In a Personal Essay for Playboy titled ‘My Choice’, Comedian and former
TV host Chelsea Handler uses past experiences from her life to
illustrate the importance of access to abortion. She opened up about
having two abortions in one year
after being impregnated by the same guy – who she was not supposed to
be having unprotected sex with. According to her, ‘getting
unintentionally pregnant more than once is irresponsible, but itโs still
necessary to make a thoughtful decision.’ Read her essay below…When I got pregnant at the age of 16, getting an abortion wasnโt the first idea that popped into my unripened brain.
I
was going through a very bad stage in my life. I hated my parents and I
was having unprotected sex with my boyfriend, who was not someone I
shouldโve been having sex with in the first place, never mind
unprotected sex. I wasnโt really playing with a full deck of cards, and
when I got pregnant I just thought, Why not? I can have a baby. Maybe
Iโll have twins and give them rhyming names! Of course, the idea that I
would have a child and raise it by myself at that age, when I couldnโt
even find my way home at night, was ridiculous. My parents recognized
that, so they acted like parents for one of the very first times in my
life and took me to Planned Parenthood. I felt parented, ironically,
while I was getting an abortion. And when it was over, I was relieved in
every possible way.
And I didnโt have just one abortion; I had
two in the same year, impregnated by the same guy. I didnโt have the
money the second time. I had to scrape together the $230 to pay Planned
Parenthood, but it was a safe abortion. Getting unintentionally pregnant
more than once is irresponsible, but itโs still necessary to make a
thoughtful decision. We all make mistakes all the time. I happened to
fuck up twice at the age of 16. Iโm grateful that I came to my senses
and was able to get an abortion legally without risking my health or
bankrupting myself or my family. Iโm 41 now. I donโt ever look back and
think, God, I wish Iโd had that baby.
Like millions of women, I
can live my life without an unplanned child born out of an unhealthy
relationship because of Roe v. Wade. Itโs infuriating to hear
politicians make bogus promises about overturning this ruling that has
protected us for more than 40 years. Itโs infuriating to hear them
pander to the Christian right with promises they have no chance of
keeping. (By the way: Even if there is a God, I highly doubt he wants
everybody to go through with their pregnancies.) And itโs even more
infuriating to watch politicians find ways to subvert Roe v. Wade,
passing lesser laws that close clinics or restrict abortion access for
women. At least five statesโMississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, South
Dakota and Wyomingโcurrently have only one clinic left within their
borders.
But despite all that, I donโt buy that Roe v. Wade is in
danger. Weโre too far ahead of the game. Once you go forward in
history, you donโt go backward. That would be like the government
saying, โOkay, weโre taking away your right to vote too.โ You canโt
introduce a black person and be like, โOh, I just got a slave!โ That era
is over. Itโs similar to whatโs happening in Mississippi and some other
states with gay-marriage discriminationโmarriage equality is going to
take. You canโt stop that. Weโve already made the decision, and now
weโre moving on to transgender rights. And itโs a wrap on men deciding
what women can do with their bodies.
I doubt this is something
America will ever agree on. Again, itโs like racism and sexism: People
will be racist if theyโre innately built that way, but whether they can
act on their racism or not is a separate issue. There are people who
think women shouldnโt hold high-powered positions, or who think Obama is
Muslim, and itโs okay for them to have those thoughts; they just canโt
act on them in a civilized society. Itโs okay if you think itโs not
right for women to have abortionsโbut itโs not your problem, because we
decide.
We have 7.3 billion people on this planet. Anybody who
carefully decides not to become a parentโlet alone a bad parent, which
is what I would have becomeโshould be applauded for making a smart and
sustainable decision.
Iโd love for somebody to try to tell me what to do with my body. I dare them.