Posted on 12/08/2019 11:59:48 PM PST by Morgana
Ramona Treviño is a former manager of a Planned Parenthood facility who left her job and is now pro-life. In her book, she shared the story of how a Catholic radio show helped open her eyes to the truth about abortion.
Before she left Planned Parenthood, Trevino began having doubts about her work there. In her book, she writes:
"For some time, I had been experiencing an unrelenting, secret turmoil. I felt like someone engaged in an intense game of tug-of-war.
At work, every child should be a wanted child was a constant message. This idea that every child should be planned, or not exist at all, provided the basis for what we did each day.
But something about that mantra wasnt ringing true. New pushes at work to pack more and more clients into each day, and without additional resources, seemed to contradict our verbalized commitment to those we served."
While driving to Walmart one day, Treviño turned on the radio and flipped through stations, only to wind up listening to a Catholic show on Guadalupe radio. It was a two-hour talk show on abortion.
Ramona Treviño (via LifeNews.com)
As she listened, a guest on the show describe the trauma shed endured because of her abortion. Treviño explained:
"One of the guests had gotten pregnant at age 12 after being raped by a family member. Through tears she talked about how her mother, to protect the family secret, had forced her to get an abortion. Since abortion was illegal at the time, the family had gone to extraordinary measures to kill the child. The woman spoke of her feelings of powerlessness and how long it had taken her to get over not only the rape but the abortion on top of it. If she had had a choice, she said, she wouldve had the baby."
The fact that the girl, now older, regretted her abortion directly contradicted the pro-abortion narrative of Planned Parenthood. I was stunned, said Treviño. The story went against everything we have been led to believe was right. She was young and a rape victim. From the perspective of Planned Parenthood, this was the perfect candidate for an abortion. And yet here she was, saying otherwise. Had it been a choice for her? It didnt seem so.
What the next guest said resonated even more strongly with Treviño. The woman spoke about being treated like cattle by the abortion facility, saying that no one there made the women feel loved or allowed them to truly consider their other options. It seemed clear they just wanted to get us in and out as quickly as possible, she said.
It sent shivers through Treviño because she could relate to the womans story. She was seeing the same thing happening at her Planned Parenthood facility. Treviño was being pressured to rush women through their appointments in order to fit more women into the schedule. She explained how hearing the radio guests story gave credence to her own misgivings:
"Hearing [the guest] talk, I felt my heart jump. Her story seemed to match my experiences as a staff member feeling pressured to push the clients through, hearing all the cautionary notes about low numbers and the need to work harder to reverse that. Deep inside, I had questioned the way we were treating our clients, and now here was this woman the kind of woman we served and supposedly cared for validating my concerns .In spite of my good intentions, I was becoming a cattle herder too."
Although Treviño did not leave her job at Planned Parenthood immediately after hearing the radio show, listening to it increased her doubts about Planned Parenthood. Learning that women regretted their abortions, even when abortion seemed like the perfect solution, made her question whether she was really helping women when she referred them to abortion facilities. Trevino had already been uneasy about Planned Parenthoods insistence that she rush women through their appointments. She learned from the radio show that this was actually a common practice at Planned Parenthood. Although it took some time before Treviño worked up the courage to quit her job, hearing the radio show was a pivotal point in her conversion. It helped her realize that her work with Planned Parenthood was hurting women, not helping them.
Editors Note: Source: Ramona Treviño Redeemed by Grace (San Francisco, CA: Ignatius Press, 2015) 65, 66
And still, no thought at all for the pain the baby endures before death. I’m glad she has reconsidered her position, but I don’t understand her at all. Yes, I feel sympathy for the children and women who have had abortions, but I feel so much more sorrow for the tiny little innocents being frightened, tortured and slaughtered. May God forgive all of us, but especially me because I authorized this be done to my own baby.
Abortion= one dead one wounded
You know, it’s interesting. The converts from pro-abortion to pro life always cite very magnanimous reasons (i.e., “I realized what we were doing was wrong,” “I realized we were killing babies,” “I realized it was hurting women” etc. etc).
How ‘bout the converts from pro-life to pro-abortion? It’s never for anything resembling a noble reason. They seem to fall into 1 of 2 categories: 1. “I want to run for office as a member of the Democratic Party and I’m selling out to do so”; or 2. “I’m a guy and I knocked up some gal and I’m being dishonorable about it.”
“How bout the converts from pro-life to pro-abortion?”
I read about one recently. Let me go back and find that okay? She gave reasons but if you ask me sounds like she’s just rebelling against her parents and her religious upbringing.
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