PATH Leads
To Healing For Women Who Have Had Abortions
By Erika Anderson, Staff Writer (The Georgia Bulletin,
January 31, 2002)
ATLANTA-Carol carried with her the guilt of having had
an abortion for 24 years.
"I never talked to anyone about it," she
writes. "It just festered inside me." Carol found her way to
the Post Abortion Treatment and Healing program. "This program was
a blessing-a gift from God. It has changed my life," she writes
in a testimonial on the PATH web site. "This program allowed me
to open up, to cry, and to learn that God still loves me and He has truly
forgiven me."
Mary Ann McNeil, director of PATH, has been with the
program since it began at St. Jude the Apostle Church in Atlanta in 1987.
At first there was no set structure, but when McNeil took over the program
after a St. Jude pastoral minister moved, she found a Bible study geared
for post-abortive women called "Forgiven and Set Free."
"At
first it was just kind of open, but we realized that when talking about
it became hard, the women didn't come back," she said.
"Not
only do they need structure, but they need God. The book and Scripture
really helped me to help them. We've never looked back and we've used
it ever since."
Just this year a companion Scripture study for men
called "Healing a Father's Heart" has been used.
"Men
have really been ignored," McNeil said. "We know we're not
reaching enough men, and it was really on my heart to do this."
Participants
in the nondenominational Bible study usually take from 12-14 weeks to
go through the program, based on the stages of grief. Trained facilitators
lead the groups, spread throughout the archdiocese. Before beginning
the PATH process, McNeil, who holds a master's degree in social work
from the University of Georgia, talks individually with the women, who,
she said, share one thing in common: brokenness.
"Until they sit
down with me, they are so scared. When they come in, it's so cliché,
but it's so true-they think that this is the one unforgivable sin."
McNeil
hasn't experienced an abortion, although many of the facilitators have
and have gone through the PATH program themselves. But as a mother of
four, she knows the pain parents feel when they've hurt their child.
"When
I have done something that I think has hurt my child, it feels so terrible,
and you compound it by 1,000 or more and this is how these women feel," she
said. "They are so broken, and you just want to say to them, 'It's
going to be OK,' but most of them don't believe it."
Theresa Burke
is the founder of Rachel's Vineyard post-abortion ministries, and the
co-author, along with David C. Reardon, of "Forbidden Grief: The
Unspoken Pain of Abortion." In the book's introduction, Burke writes
of the many women she has encountered who suffer in silence after having
an abortion. When she first began her work counseling post-abortive women,
there were few resources.
"As a result, many women and men suffer
in silence, in complete numbness, or with the frightening and bewildering
feeling that they are going crazy," she writes. "Grief following
an abortion can be extremely complicated and can be experienced on all
levels of the personality. For many women, the source of their distress
may go unrecognized, unspoken and unnamed."
"The symptoms I
and others have observed vary widely between individuals. Despite the
diversity of emotional and behavioral reactions, however, these symptoms
are all rooted in the experience of abortion," she continues. "For
many, it is primarily an issue of unresolved grief. For many other women,
it is a traumatic event which has disordered their coping skills and
distorted their lives and behavior in dramatic and even bizarre ways."
McNeil
said that many women suppress their feelings after an abortion for as
long as seven to 10 years.
"A lot of the women in our groups are
in their 30s and 40s and maybe had an abortion when they were 18, 19
or 20-college age," she said. "At that time they were not going
to church or not close to God . . . They may push it to the back of their
mind, but it surfaces later, sometimes when they become pregnant again
or when they have a child and remember that it wasn't their first child.
They have all these sad, guilty and sometimes very frightening feelings
that they have to work through."
That's where McNeil and her facilitators
come in. Most of the group leaders know firsthand the pain that is felt
by the participants.
"Our facilitators are drawn largely from our
graduates, who have been there and really understand. Many of them have
similar stories. God's hand is so in it," she said, adding that
facilitators and participants are often paired up without realizing their
stories are nearly identical.
Retreats are also offered during the year,
based on the Rachel's Vineyard model. Though the Bible studies are nondenominational,
McNeil said that the retreats have a distinct "Catholic flavor," offering
Mass and the sacrament of reconciliation.
"It's a beautiful process," she
said.
McNeil has witnessed firsthand the amazing healing that
has come from the PATH program, and her faith has increased because of
it, she
said.
"These women come in, and there are tears and anguish
and fear and depression. If I didn't know how great they would be at
the
end, I don't know if I could do it," she said. "If they have
really come and done the work, I've seen some women who are actually
radiant. Those are the ones who have really accepted Christ's promise."
One
such participant wrote McNeil a letter after going through the program.
In her letter, she described her transformation from grief and fear to
peace and calmness.
"As I walked through this very dark valley,
I had to trust the Lord completely and I am now healed and out of the
valley," she wrote. "When I began this walk I really was consumed
by a spirit of fear and thought that if I was truthful I would die. But
quite the contrary has happened. For the first time in my life I feel
alive! The forgiveness I have been able to now accept from God, my daughter
and myself has set me free."
"And I never would have been able
to get here without the help of PATH," she continued. "God
knew what I needed long before I did and I am so thankful to everyone
who has answered His call to do this work."
McNeil said that there
are many stories like this woman's, and that this ministry has become "addictive."
"You'd
think this kind of work would be depressing, but it's anything but. You
just know that God's going to step in and it's just so cool," she
said. "I don't know if I could put into words how much it's meant
to me. It's just been so wonderful."
In the future, McNeil would
like to see PATH continue to grow.
"I'd love to have a day where
we have a training for priests and deacons," she said. "It's
really tough to find priests to help us. They are so busy."
McNeil
would also like to see more education about post-abortion syndrome. Her
greatest hope, she said, is to prevent abortions altogether.
"I
think if we can educate people better and support people together-if
there is more education and support from family, more awareness with
the men, the boyfriends, as well, then we can work toward prevention," she
said. "That's everyone's ultimate goal."
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