For all the pro-choice fervour that has always, and always will, thrive in me, I was shocked by the staggering sadness that overcame me in the wake of this choice.
There is blood on my hands.
The nurse, a young woman in pink scrubs, apologises as she sops up my excess blood from the table, from the floor. She was just supposed to draw a sample but having pulled the stopper almost all the way out before inserting the syringe into my vein, she accidentally created a hungry vacuum that was already at capacity. My blood flows freely, with nowhere to go except everywhere.
I feel distant from myself, from the blood that’s all over. It’s mine but not a part of me anymore. It is useless now. It is waste.
It drips down my arm, forming a pool in the palm of my hand. And even then, I remember thinking: It was too on the nose, too obvious a symbol. Very fucking funny, universe, I thought. But try a little harder, hmm?
Outside, in the waiting room, my then-boyfriend, Will, waits. He is not allowed in until the procedure actually begins. By the time the procedure will actually start, I’ll be so high on painkillers that I’ll hardly need him. But now, as my anxiety and my guilt stack upon one another, now is when I wish he were here, to hold my stupid, bloody hands.
Read more: This WA clinic won’t be suppling abortions, after all.
“These things happen,” the woman from our college health center tells me.
“When you’re irresponsible.”