Register Now!
Link To: Home
 
featured personal

search articles

media blogs

  • scanner
    scanner
  • screengrab
    screengrab
  • modern materialist
    the modern
    materialist
  • 61 frames per second
    61 frames
    per second
  • the remote island
    the remote
    island
  • date machine
    date
    machine

photo blogs

  • slice
    slice
    with
    transgressica
  • paper airplane crush
    paper
    airplane crush
  • autumn
    autumn
  • brandonland
    brandonland
  • chase
    chase
  • rose & olive
    rose & olive
Rose & Olive
Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other’s lives.
Scanner
Your daily cup of WTF?
Date Machine
Putting your baggage to good use.
The Modern Materialist
Almost everything you want.
Autumn Sonnichsen
A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Chase
The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
The Remote Island
Hooksexup's TV blog.
61 Frames Per Second
Smarter gaming.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Slice
Each month a new artist; each image a new angle. This month: Transgressica.
Paper Airplane Crush
A San Francisco photographer on the eternal search for the girls of summer.
Brandonland
A California boy in L.A. capturing beach parties, sunsets and plenty of skin.

new this week
Miss Information by Erin Bradley
Three ways to deal with an unemployed S.O. /advice/
Horoscopes by the Hooksexup Staff
Your week ahead. /advice/
Roe vs. Wade vs. My Boyfriend by Lauren Bans
My abortion was no big deal — except to the men in my life. /personal essays/
Dating Confessions by You
"I wish I had someone to crush on for Valentine's."
The Velvet Hammer Burlesque by Michelle Carr
We wish you all a very 'lesque-y Valentine's. /photography/
Innocent by Giuliano Bekor
So the photographer claims, but our writer's not so sure. /photography/
Dating Advice From . . . Comic-Con Attendees by Cyriaque Lamar
Q: I'm a Batman girl, my boyfriend's a Superman guy. What sort of relationship hurdles can we expect? A: Don't date. It's not going to work out.
Valentine's Alternatives for the Terminally Lonely by Hooksexup editors
14 ways to get through the day.
 PERSONAL ESSAYS


  Send to a Friend
  Printer Friendly Format
  Leave Feedback
  Read Feedback
  Hooksexup RSS

Four weeks after my abortion, I was dating again.

It was my second night out with a wide-eyed, pretentious poetry MFAer. We were three whiskey sodas down when he suavely brought up his recent bout with testicular cancer. His woes — the monthly check-up tests, the weirdness of post-surgery masturbation — flowed from his tongue without any hint of doubt that such talk might be second-date TMI.

Reaching his hand across the table and playing with my fingers, he asked innocently enough, "Have you ever had surgery?"

Um. . . yes. I was still spotting from the procedure; I was reminded of it every time I pulled down my pants. In a drunken split second I debated avoiding the A-word. My abortion had basically been the uterine equivalent of minor knee surgery, annoying and a bit painful, but not soul-destroying or existentially angsty. At the same time, I didn't want to draw needless attention to the fragile and somewhat bloody state of my uterus, especially with someone I might want to invite in there later on.

Still, lying reeked of shame and regret, so I decided to answer him casually and matter-of-factly. If he turned out to be a bible-thumping right-winger screaming "Murder!" I didn't care much anyhow. I'd realized we didn't have long-term potential around midnight when he made the suggestion we go drop acid in Fort Greene Park and read Whitman poems to each other ("Fort Greene Park was, like, Whitman's favorite writing spot").

As soon as "I had an abortion recently" left my lips, his hand withdrew clumsily and his eyes, seeking refuge, darted up to the 1950s pinup poster on the adjacent wall. But apparently all that breast display was too evocative of fertility. He jumped up from the booth. "More drinks?" he asked — and then scurried off without waiting for my reply. As far as appropriate date conversation goes, it seems that a dude is allowed to passionately elegize his one removed ball, but I couldn't even make passing mention of a discarded bundle of cells.



I was twenty-five when I discovered I was a month pregnant. I wasn't dating the fetus-daddy anymore, and I was without health insurance, having been laid off from my crappy fact-checking job.
Lo and behold, when I looked down at the two plus signs, there was no instant connection.
I was the living, breathing example of that small percentage of women who get knocked up for being careless with their pill intake. I had no doubt I was going to terminate the pregnancy. In fact, my certainty gave me odd satisfaction. I'd spent countless weekends in college escorting abortion patients through the obnoxious church groups outside Planned Parenthood. One elderly protester, Teresa, would debate me for hours, and every time the argument was losing steam, she would let out a knowing, self-satisfied laugh, reducing my pro-choice position to lack of experience: "Ah, honey, you've never been pregnant. When you get pregnant for the first time, you'll feel a connection instantly. You'll know your child loves you and you won't be able to harm it."

Lo and behold, when I looked down at the two plus signs, there was no instant connection. The invasion in my abdomen felt more like a cruel joke than a loving creature who would paw at my breasts and call me "Mommy." Afterwards, I considered calling Teresa to brag about my angst-less procedure and the sweet aftertaste of relief. But I didn't have her digits, let alone her last name.

Besides, I knew friendlier ears. I honed my improbable pregnancy and ensuing abortion into a kvetching monologue about life's little inequities — I get pregnant on birth control, while teenagers in Utah practicing the pray-to-God-and-please-come-on-my-ass method remain distinctly un-knocked-up? It's not like I broadcasted my uterine news to co-workers, distant cousins, or Facebook cronies. It was simply something that happened to me, and I shared it with my friends like I would've shared any other story. It would have felt wrong not to. My female friends laughed when I laughed, commiserated when I needed it and treated the procedure as lightheartedly as I did. That's all I wanted. To be able to define my own experience, not the other way around.



           




RELATED ARTICLES
A Dram of Poison by Miles Morse
I roofied my wife to save our marriage.
The Real Estate of the Flesh by Maia McCann
My London job offer had a catch.
Love Bites by Ryan Britt
The aerial menace that came between us.
The Truth is Out There by Iris Smyles
First-date love, lies and X-files.
Accidental Bedmates by Jason Feifer
When I crashed at my friend's place, she shared more than her sheets.
Early Exposure by Krissy Kneen
Remembrance of nudie pics past.
promotion


partner links
Important Things with Demetri Martin
Wednesdays 10:30/9:30c
The Other Side of Desire
Four Journeys Into the Far Realms of Lust and Longing
VIP Access
This click gets you to the city's hottest barbells.
The Position of The Day Video
Superdeluxe.com
Honesty. Integrity. Ads
The Onion
Cracked.com
Photos, Videos, and More
CollegeHumor.com
Belgian Nun Reprimanded for Dirty Dancing
Fark.com
AskMen.com Presents From The Bar To The Bedroom
Learn the 11 fundamental rules to approaching, scoring and satisfying any woman. Order now!


advertise on Hooksexup | affiliate program | home | photography | personal essays | fiction | dispatches | video | opinions | regulars | search | personals | horoscopes | retroHooksexup | HooksexupShop | about us |

account status
| login | join | TOS | help

©2009 hooksexup.com, Inc.