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We offer counseling that includes healthy solutions,
referrals and assistance.
Counseling Training now available. Please email
us.
Pregnant? Need help Now? Get
The Facts!
Need to find a
Pregnancy Resource Center nearest you?
Why Sidewalk Counseling???
We are more apt to save a child from being aborted
outside an abortuary than a Pregnancy Resource Center. Most women
entering a Resource Center is seeking help for herself and an unborn,
not an abortion. This is the final word. A matter of Life and Death
for all that come.
Need Prayer Persons?
No habla Espanol???...No problema...
Do your homework!
- Are there police officers hired by the abortuary?
- Does that present a conflict of interest?
- Is it legal?
- Do they have pro-abort protesters that they
refer to as "escorts"?
- Know the statutes/codes in your area.
- Ask the officer what code he is enforcing.
You can research, print out, and bring along applicable
laws/ordinances/statutes from the internet. You may want to bring
a code book on site. Make sure you are familiar with the codes/statutes
that are more apt to pertain to the activities at the abortuary
- Public Assemblies, Impeding Traffic, Trespassing, Free Speech,
etc. Highlight them. A local college will have a Law Enforcement
Handbook updated and published annually.
Be prepared -
Have someone with you - No one with you? That equates
to no witness. If you have no one - wait until someone comes
1) Literature - Referral/Adoption/Resources....
2) Dual Camcorder
3) Cell Phone
4) Related Phone Numbers - Bilingual friend/CPCs/Emergency
Care
5) Paper/Pen
6) Business Cards
7) Law Enforcement Handbook
8) Layettes (we found these helpful to assist with
saves)
9) Water
Be confident - The more training and knowledge
you have the more confident. Know your materials and organize them.
Excerpts from Fr Frank Pavone, Founding Director
of Priests for Life
Counseling Tips: Helping People Choose Life, Not
Abortion Saving lives in our day has never been easier, and this
is so for the tragic reason that more lives are in danger and easily
snuffed out than ever before. The potential victims are all around
us: in our families, in our neighborhoods, in our Churches. How
do we counsel someone who is pregnant, in need, and tempted to abortion?
Counseling in these situations can be direct (speaking to the one
who is pregnant) or indirect (speaking to someone who knows her),
brief or extended.
1. Narrowing the focus. We are speaking here of
the abortion minded woman, and for our purposes we will define this
person as one who sees abortion as either her only option or one
of her likely options. Others who are pregnant but not abortion
minded may come to us for various kinds of help and advice, and
helping them is certainly part of the mission of the Church. But
stopping an abortion has dynamics that are unique and require special
attention.
2. She does not want the abortion. A key thought
to keep in mind is that those who have abortions don't want them.
As Frederica Mathewes-Green has said, no woman wants an abortion
like she wants a Porsche or an ice cream; rather, she wants it like
an animal caught in a trap wants to gnaw off its own leg. Most likely,
this pregnant girl has received no advise from anyone she has spoken
to except "You have to get an abortion; there's no other way," We
should assess right from the start who know about the situation
and what they are telling her. We then need to provide the voice
of hope, that there are alternatives. Deep down, this is what she
is hoping against hope to hear. Countless post-abortion testimonies
reflect the experience of crying out-on the inside-for an alternative.
3. Why some feel adoption is worse than abortion.
In his article, "Abortion: A Failure to Communicate," (First Things
82, April 1998: 31-35), Paul Swoope of the Caring Foundation gives
us the following insights regarding studies done on women's perception
of abortion, adoption, and parenting: "Adoption, unfortunately,
is seen as the most 'evil' of the three options, as it is perceived
as a kind of double death. First, the death of self, as the woman
would have to accept motherhood by carrying the baby to term. Further,
not only would the woman be a mother, but she would perceive herself
as a bad mother, one who gave her own child away to strangers. The
second death is the death of the child "through abandonment." A
woman worries about the chance of her child being abused. She is
further haunted by the uncertainty of the child's future, and about
the possibility of the child returning to intrude on her own life
many years later. Basically, a woman desperately wants a sense of
resolution to her crisis, and in her mind, adoption leaves the situation
the most unresolved, with uncertainty and guilt as far as she can
see for both herself and her child. As much as we might like to
see the slogan "Adoption, Not Abortion" embraced by women, this
study suggests that in pitting adoption against abortion, adoption
will be the hands-down loser. "The attitude of these women toward
abortion is quite surprising. First, all of the scores of women
involved in the study (none of whom were pro-life activists and
all of whom called themselves "pro-choice") agreed that abortion
is killing. While this is something that is no doubt "written on
the human heart," credit for driving home the reality of abortion
is also due to the persevering educational work of the pro-life
movement. Second, the women believe that abortion is wrong, an evil,
and that God will punish a woman who makes that choice. Third, however,
these women feel that God will ultimately forgive the woman, because
He is a forgiving God, because the woman did not intend to get pregnant,
and finally, because a woman in such crisis has no real choice,
the perception is that the woman's whole life is at stake.
4. Find out whom she is afraid to hurt, disappoint,
or lose. Whom is she trying to please or protect? Some believe that
the key elements causing a person to seek abortion are practical
matters like money or housing. Just as significant, however, are
relational concerns. Frederica Mathewes-Green conducted listening
groups in major cities across the United States to ascertain why
women get abortions. Her book, Real Choices, gives excellent insights
from what she learned. She writes, "Women in the listening groups
uniformly talked about pressures in relationships; the abortion
was done, each told us, either to please someone or to protect someone"
(p.17). "For nearly every woman, the abortion decision is the result
of many reasons, not just one. Relational and practical, emotional
and material problems all jumble together in a dense knot, and abortion
appears the most efficient-if not the only-way to solve them all"
(p.20) The "pro-choice" Alan Guttmacher Institute states the following
on its website (www.agi-usa.org/pubs/fb_induced_abortion.html.)
about why women get abortions: "On average, women give at least
3 reasons for choosing abortion: 3/4 say that having a baby would
interfere with work, school or other responsibilities; about 2/3
say they cannot afford a child; and 1/2 say they do not want to
be a single parent or are having problems with their husband or
partner."
5. See and treat the situation as a life and death
emergency which it is. Though it may come to us in the most calm
and normal of circumstances, the conversation with someone who might
have an abortion has immersed us all at once into a life-or-death
struggle. We need to treat it accordingly with the highest priority,
being sure not only to assist the pregnant individual in our conversation,
but to maintain contact with her on a daily basis, either doing
so ourselves or entrusting her to an individual who can do so. Even
if we seem to have persuaded her to choose life, those who are pressuring
her to abort will be at it again later that day and the next day.
We should know the nearest abortion-alternatives and the people
who serve there, and we should, wherever possible, establish the
connection ourselves between the person in need and the pregnancy
assistance center. Simply giving her the contact information does
not assure that she will call. Hotline numbers like the National
Life Center (800-848-LOVE) should be on the tip of our tongue.
6. Different levels of persuasion are necessary
in different cases. Some abortion-minded individuals can be talked
out of it with counseling alone, maybe just one talk. Others will
be persuaded only if they see photos of the developing baby. It
is good to have some at hand. It is also advisable to identify a
doctor in the parish who is willing to volunteer his or her services
in these emergencies, and provide an ultrasound for the mother.
Some will not be moved either by counseling or by positive images,
and may need to see the pictures of aborted children. There are
those who, despite their knowledge of the life of the child and
the violence of abortion, have completely closed their heart to
the child. Sometimes, speaking about the risks of abortion to their
own health and safety, and information about abortion malpractice
and the dangers of the procedure, can persuade them not to go through
with it. Finally, there are those who have placed themselves beyond
the realm of reason, and only some form of peaceful, direct intervention
can save that life.
7. A priest's counseling is unique. You as a priest
are offering, by your very presence, a caring fatherly image that
contradicts the abandonment that this woman likely experiences from
the baby's father. Moreover, the powerful religious symbolism a
priest provides is an essential element which professional counseling
by itself cannot provide.
8. Invite them to come. People who are pregnant
and in need will come if we invite them to. By preaching and writing
about abortion within our parishes and schools, and inviting people
to come forward to seek help, we give them permission to bring to
us this deeply personal and troubling matter. And as a result, lives
will be saved.
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