I'm fascinated by the difference between your (collective) reactions and mine.
I read this:
Quote:
"The outcome of my pregnancy, that choice was made by God. I feel like how to handle the end of my pregnancy, that choice should have been mine, and it wasn't because of a law."
and I hear a person of faith accepting the near-inevitability of her child's death but wanting to mitigate the suffering involved. Hopwin reads it and hears hypocrisy.
I read this:
Quote:
Without amniotic fluid around the fetus, the infant would likely be born with contractures, a shortening of muscle tissue that causes an inability to move limbs. Because the skull of the fetus was still soft, the muscles in the mother's uterus would likely cause deformities to its face and head. It also was unlikely the baby's lungs would develop beyond the 22-week stage, when Danielle's water broke.
...They asked the perinatologist a question no parent wants to ask: At what point do parents who are willing to do anything to save a child turn selfish by putting the child through what seemed to them like torture? There was less than a 10 percent chance their child would have a heartbeat and be able to breathe on its own. There was an even smaller chance - estimated at 2 percent - that the baby would ultimately be able to perform the most basic functions on its own, such as eating.
and I think it was a horrific situation in which the parents had to choose between a quick, clean death for their child or a 90% chance of a painful death or, in the unlikely event that was avoided, a 98% chance of a life of severe disability and dependency. Arathain reads it and thinks it was a choice of convenience.
Not necessarily saying y'all are wrong, but wow, talk about different perspectives!