an After abortion

REAL, CONFIDENTIAL, FREE, NON-JUDGMENTAL HELP TO AVOID ABORTION, FROM MANY PLACES:
3,400 confidential and totally free groups to call and go to in the U.S...1,400 outside the U.S. . . . 98 of these in Canada.
Free, financial help given to women and families in need.More help given to women, families.
Helping with mortgage payments and more.More help.
The $1,950 need has been met!CPCs help women with groceries, clothing, cribs, "safe haven" places.
Help for those whose babies haveDown Syndrome and Other Birth Defects.
CALL 1-888-510-BABY or click on the picture on the left, if you gave birth or are about to and can't care for your baby, to give your baby to a worker at a nearby hospital (some states also include police stations or fire stations), NO QUESTIONS ASKED. YOU WON'T GET IN ANY TROUBLE or even have to tell your name; Safehaven people will help the baby be adopted and cared for.

Wednesday, October 8, 2003



Charnette's Story by Townhall columnist Terence Jeffrey.

"The other day I met a woman whose story could help save thousands of lives. She is a successful 33-year-old entrepreneur named Charnette Messe.

Charnette is founder of a dance company whose students have performed at the Lincoln Center. As creator of Embracing Life greeting cards, she won the 2001 Louie Award -- the greeting card industry's Oscar.

But it is not the story of Charnette's creative success that has the power to save lives. It is the story of her abortion and subsequent struggle with breast cancer.

'I was a young woman with a dream,' she said last week at a conference in Arlington, Va., organized by Bay Buchanan's American Cause Foundation. 'I wanted to be married. I wanted children. I had this dream as a young child to be a dancer, and an actress, and a writer. I wanted all of that.'

Then at age 20 she became pregnant. She approached her boyfriend holding some hope in her heart. 'Maybe he'd say we could get married,' she said. 'Then I could have the house and the baby and everything I wanted. I could have my dream. But he said, 'Are you going to have an abortion?'

He took her to a clinic. 'I laid on my back,' she said, 'and I allowed a nameless, faceless person to take my child from me and ultimately my health.'

A few years later, Charnette met Thomas Messe, a Navy doctor. It was love at first sight. They married. Her dreams were coming true at last. But then there were complications.

'Following my abortion,' she said, 'I suffered from infertility. I suffered from pelvic pain, abdominal pain and pain in my left breast.'

Worst of all she suffered emotional isolation, even from her beloved husband who was deeply pro-life."

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