Linggo, Disyembre 14, 2014

Pregnant After a Brutal Rape and Encouraged to Abort, Here’s How My Husband and I Responded

Reposted from a survivor:


Last January, I was traveling on business, staying in a little hotel in a college town.


I like to think I’m usually more aware of my surroundings, but it was so snowy and windy that I wouldn’t have heard his footsteps even if he had he been stomping.  It happened so fast.  I got the door open, turned around to close it, and he was there – a huge man.  My first instinct wasn’t fear, just confusion.  In an instant, he punched me in the face.  I don’t remember being dragged from the room, but I was found in the stairwell.  I don’t know why — maybe I was trying to go for help.

The rape kit came back negative for HIV, gonorrhea, chlamydia, syphilis, herpes, and dozens of other things I’d never heard of.  God is gracious.

The following month, I was scheduled to work on a cruise ship.  Struck with dysentery on day two and not getting better with antibiotics, I was taken to what passes for a hospital when we docked in Cartagena, Colombia.  Concerned about intestinal obstruction, I was given an ultrasound.   And we saw the pea — my son.  Happy Valentine’s Day.

Back on the ship, I told the doctors an abbreviated version of my story, which resulted in me being quarantined.  Suicide watch?  In danger of a psychotic break that will have me running naked across the shuffleboard courts?  Who knows.  What I know is that I spent the next week listening to a team of very well meaning doctors and nurses console me with how “easy” it would be to “take care of it” — to kill the child.  To start over.  Easy???

There were a lot of things discussed over scratchy, tearful transatlantic phone calls home that week, but the possibility of “taking care of it” never came off my lips.  Or my husband’s.   When I told him I was pregnant, he said with his voice calm and steady, “Okay.  Okay . . . all right . . . this is all right.”  I asked him, “What do you MEAN this is all right?”  “I mean we can do this.  We’ll get through this.  It’ll be okay.  And, . . . I love babies.  We’re going to have another baby.  Sweetheart, this is a gift.  This is something wonderful from something terrible.  We can DO this.”  And I began to feel the stirrings of joy for the new life in my womb, blossoming under my heart.  That new love that would grow so fierce it overwhelmed any trepidation or angst.  And my husband was right.  We could do it.

On my last morning aboard the ship, I said to this caring team, “If you ever think about this again, if you ever wonder what happened to me — I had a beautiful baby in October 2014.”   Their reaction . . . , the looks on their faces . . . , the doctor who had pushed abortion more vehemently than the others — she had tears in her eyes.  For the first time, I thought of how God can use this, this nightmare I’d endured.  Use me.

I live in North Carolina.  My OB who delivered my last two children was running in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate.  He talks to people all the time who challenge him with the “What about in cases of rape?” question.  What about them?  My son will have a voice.  Until he can use it, it’s my responsibility — my privilege — to speak for him.  That’s my story.

During my pregnancy, I was in and out of the hospital for a couple of months – more in than out.  I had preeclampsia, high blood pressure and uncontrolled seizures.  It was terrifying at 26 weeks when they admitted me saying they might have to deliver that night — terrifying because I desperately wanted my son to live!  We got past that fear.  I had strict bed rest, but was home.  Every week we made it further was awesome, knowing how glad I’d be once he got here safely in my arms.  Emotionally, I was doing very well.

We were working with a really godly team of doctors.  It’s just a matter of trusting utterly.  This wasn’t new.  I’d felt completely out of control since the assault in January — not that “control” is ever anything but an illusion, but, you know.  8-1/2 months ago the world upended and hadn’t righted since — until my son was born.  It’s not a bad thing.  It keeps me on my knees, keeps me from my arrogant, self reliant “It’s okay, God. I got this” attitude, which I’m so quick to adopt.

Our little boy may have been conceived in violence, but he is a gift from God — a delicious gift that filled the hole in our family that we never realized was there.  He made us complete.

I’m so thankful to have been connected to other mothers who became pregnant by rape as well.  We are survivors.  Not victims.  My son has healed me.

The pressure to abort from the medical community was extremely eye opening to me.  So many times I was told how “simple” it would be and how quickly I could just “get on with my life” once it was over.  It was heartbreaking to have to repeatedly hear it.  Even some friends thought keeping the baby was a mistake — that I wouldn’t be able to handle things emotionally.  Every time we, as rape survivor mothers, share our stories, we are strengthened as we strengthen others. . . .  And who knows what lives might be spared?

I am Eliza, an adult survivor

Dear everyone,

Thank God for allowing me to have another day, an opportunity to pursue my longtime wish to somehow help a person or two who are facing the same ordeals like me through this blog.

I am Lady Eliza Minhyung-Lee (my pen name) from Philippines, I just turned 27 last month. I came from a poor family, I lived with my late mother, our breadwinner, together with my younger sister. We were abandoned by our father when I was only around three years old. 

Living a life without a father to grow up with is indeed difficult. When I was young, I envied my playmates and even my cousin who had their fathers together with them. But it was okay for me to live without a father than to live with a negligent one.  (Yes, when I was younger I hated my father for leaving us, I just later on learned to accept the fact that's how life is and I get used to live a life without a negligent father.)

While growing up, I strove to study hard because I knew that by doing that, I would be able to help my mom to raise the family we had. Then around February 1994, my mom's lover came into our life. Starting then, horror events happened to me that made me scared to my core

How I was able to make it until this very hour?

I would be posting my next entries for the update next time.

Eliza,


Sabado, Nobyembre 1, 2014

Welcome to my blog!

Hello, everyone!

Welcome to my blog!

Let me introduce to you my full pen name "Lady Eliza Minhyung-Lee." As you can see in the title of my blog this is an autobiography of an adult survivor. I have long been thinking to write a book to help and inspire fellow adult survivors, children who are victims of any manner of abuse or even those who are not victims who happened to know somebody facing the same ordeal. My hope is beyond my death I would continue to help these people in my own humble way.  I know the hardships we have to encounter because of the bitter past.

I have thought in writing a book on my 30th birthday. I did try to make a draft but I couldn't finish it.
What made me to decide to start making a blog about my longtime plan? Time. Time is running out. I am turning 27 this year and I just do not know whether I would be alive tomorrow or in the next years to come. So, I finally decided that as long as I have an opportunity, I would grab it in helping anyone through this blog.

In the next days, God willing, hopefully this blog would be able to help even a person or two.  I would post here my autobiography, and also the stories that touches my heart, that helps me to fight..to survive.


PS: I am not a professional writer, so pardon me if sometimes I would be having some grammatical errors in my posts. One thing I am assuring you, I would be doing this blog with all my heart.

Sincerely,
Eliza Lee