Dear Prudence: Should I Abort My Pregnancy and Tell My Husband I Miscarried?

DEAR PRUDENCE

Should I Abort My Pregnancy and Tell My Husband I Miscarried?​

I’m plagued with nausea, vomiting, and most of all regret.​

BY DANNY M. LAVERY

Dear Prudence,
I am happily married, financially stable, and a mom of a beautiful, feral toddler. On a drunken night I convinced myself that I did, in fact, want a sibling for my toddler—quite the 180 from my staunch stance of being “one and done!” I’m now 10 weeks pregnant with my second child and plagued with nausea, vomiting, and most of all regret. Should I terminate this pregnancy and tell all (including my husband) that I miscarried? He, his parents, and my parents are all excited about baby No. 2. I, however, am completely disappointed in myself for having a lapse in judgment and thinking I would be OK with getting pregnant again.
—Thinking About Termination

“I don’t want to be a parent” is a wholly sufficient reason to schedule an abortion. You are under no obligation to disclose your decision to terminate a pregnancy to anyone else, no matter how excited they may have been about your pregnancy or how much they might wish you to carry your pregnancy to term. Your husband’s and your other relatives’ interest in, relation to, or attendant feelings about your pregnancy and your prospective parenthood of another child must always remain secondary to theirs. Your pregnancy is not a decision to be made by an executive committee whereby other people can purchase shares in your reproductive choices because they’ve married you, or because they hope to become grandparents again, or for any other reason.

If you decide to have an abortion, you may choose to inform your husband beforehand if you think he’ll be supportive (emotionally and physically, since you’ll need care while recovering), or afterward, if you trust he’ll keep it in confidence. That’s not mandatory, but you may find it relieves some of your sense of isolation if you think you’ll be on the same page. But I hope you’re able to share your regret and distress with your partner, not so he can talk you out of them, but because secrecy and shame can make for a damaging combination, especially in the long term. It may also minimize the likeliness that you’ll feel additional pressure in the future to go along with the general family excitement about a second child and give them what you think they want.

You don’t say anything about your husband’s (or your other relatives’) views on abortion. You may not know these views, but if you have reason to believe your husband or family would antagonize you for having had an abortion, you should prioritize your own well-being and safety first. If you decide you want to move forward with termination and don’t feel prepared to discuss it with your husband, then consider confiding in a trusted friend or your doctor. Whatever you decide, don’t let your disappointment or your embarrassment keep you from making an informed and self-interested decision about something as huge as raising a second child.
 
There's not a whole lot of trust in this marriage if she's thinking about having her baby's head vacuumed flat and telling her husband she tripped down a set of stairs. Plus it's going to look real suspicious when she has to tell him "Hey honey, I just had a miscarriage. Can you pick me up from Planned Parenthood?"
 
You are under no obligation to disclose your decision to terminate a pregnancy to anyone else, no matter how excited they may have been about your pregnancy or how much they might wish you to carry your pregnancy to term. Your husband’s and your other relatives’
I whole heartedly disagree with this. The husband should not be kept in the dark about this and deserves to know.
 
The only reason to ask a magazine about this is if you want anonymous validation about how your sketchy abortion plan because you know your excuse of "Its uncomfortable being pregnant :(" isn't going to fly with your family and hiding it is insane. Its like a reddit post. Nobody is making actual decisions based on this.

Either that or its a troll.
 
There's not a whole lot of trust in this marriage if she's thinking about having her baby's head vacuumed flat and telling her husband she tripped down a set of stairs. Plus it's going to look real suspicious when she has to tell him "Hey honey, I just had a miscarriage. Can you pick me up from Planned Parenthood?"
My thing is, is she mentioned she was drunk when she decided to suddenly have another kid. That's a fact that honestly could've been left out for irrelevancy, but left in for seeking pity. My cheating senses are tingling on top of that if she didn't want the kid but the told her husband about it so he'd think it was his to avoid too much suspicion.
 
Amazing.

Now I know I really could get paid to write an advice column.

Because this is the worst possible advice you could give someone who wants a stable marriage.

Your body your choice? Sure. But that line blurs quite a bit given that you're married and trying to avoid a divorce.
 
On a drunken night I convinced myself that I did, in fact, want a sibling for my toddler—quite the 180 from my staunch stance of being “one and done!” I’m now 10 weeks pregnant with my second child and plagued with nausea, vomiting, and most of all regret.
It makes me sick that people treat having a child as something you can just take back like a pair of pants you decided makes your ass look fat.

Amazing.

Now I know I really could get paid to write an advice column.

Because this is the worst possible advice you could give someone who wants a stable marriage.

Your body your choice? Sure. But that line blurs quite a bit given that you're married and trying to avoid a divorce.
Quite simply, relationships thrive on communication and transparency and fall apart with lies and miscommunication. I guarantee if she goes through with this there will be a Telltale Heart moment where she blurts the whole thing out.
 
DEAR PRUDENCE

Should I Abort My Pregnancy and Tell My Husband I Miscarried?​

I’m plagued with nausea, vomiting, and most of all regret.​

BY DANNY M. LAVERY

Dear Prudence,
I am happily married, financially stable, and a mom of a beautiful, feral toddler. On a drunken night I convinced myself that I did, in fact, want a sibling for my toddler—quite the 180 from my staunch stance of being “one and done!” I’m now 10 weeks pregnant with my second child and plagued with nausea, vomiting, and most of all regret. Should I terminate this pregnancy and tell all (including my husband) that I miscarried? He, his parents, and my parents are all excited about baby No. 2. I, however, am completely disappointed in myself for having a lapse in judgment and thinking I would be OK with getting pregnant again.
—Thinking About Termination

“I don’t want to be a parent” is a wholly sufficient reason to schedule an abortion. You are under no obligation to disclose your decision to terminate a pregnancy to anyone else, no matter how excited they may have been about your pregnancy or how much they might wish you to carry your pregnancy to term. Your husband’s and your other relatives’ interest in, relation to, or attendant feelings about your pregnancy and your prospective parenthood of another child must always remain secondary to theirs. Your pregnancy is not a decision to be made by an executive committee whereby other people can purchase shares in your reproductive choices because they’ve married you, or because they hope to become grandparents again, or for any other reason.

If you decide to have an abortion, you may choose to inform your husband beforehand if you think he’ll be supportive (emotionally and physically, since you’ll need care while recovering), or afterward, if you trust he’ll keep it in confidence. That’s not mandatory, but you may find it relieves some of your sense of isolation if you think you’ll be on the same page. But I hope you’re able to share your regret and distress with your partner, not so he can talk you out of them, but because secrecy and shame can make for a damaging combination, especially in the long term. It may also minimize the likeliness that you’ll feel additional pressure in the future to go along with the general family excitement about a second child and give them what you think they want.

You don’t say anything about your husband’s (or your other relatives’) views on abortion. You may not know these views, but if you have reason to believe your husband or family would antagonize you for having had an abortion, you should prioritize your own well-being and safety first. If you decide you want to move forward with termination and don’t feel prepared to discuss it with your husband, then consider confiding in a trusted friend or your doctor. Whatever you decide, don’t let your disappointment or your embarrassment keep you from making an informed and self-interested decision about something as huge as raising a second child.

TIL: The person you married and the father of your children should never be informed of what you're doing with the pregnancy and their input is literally nothing on whether you wanna have or not children or that an abortion doesn't really matter to him at all and that being a manipulative little whore is the best way forwards in a marriage. Good to know, very cool.

God I fucking wanna die so bad. I bet the fucking stupid cunt that wrote this would throw a hissy fit if the husband sold the house to make a hotdog stand without consulting the wife but an abortion of the child? Yeah no that's nothing just fucking dunk it out and play b-ball with the fetus whatever LOL
 
Was she drunk from conception all the way until the pregnancy started showing? Her story makes no sense.
My guess is she hates her child rearing responsibility and now wants to ditch it as quick as she can. In short she's a classic bitch who thinks only of herself, and soon she'll be a child murderer. There is no way this won't come back to haunt her.
 
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