the end of the
suction tube — had been inserted into the uterus and was nearing the baby’s
side. It looked like an invader on the screen, out of place. Wrong. It just
looked wrong.
My
heart sped up. Time slowed. I didn’t want to look, but I didn’t want to stop
looking either. I couldn’t not watch. I was horrified, but fascinated at the
same time, like a gawker slowing as he drives past some horrific automobile
wreck — not wanting to see a mangled body, but looking all the same.
My
eyes flew to the patient’s face; tears flowed from the corners of her eyes. I
could see she was in pain. The nurse dabbed the woman’s face with a tissue.
“Just
breathe,” the nurse gently coached her. “Breathe.”
“It’s
almost over,” I whispered. I wanted to stay focused on her, but my eyes shot
back to the image on the screen.
At
first, the baby didn’t seem aware of the cannula. It gently probed the baby’s
side, and for a quick second I felt relief. Of course, I thought. The
fetus doesn’t feel pain. I had reassured countless women of this as I’d been
taught by Planned Parenthood. The fetal tissue feels nothing as it is
removed. Get a grip, Abby. This is a simple, quick medical procedure. My
head was working hard to control my responses, but I couldn’t shake an inner
disquiet that was quickly mounting to horror as I watched the screen.
The
next movement was the sudden jerk of a tiny foot as the baby started kicking,
as if it were trying to move away from the probing invader. As the cannula
pressed its side, the baby began struggling to turn and twist away. It seemed
clear to me that it could feel the cannula, and it did not like what it was
feeling. And then the doctor’s voice broke through, startling me.
“Beam
me up, Scotty,” he said lightheartedly to the nurse. He was telling her to turn
on the suction — in an abortion the suction isn’t turned on until the doctor
feels he has the cannula in exactly the right place.
I
had a sudden urge to yell, “Stop!” To shake the woman and say, “Look at what is
happening to your baby! Wake up! Hurry! Stop them!”
But
even as I thought those words, I looked at my own hand holding the probe. I was
one of “them” performing this act. My eyes shot back to the screen again. The
cannula was already being rotated by the doctor, and now I could see the tiny
body violently twisting with it. For the briefest moment the baby looked as if
it were being wrung like a dishcloth, twirled and squeezed. And then it
crumpled and began disappearing into the cannula before my eyes. The last thing
I saw was the tiny, perfectly formed backbone sucked into the tube, and then it
was gone. And the uterus was empty. Totally empty.
I
was frozen in disbelief. Without realizing it, I let go of the probe. It
slipped off the patient’s tummy and slid onto her leg. I could feel my heart
pounding — pounding so hard my neck throbbed. I tried to get a deep breath but
couldn’t seem to breathe in or out. I still stared at the screen, even though
it was black now because I’d lost the image. But nothing was registering to me.
I felt too stunned and shaken to move. I was aware of the doctor and nurse
casually chatting as they worked, but it sounded distant, like vague background
noise, hard to hear over the pounding of my own blood in my ears.
The
image of the tiny body, mangled and sucked away, was replaying in my mind, and
with it the image of Grace’s first ultrasound — how she’d been about the same
size. And I could hear in my memory one of the many arguments I’d had with my
husband, Doug, about abortion.
“When
you were pregnant with Grace, it wasn’t a fetus; it was a baby,” Doug had said.
And now it hit me like a lightning bolt: He was right! What was in this
woman’s womb just a moment ago was alive. It wasn’t just tissue, just cells. It
was a human baby. And it was fighting for its life! A battle it lost in the
blink of an eye. What I have told people for years, what I’ve believed and
taught and defended, is a lie.
Suddenly
I felt the eyes of the doctor and nurse on me. It shook me out of my thoughts.
I noticed the probe lying on the woman’s leg and fumbled to get it back into
place. But my hands were shaking now.
“Abby,
are you OK?” the doctor asked. The nurse’s eyes searched my face with concern.
“Yeah,
I’m OK.” I still didn’t have the probe correctly positioned, and now I was
worried because the doctor couldn’t see inside the uterus. My right hand held
the probe, and my left hand rested gingerly on the woman’s warm belly. I
glanced at her face — more tears and a grimace of pain. I moved the probe until
I’d recaptured the image of her now-empty uterus. My eyes traveled back to my
hands. I looked at them as if they weren’t even my own.
How
much damage have these hands done over the past eight years? How many lives
have been taken because of them? Not just because of my hands, but because of
my words. What if I’d known the truth, and what if I’d told all those women?
What
if?
I
had believed a lie! I had blindly promoted the “company line” for so long. Why?
Why hadn’t I searched out the truth for myself? Why had I closed my ears to the
arguments I’d heard? Oh, dear God, what had I done?
My
hand was still on the patient’s belly, and I had the sense that I had just
taken something away from her with that hand. I’d robbed her. And my hand
started to hurt — I felt an actual physical pain. And right there, standing
beside the table, my hand on the weeping woman’s belly, this thought came from
deep within me:
Never
again! Never again.
I
went into autopilot. As the nurse cleaned up the woman, I put away the
ultrasound machine, then gently roused the patient, who was limp and groggy. I
helped her sit up, coaxed her into a wheelchair, and took her to the recovery
room. I tucked a light blanket around her. Like so many patients I’d seen
before, she continued to cry, in obvious emotional and physical pain. I did my
best to make her more comfortable.
Ten
minutes, maybe 15 at most, had passed since Cheryl had asked me to go help in
the exam room. And in those few minutes, everything had changed. Drastically.
The image of that tiny baby twisting and struggling kept replaying in my mind.
And the patient. I felt so guilty. I’d taken something precious from her, and
she didn’t even know it.
How
had it come to this? How had I let this happen? I had invested myself, my
heart, my career in Planned Parenthood because I cared about women in crisis.
And now I faced a crisis of my own.
Looking
back now on that late September day of 2009, I realize how wise God is for not
revealing our future to us. Had I known then the firestorm I was about to
endure, I might not have had the courage to move forward. As it was, since I
didn’t know, I wasn’t yet looking for courage. I was, however, looking to
understand how I found myself in this place — living a lie, spreading a lie,
and hurting the very women I so wanted to help.
And
I desperately needed to know what to do next.
This
is my story.
To
read the rest of the book, click here.
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