Men and abortion: Three couples share their stories
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This is the first time Brittney and Bobby Welinski have told their story to anyone other than close friends and family. In 2019, the parents of four were at their doctor鈥檚 office for a fetal anatomy scan. At that point in their lives, they were preparing for their fifth child 鈥 and fourth daughter.听听
Ms. Welinski was 20 weeks along in her pregnancy. But during their checkup, the physician had heartbreaking news: Their daughter had a severe cleft affecting her brain and, very probably, her heart.
鈥淭hey told us it was a condition incompatible with life,鈥 Ms. Welinski remembers.听
Why We Wrote This
A story focused onAlthough abortion is commonly framed as a women鈥檚 issue, the impact on men is significant, as these three couples鈥 shared perspectives and unified decision-making demonstrate.
The family was living in North Dakota at the time. They traveled to another physician in South Dakota for a second opinion, where the diagnosis was confirmed. Their options were limited to terminating the pregnancy or carrying it to full term and arranging palliative care, which would optimize the child鈥檚 quality of life before passing.听听
鈥淚f we made it that far along,鈥 Ms. Welinski adds.听
A 2013 North Dakota law banned abortions at her stage in pregnancy. The couple were then forced to travel, again, to South Dakota, where Ms. Welinski was induced into labor. Their health insurance didn鈥檛 cover the procedure. They were prepared to go into medical debt to do it.
The procedure 鈥撎齛 medically induced abortion 鈥撎齧eant that the premature child would survive only briefly, if at all, once born. They said goodbye on the day of the procedure.
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Mr. Welinski鈥檚 conservative Catholic background hadn鈥檛 prepared him for their family鈥檚 loss. Growing up in small-town Minnesota, he hadn鈥檛 heard about听the kind of tragedy that befell their family. The experience changed him: ideologically 鈥撎齢e changed his voting affiliation from Republican to Democrat 鈥撎齛nd emotionally. Now politically engaged, he wants families to have the same options they did 鈥 without having to cross state lines 鈥 when听navigating similar situations.听
The听Welinskis鈥 story reveals not just the difficult decisions that many American households face over abortion. It also shows how these matters aren鈥檛 simply a 鈥渨omen鈥檚 issue,鈥 but engage men as well 鈥 working in unity with their partners and thinking through their own questions on reproduction and birth control. And while women deal with both the mental and physical toll of abortion care, such family decisions weigh on men, too, says Bethany Everett, a professor of sociology at the University of Utah.
A national overview on a deeply personal issue
鈥淭he repeal of Roe is a big deal,鈥 Dr. Everett adds. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take years for us to really have a full understanding of the ways that this has potentially damaged people鈥檚 lives.鈥澨
About 1 in 5 men have been involved in an abortion, according to recently published in the medical journal Contraception.听
The stakes for them (as for women) are partly economic. Dr. Everett says that includes the decision鈥檚 impact on long-term earning and the pursuit of educational opportunities.
Many men support an abortion in the interest of better providing for their existing family 鈥 or better launching their careers before taking on the responsibilities of parenting.
To the many Americans who oppose abortion in most or all circumstances, the Dobbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization ruling, which overturned Roe v. Wade, holds the promise of allowing state legislators and other elected officials to pass more laws aimed at preventing abortion. had 鈥渢rigger laws鈥 in place prior to the Dobbs ruling, to ban or sharply restrict abortion when Roe was overturned, and more are expected to follow.听
Yet even in the states with some form of trigger law, spanning swatches of the West and South, 54% of adults said abortion should be entirely legal or legal with a few restrictions, according to conducted in May. That view, emphasizing women鈥檚 bodily autonomy, is shared by an even larger majority (62%) in states that are not imposing bans.听
That鈥檚 the national background for people like Mr. Welinski on a difficult and deeply personal issue.
It鈥檚 not black or white, Mr. Welinski says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 more color to these decisions.鈥
Among those colors are the somber shades of difficult health decisions for families. Their nuance and weight have moved to the forefront of public thought since the nation鈥檚 highest court struck down the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling last month. Though the burdens are heaviest on women鈥檚 shoulders, some men are attempting to help carry the strain through empathy and the unity that comes from listening and sometimes speaking up in public at their partner鈥檚 side.
It鈥檚 about 鈥渂eing there to listen and understand the frustrations, the sadness,鈥 Mr. Welinski says.
Partnering: a matter of listening and acting
Ask most individuals in a long-term romantic relationship, and they鈥檒l admit listening is sometimes easier said than done. To hear well requires a commitment to each other. Years will pass, as the springtime of a couple鈥檚 love churns its calendar into summer, and listening becomes a practice of hearing not just what鈥檚 said, but also what鈥檚 not yet said.听
For Ryan, who asked that his last name be omitted out of concern for professional security, he could hear the ticking anxieties of his wife鈥檚 heart before she鈥檇 even stepped out of bed on the morning the Supreme Court released the Dobbs decision.
Ryan was up first that morning in the couple鈥檚 New Orleans home when he heard the news. His mind immediately went to his wife 鈥撎齛 sexual trauma survivor. He turned the TV off and waited.听
鈥淲hen I heard her getting up, I told her, 鈥榊ou should probably stay in bed today,鈥欌 he says.听
The Dobbs decision was announced on a Friday. By the following Monday, Ryan鈥檚 wife had scheduled a hysterectomy. (Ryan already has a vasectomy, but they鈥檙e taking extra precautions.)
Ryan, who owns a software company, also announced to his employees that the small company would switch to full-time remote work. The New Orleans office would close. The decision was geared toward male and female employees alike.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 do anything in good conscience that makes an employee feel they need to stay in Louisiana,鈥 Ryan says of his home state, where a trigger law, , will make abortion illegal. 鈥淚 want to stay in Louisiana. But my role is to support my wife. If she鈥檚 not comfortable, we鈥檙e not going to be here. If we have to, we鈥檒l move.鈥
Two states away, in Alabama, Jessey Stahl and her husband, Davante, find themselves grappling with the impact of similar decisions after their state enacted a near ban on abortion procedures.
Ms. Stahl has traveled across the state for abortion-rights rallies in the weeks since the Dobbs decision. Mr. Stahl joins her every opportunity he can. During the Fourth of July parade in their rural part of Alabama, they were two of only six in attendance at a rally in support of reproductive rights. Ms. Stahl says it鈥檚 just one example of her husband鈥檚 unwavering support.
In Mr. Stahl鈥檚 mind, there is no other choice 鈥撎齪artly because of the danger to women鈥檚 health if their reproductive care doesn鈥檛 include access to abortion in a nation with a 听maternal mortality rate than any other industrialized nation.
鈥淚 support anything she believes in,鈥 Mr. Stahl says of their relationship. 鈥淪ay, she gets pregnant. I could lose her and my child at the same time because she can鈥檛 get an abortion鈥 in Alabama.
Even so, it鈥檚 difficult to speak out on reproductive rights issues in their conservative hometown, 鈥渆specially as an interracial couple. They already look at us a certain type of way,鈥 Mr. Stahl says. But it鈥檚 more difficult to not speak out, he says, especially when he thinks of the future for Ms. Stahl鈥檚 teenage daughter.听
A lot of folks are 鈥渢oo scared of what people might think to go out there and speak up,鈥 he says. 鈥淔or her to do that, she鈥檚 an extremely, extremely strong woman. It makes me proud to be hers.鈥
鈥淚 want people to see the other side鈥
After the Dobbs decision, the Welinski family continued to keep the story of their premature daughter鈥檚 passing mostly to themselves and their innermost social circle.
That didn鈥檛 mean it stung less emotionally when distant friends and family posted online in support of the Dobbs ruling. They鈥檇 never wish such a tragedy on another family, but still, they wished others could better understand the weight that came with their family鈥檚 decision.听听
鈥淚 want people to see the other side of what they think is a simple decision,鈥 Ms. Welinski says.听
Their family moved to Minnesota last year to be closer to Mr. Welinski鈥檚 family. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, has so far voiced his support for abortion rights.听
They consider themselves fortunate they had the opportunity to leave North Dakota. Even if their decision to relocate wasn鈥檛 guided by future indications of access to reproductive health care, to them it鈥檚 important that their three daughters grow up in a state that allows women a right to choose.听
Mr. Welinski understands that the recent weeks of debate over abortion access have weighed on his wife.听
鈥淕oing through life with her, you see things from a different angle,鈥 Mr. Welinski says.
Ms. Welinski cuts in, lovingly.
鈥淭hen this happened,鈥 she says, referring to the loss of their premature daughter in 2019.听听
鈥淚 think it just kind of affirmed that,鈥 Ms. Welinski adds.听
It鈥檚 all about listening, Mr. Welinski says again.听
鈥淔rom listening to her, I鈥檓 educated through her.鈥