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Writer's pictureAnikó Blake, LMFT

The Emotional Journey of an Abortion Decision and How Therapy Can Help

Updated: Aug 7



Grief, relief, uncertainty, and direction. These are only a few of the many coexisting feelings that can arise after having an abortion. This highly nuanced experience is one that thousands of people go through every year—sometimes more than once—and yet many find themselves feeling isolated and alone. Most likely, you or someone you have known has been impacted by an abortion. At a time when narratives that narrowly define and represent the abortion decision-making and recovery process fill the political discourse, it is more important than ever that accessible therapeutic support exists. This includes supportive spaces that allow diverse voices to be safely heard, foster self-compassion and empowerment, and grow community. Someone who has received an abortion will likely benefit from the same mental, emotional, and relational care that we extend to other significant life moments. They will need access to the care that allows us the healing and peace we need in order to develop and thrive.


There is a human tendency to reduce experiences in order to make sense of or categorize them in one way or another. This rigid, black-and-white thinking offers us a temporary feeling of being in control at the cost of being able to honor the full complexity of being human. This is especially the case when it comes to broader social discourse and political views about abortion. By focusing on one component or fact, we fall into the trap of creating an argument void of empathy and humanity. Singular and narrow talking points overlook or ignore that abortions are not chosen for one specific reason. It is impossible to fully capture all of the unique circumstances that factor into someone choosing to abort their pregnancy. General themes to these factors include the timing in someone’s life, their gender expression or sexuality, their goals and life aspirations, and their own health or the health of the embryo or fetus. In addition, people can feel a myriad ways about their abortion(s) before, during, and after the surgical or medical procedure. This includes emotions that arise immediately afterwards, months later, and years down the line. Some emotional themes are relief and direction from the ability to terminate relationships and pursue goals, self-assurance and ease from greater LGBT+ identity alignment, disappointment and anger from breaks in trust with a partner(s) and support system, and sadness and longing from one’s connection with parenthood and their aborted baby.


Connecting with one’s own abortion story is neither immediate nor linear. And it can be different from one abortion to the next. For many who have had an abortion(s) hearing simplified narratives about abortions on a public level, making claims about the type of people who tend to receive them and how someone should feel about their abortion(s), can feel minimizing; It leaves out the many facets of their abortion(s) experience that are woven into their daily lives.


Grief is a tricky word to use when talking about abortion since it can be misconstrued as regret. While not everyone regrets their abortion decision, transitions and significant life decisions can often bring some type of grief. Abortions are typically a surgical or medical procedure that occur with limited time for preparation and someone may need time to make sense of how they feel about their experience. In fact, generally speaking, not knowing how we feel right away is ok. Some people may not feel any grief about their abortion(s) while others may feel a great amount of it. Abortion grief might be tangible, such as acutely experiencing the physical loss of a pregnancy or ending a relationships with someone in their life due to the abortion. Grief also can be ambiguous, such as experiencing the emotional loss of connection to aspects of one's identity or to their imagined parenthood had they carried to term. And grief might be delayed and complicated, particularly when the abortion happens in tandem with other loss or reconnects us to unresolved loss from our past. For some, abortion(s) can be another teachable moment in acknowledging the legitimate grief we can still feel when we let go willingly. The process of exploring emotional nuance can include sorting through conflicting emotions in order to make sense of each of their origin stories. Then we can build a map for moving forward with mixed or coexisting emotions about the same event. Over time, emotions such as grief, sadness, and anger can be felt harmoniously with relief, peace, and even hope and determination.


As therapists, we learn that adequate support improves the outcome of a significant life event. On one hand, someone can have a trauma response to the surgical or medical abortion itself, whether it relates to someone’s physical experience during the procedure or how their care was managed. On the other hand, someone’s trauma can be related to the response they receive about their abortion(s) from others, or the non-decision makers: such as partner(s), family, friends, broader communities, and leaders. Abortion stigma, agendas about abortion access, and personal values, beliefs, and goals from non-decision makers can become barriers to helping people who are considering an abortion make an informed decision and identify their own reasons and emotions. These barriers reduce access and availability to support resources and can ultimately create more mental, emotional, and relational complications later on. They can also increase mismanagement of care which can result in health risks. It is common for people having an abortion to receive misleading or incomplete information about the surgical or medical process, to experience ineffective collaboration across their care teams, and to not receive critical follow-up physical, emotional, mental, and relational support afterwards. These issues are heightened by rapidly changing abortion laws and policies and inconsistencies across clinics and states.


Offering someone accurate and comprehensive information about their abortion options and providing non-agenda based listening as they explore their decision are some of the ways that non-decision makers, including partner(s), family, and friends, can support someone who is considering an abortion.


Therapy is a confidential and carefully structured form of support for aiding people through life transitions. Those who choose to have an abortion, including life-saving or medically necessary abortions, deserve clinically informed and ethically grounded treatment for their emotional, mental, and relational healing. This type of treatment improves self-awareness and empowers someone to make informed and intentional decisions about their lives. Therapy before or after an abortion may be focused on grief, identity development, shame healing, trauma recovery, relationship repairing, and community building all at the same time. Knowing if, how, and when to talk about an abortion(s) with a therapist can be difficult and sometimes scary. If you are currently working with a therapist, ask them if this is a clinical area they have worked with before. You can also ask them about the type of therapeutic model or approach they would use for working with a client who is considering or has received an abortion. If your therapist is unable to support you in processing your abortion options or decision experience they may be able to refer you to another therapist more specialized or familiar in this area. These recommendations also extend to those who did not receive an abortion but were impacted by another’s abortion decision and would like therapeutic support.


Therapy is a form of treatment where client information is protected (with exception to the reasons listed in Illinois law for Mandated Reporters). Your safety is of utmost importance. If you are concerned about risks to your safety by talking with a therapist about an abortion you are considering or have received, collaborate with them on a plan to increase safety. For example, consider working with a therapist without using your insurance, since insurance companies may ask for diagnostic codes and treatment summaries to assess coverage for therapy services. If you are in couple or family therapy and do not want your partner(s) or family to know about your abortion, consider starting individual therapy. If you are looking to process the abortion with your partner(s) or family in therapy, make sure everyone is in agreement about the confidentiality of what is shared in session. Make sure you and your therapist are in agreement about documentation and case consultation, particularly if they have your consent to speak with another clinician on your care team. If you are not open about your abortion with someone in your place of residence, consider working with a therapist who can offer in-person sessions in their office versus attending virtual sessions in your home. Use caution when emailing, texting, or leaving voicemail messages with private information. A phone conversation via a therapist’s confidential and direct number and electronic message sent through their secure HIPAA-compliant software system (EMR) are safer ways to share information about yourself with a therapist.


If you are looking for additional resources, for you or someone else, you can find them below. Please make sure to assess any resource, clinic, and provider before receiving care to make sure that they are a good fit for you.


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