I'm Catholic and 'pro-life.' Here's why I would never vote for Donald Trump.
My social media accounts are bleeding red. A practicing Catholic, I have many friends and acquaintances who are voting Republican this year, in order to secure at least one conservative Supreme Court judge, and possibly even overturn Roe v. Wade. A Donald Trump vote, they say, would save millions of babies from abortion. A Trump vote is the only moral choice.
And as a practicing Catholic, I couldn’t disagree more.
Four years ago I was lying in a darkened office in a Chicago-area hospital listening to my son’s heartbeat when our obstetrician walked in and upended our lives forever. The baby on the ultrasound screen had not formed properly. His neural tube had failed to fuse together, creating a hole at the base of his spinal column. His tiny feet were clubbed inward. The buildup of spinal fluid on his brain was so immense that it had managed to push his cerebellum—the part of the brain responsible for motor control—down into his neck. I fought the urge to vomit, to run, as he scanned my burgeoning belly with his ultrasound wand and clicked his tongue disapprovingly. I can’t even see the cerebellum, he said.
The diagnoses were many, and all of them terrifying: chiari malformations, bilateral clubbed feet, hydrocephalus, and spina bifida myelomeningocele.
Maybe this is the part of the essay where you’re expecting me to say I terminated the pregnancy, and the GOP should keep their hands off women’s bodies. The end. I read at least one of those essays every few months. But the truth is, I’m a practicing Catholic, and I identify as “pro-life.” Put simply, this means that I think every life—every single one—has dignity and value, by the virtue of its humanity: immigrant lives, gay lives, black lives, poor lives, born and unborn, able-bodied and not. So I told the doctor I’d keep him, even though my teeth were chattering as I did it, and I begged God for the strength to ease him into a peaceful death, if it came to that. I was scared shitless, the kind of fear that makes it hard to draw a full breath.
Being “pro-life” is something I believe in strongly, and I try to reflect that politically when I can. Until four years ago, this meant voting for the GOP, the party who was loudly and unapologetically against abortion. But my son changed that.
Over the next several months, still pregnant, my husband and I visited an endless number of specialists, trying to come to terms with the level of care our son would eventually need: Right away he’d need surgery to repair his spinal cord, to sew up the hole in his back where it had failed to fuse. He’d need a permanent shunt to drain the fluid in his head. And beyond that—who knew? We had no idea what the future looked like, except that it stretched on in front of us endlessly, and I felt faint under the weight of it. I understood why parents would choose abortion, with news like this: It was like I had been thrust into a full-time job for the rest of my life that I didn’t want and had never asked for—the life of a special needs parent. I didn’t want this, God, I argued. I never asked for this.
When we welcomed Henry on a snowy day at the end of February 2013, he was fat and pink and beautiful, with a fine layer of red fuzz on the top of his head. He squawked, once, and settled grumpily into the doctor’s outstretched hands, glaring at my husband and I, looking deeply irritated. As the doctor handed him to the chaplain to be baptized, I gasped for air, crying at his beauty. You’re so beautiful, I kept weeping. How are you so beautiful? He had this hole in his back, but whatever. We’d get it fixed! We’d do whatever it took! And we could, too—because our private health insurance was awesome.
Henry stayed in the neonatal intensive care unit for 25 days and underwent two invasive surgeries: one to repair the defect in his back, the other to place a shunt in his head to control his hydrocephalus, a buildup of spinal fluid on his brain. He was nearly six months old when the hospital bill came, and his care, including my c-section, totaled a quarter of a million dollars. The insurance paid every dime.