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Reproductive Loss: Speaker and Author Michaelene Fredenburg Urges Dialogue
and Healing
Contact: Ashley Walker, 678-990-9032 ext 105; Christine
Schicker, 404-610-8871; both with
The Maximus GroupSAN DIEGO, May 7 /Christian
Newswire/ -- The emotionally charged national debate over
abortion often stops dialogue before it starts, leaving anyone who's
ever been touched by the experience — tens of millions of American men,
women, grandparents, siblings, and other family members and friends —
feeling there's nowhere to turn for support.
Because our culture lacks safe spaces to talk about this type of
reproductive loss—many women and men feel that their personal
experiences may be judged, labeled, minimized or even ignored. Abortion
is rarely a decision taken lightly. Those who've made that difficult
choice, their family members, and friends seek the opportunity to share
and dialogue about their experiences.
More than one out of every three American women will have had an
abortion by age 45. Their husbands, boyfriends, brothers and sisters,
and other relatives also seek support and resolution to their thoughts
and emotions surrounding the experience. Almost everyone knows somebody
affected by an abortion or lost pregnancy — but it still remains one of
the most difficult subjects to discuss, and little exploration has been
done of the influence upon those close to the women who experience it.
Every person moves through reproductive loss and grief differently. "I
was completely unprepared for the emotional fallout," says Michaelene
Fredenburg, author of a new book on loss experienced from abortion. "For
years I suffered in silence," she remembers. An abortion experience can
create a range of emotions, from feelings of relief, to confusion, to
more severe instances of sadness or depression. These emotions can
change or take on new meaning over time.
Although the loss experienced because of an abortion has significant
differences than that of a miscarriage, stillbirth, or infant death, the
grief and reactions that women, men, and families experience are
similar. However, because the loss suffered through abortion was chosen
(usually as a result of pressure from others or their circumstances) and
typically kept a secret, the ability for women, men, family members and
others to grieve that loss is complicated.
Fredenburg, a noted speaker and commentator on this topic, understands
this complex environment from personal experience. Fredenburg became
pregnant at age 18 and chose an abortion. Because of her own journey,
and after years of hearing from men, women, grandparents, and siblings
about the difficulty of finding a safe space to explore their
experiences, she created the national outreach effort
Abortion Changes You(TM)
and authored Changed: Making Sense of Your Own or a Loved One's Abortion
Experience. This outreach and book provide a much-needed space where
people of different viewpoints can share, build community, and start the
grieving process. "It is our hope that the space we've created online
and in the book will help people know they are not alone and healing
resources are available," says Fredenburg.
Men and women with little social support are at an increased risk of
distress or unhealthy coping behaviors. Fredenburg stresses that
building a compassionate cultural dialogue surrounding abortion, and
equipping friends and family members to support loved ones who have been
touched by abortion is long overdue. "I believe many people are tired of
the polarization," says Fredenburg, "More men and women are starting to
ask 'How can I be a safe place for my loved one?' Abortion Changes You
is a starting point for our family members and friends, a safe place
away from politics, labels, and debate."
To schedule an interview with Michaelene, contact Ashley Walker (678)
990-9032 or Christine Schicker (404) 610-8871 both with The Maximus
Group.
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