An incredibly powerful column from Nora Calhoun at the Firstthings.com website on the importance and value of life.
The baby in my arms lacks the majority
of his brain. He was born just fifteen minutes before this moment, and
he is likely to die before another fifteen minutes pass. He has taken no
first breath and will give no first cry. He cannot see. He cannot hear.
He does not feel the warm weight of my hand as it rests on his chest
and belly. I quietly weep and pray as the last gift of oxygen his
mother’s body gave him dwindles and his rosy newborn glow fades to gray.
His soul gently slips out of his body, and his life ends.
Ability
is not what makes death significant. At birth this baby had capacities
below that of a healthy fetus at ten weeks. Holding his body, living and
then dead, proves to me that it doesn’t matter how early the human
heart beats, how early it is possible to feel pain, or when the senses
develop. No ability or strength confers human status—not being viable or
sentient or undamaged or wanted. Being of human descent is enough; you
cannot earn or forfeit your humanity. If this baby’s death does not
matter, no death matters.
I have not always seen this so clearly.
A gut repugnance and horror of abortion, which I felt from the time I
first heard of it as a nine-year-old, kept me from ever being fully
pro-choice. But even after my conversion to Christianity at eighteen, I
didn’t want to express full opposition to the opinions of almost
everyone I knew, my family, teachers, and friends. I wanted to avoid the
taboo of “judgmentalism,” widely imputed to those who oppose abortion,
and to maintain credibility among the feminist friends I cherished.
I
might eventually have reasoned my way into truths about life, death,
and human dignity—perhaps, given the right information and friends and
graces, but probably not. A jumble of allegiances, caricatures,
arguments, and fears dictated my opinions. But bodies speak a different
language; they teach in different terms. The images and touch memories
of the small body of that severely damaged baby boy whom I held as he
died only minutes after being born could not be explained away,
caricatured, ignored, or debated.
The
flushed, grunting woman whose face I cradle in my hands is pushing out
her baby. She has rocked and groaned her way through sixteen intense
hours, and now the baby’s head is crowning. She had stood and swayed
while I massaged her back, squatted while I supported her weight,
sweated while I wiped her brow, hummed and sighed while I whispered
encouragement. Her hair is wild, her eyes half shut, her attention
completely inward. Now she reaches down to touch her baby’s emerging
head, and with a shout of surrender and welcome she releases him to the
midwife’s waiting hands. As she gathers her son in her arms, she croons,
“My baby, my baby, oh my baby!” She is exultant.
Her body tells a
bold truth: Women don’t need to be rescued; they are strong far beyond
society’s imagining. They don’t need to be protected from the children
conceived within their bodies; they don’t need doctors to violate their
wombs in order to “save” them from the “burden” within. Women are not so
weak that they can handle the rigors of motherhood only if the
conditions are perfect, the correct products purchased, careers neatly
arranged, the approval of those in power secured. Women are not so
fragile that they can delight in their children only when their own
needs and desires are entirely satisfied.
Birth is a momentous
occasion, a radical change in state. In the moment a child separates
from his mother’s body, a profound physical and personal unity ends. We
do not need to be afraid of acknowledging and even proclaiming the unity
of a mother and her unborn baby. Insisting on the autonomy of the
unborn requires a willful blindness to the physical reality and lived
experience of pregnancy and birth. But more than that, it capitulates to
the idolatry of autonomy, both as the primary criterion of personhood
and the elusive prize worth killing for.
These truths became
undeniable to me after being with many, many women as they gave birth.
Certain turns of phrase common at my intensely secular, feminist
university suddenly sounded discordant. Ways of thinking about gender
that I had previously accepted unquestioningly began to seem, basically,
silly. Birth, experienced over and over, asserted itself as the
fundamental truth, and those ideas that did not conform to this living
reality stopped having power over me.
At
the same time, as I began to attend births regularly, I also began to
spend time with the elderly and dying. That also changed me.
She
is ninety-eight, an amputee from diabetes, senile. We speak quietly
together, and though there is no logical thread to the conversation, it
follows the rhythms and intonations of an intimate discussion: “I just
want . . . this . . . just lying here like a bagel . . . not anymore.”
To the emotion I hear behind her words, I reply, “I know, you’re so
tired. It’s all right. You can rest soon.” She hates her adult diaper
and constantly plucks at its waistband. She is small, frail, worried,
dying. We hold hands. I stroke her hair and give her sips of water from a
straw. She gets her pain medications and drifts off into a nap.
As
the body and mind deteriorate, the dying are not less themselves.
Dementia steals the faculties for expressing the self—language, memory,
personality—but the self remains, albeit largely inaccessible to others.
The experience of actually being with the demented and dying is one of
watching someone move farther and farther away, out of earshot and
eventually out of sight. It’s wrong to think, “Because I cannot access
something, it does not exist.” Being with someone who is near death
undermines such nonsense.
If people are as much themselves when
there is no chance of further accomplishment, activity, or
self-expression, then the fact that the unborn may grow up to great
accomplishment, activity, or self-expression is irrelevant. That a
precious child with Down syndrome may some day compete in the Special
Olympics is irrelevant. Another precious child with a different genetic
abnormality will spend all his days in a state that most of us will
inhabit only at the end of our lives, if ever: incapable of
communication, incontinent, compromised in language, memory, intellect,
and personality. The compassion we show to the dying is not earned by
the things they “used to be” any more than it should be earned by the
things that the unborn might become. We will all end up in a state of
total incapacity and inaccessibility, some for a long time and some only
briefly.
I have now spent a lot of
time with other people’s bodies—very old bodies and very new bodies,
severely disabled, sick, or just plain worn-out bodies, bodies in labor,
bodies that are well and strong, and the bodies left behind by death.
Looking back, I realize that changing my mind about abortion was
actually one of the least significant steps toward becoming truly
pro-life. There are things that can be learned—can be said—only in the
language of bodies. There is a specific wisdom to be gained through the
experience of being with actual people: their actual pregnancies,
illnesses, births, and deaths. And many of the lessons that bodies teach
can barely be translated into words.
We stand to gain so much by
learning those lessons. Having a big family, or living with our
grandparents, or working in hospice, or being a doula or doctor or what
have you, is not necessarily everyone’s calling—but the corporal works
of mercy are open to us all. We need to draw on the experience of
spending our time and energy on the care of other people’s bodies. If we
confine ourselves to ideas that are best suited to legislation, picket
signs, and the combox, we will lose the richest vocabulary of human
dignity, one better expressed in embraces and diaper changes than in
words. If we let bodies speak to us in their own language, by being
present to them and offering the gifts of touch and physical care, we
can learn what is truly at stake and why it matters.
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