Former Abortion Nurse Joan Appleton
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Introducing Joan Appleton
Joan Appleton was the head nurse at Commonwealth Women's Clinic in washington, D.C., and an active member of NOW. Recognizing the harm that abortion does to women, she eventually got out of the abortion business.
Ms. Appleton told her story at the third Meet the Abortion Providers conference in April 1993. Her statement has been slightly edited for readability.
Joan's Story


How did I get started in the abortion business? I was very active in the National Organization for Women (NOW). As a registered nurse, I thought that I had a wonderful opportunity as a nurse and as a firm believer in choice to be able to actually practice my political beliefs. I looked at it as a gift, so I went about working hard at the clinic for four years and remained active within NOW.
Abortion Trauma Undeniable
"We in the pro-choice movement and in the abortion industry deny that there is anything like post-abortion syndrome. Yet, it is real and girls and women do come back. I couldn't deny their presence."One of the things that bothered me even during the time that I was head nurse at the clinic is that abortion was such an emotional trauma for a woman and such a difficult decision for a woman to make.
If it was right, why was it so difficult? I had to ask myself that all the time. I counseled these women so well, they were so sure of their decision, so why were they coming back months and years later, psychological wrecks?
We in the pro-choice movement and in the abortion industry deny that there is anything like post-abortion syndrome. Yet, it is real and girls and women do come back. I couldn't deny their presence.
Troubling Ultrasound Abortion
"I saw the baby pull away. I saw the baby open his mouth... I couldn't deny what I saw on the screen. After that procedure I was shaking, literally, but managed to pull it together and continue on with the day."Another thing that bothered me as I went about my work at the clinic was the fact that I had seen an ultrasound abortion. We did first trimester abortions. This was a late first trimester, probably second trimester. I handled the ultrasound while the doctor performed the procedure and I directed him while I was watching the screen.
I saw the baby pull away. I saw the baby open his mouth. I had seen Silent Scream a number of times, but it didn't effect me. To me it was just more pro-life propaganda. But I couldn't deny what I saw on the screen. After that procedure I was shaking, literally, but managed to pull it together and continue on with the day.
Abortion Doctors in It for the Money

The doctors that we used were primarily physicians who were starting out in practice and would do abortions until they had enough money to open their own private practice. Or they were physicians who didn't have such a hot practice and did abortions to pay for their medical malpractice insurance.
"I never, ever had a doctor in the five years I was there who did abortions because he believed it was the right of the woman."
I never, ever had a doctor in the five years I was there who did abortions because he believed it was the right of the woman. It was not what was foremost in his mind. I'm not saying that they don't exist, but you certainly can't prove it by me or by my clinic.
Birth Control Pills and Abortion

I became more and more involved politically. We were a full-service clinic. We dealt with all types of sexually transmitted diseases, birth control, condoms, everything. I began to work more with organizations like Planned Parenthood, NARAL and NAF on certain projects.
I was issuing birth control pills after an abortion, and this is where I learned the real business and the real work of the abortion industry.
I would be able to counsel a woman and say, "Alright, we don't want you to have to go through this procedure again. We want to get you started on birth control pills. We'll give you your first packet free." We could do this because the pharmaceutical companies gave it to us free. It's good marketing. So we could distribute one pack free and write a prescription for five months worth. Everybody makes out.
If the birth control pill doesn't work for you this time, it may be that it's a little too strong. But don't worry, come on back because there's one that's a little lower dose.
"Now the pharmaceutical companies and Planned Parenthood and the abortion industry were not stupid. They knew that the less dose of estrogen in those pills, the more likely it was they were going to fail. But you don't have to worry. We can bring you right back here for another abortion."Now the pharmaceutical companies and Planned Parenthood and the abortion industry were not stupid. They knew that the less dose of estrogen in those pills, the more likely it was they were going to fail. But you don't have to worry. We can bring you right back here for another abortion.
They even used percentages, by the way. Thirty percent failure rate, because were going to use the real low estrogen pill. So that means thirty percent will come back. And if we forget to tell you, by the way, that if you get the flu and have to be put on antibiotics, the chemical reaction between the birth control pill and the antibiotic renders the birth control pill worthless, and totally ineffective, so we have another twenty percent. Thank you, come back around.
When I started counseling women there were seven forms of sexually transmitted diseases. There are now twenty. But don't worry, you can come back to us for that. Of course we will get you on some medication for that, and we know what the antibiotics do to the pill. Bingo! We have another ten, fifteen percent coming back around. Thank you.
The "Safe Sex" Lie

Now we're going into the schools and teaching "safe sex" because we care about women. We tell them to use condoms. You must use condoms with a jell or foam, never alone. We all know you are going to have sex anyway, so you might as well protect yourself.
Then AIDS came out and we still say, and Planned Parenthood is still saying, use the condom. What they are really saying is: It's going to fail and we will still have a certain percentage of you come back anyway. Since the AIDS virus is 100 times smaller than sperm, we're going to have a real good failure rate with the condom. So basically what they're doing today is going into the schools and saying, "Kids, we know you're going to have sex and that's O.K. If you use our condoms and our birth control methods and if you practice safer sex, only three or four of you will die. The rest of you will live."
"What they are really saying is: It's going to fail and we will still have a certain percentage of you come back anyway. "
It's the same thing as saying to a group of high school kids, "You've all got guns. We all know you are going to use them anyway, so I have this great bullet proof vest that will work for you. It won't stop all the bullets all the time, so three or four of you will get killed anyway."
Disillusioned with Pro-Choice Movement

That is what made me angry. I started out in the pro-choice movement believing that I was helping women, believing that women had a right to choose. They had a right to life. They had a right to go on. I thought when I was counseling women, I was helping them through a difficult situation so they could go on with their lives. I told them that they were the most important person on this earth, and that once this was over they could go on with their lives.
But I had to stop and say, "What's going on? Why isn't this happening? Instead you're going out and getting pregnant again. You're getting diseases. How am I helping you?" Those are the questions that kept on gnawing at me.
I finally decided that my questions were too strong. I didn't like what was going on. I didn't like what "Our Bodies, Ourselves" had turned into. I didn't like what we were doing for women. If it was right, why were they suffering? What had we done? We created a monster and didn't know what to do with it. I went to Debra, a sidewalk counselor, and began to ask questions. We talked and talked.
Resources
- Abortion Provider, Joan Appleton, turns Christian, Pro-Life
- A Tale of Two Friends
- Joy Davis: Former Abortion Clinic Operator
- Former abortion providers -- doctors, nurses, clinic operators and workers -- describe first-hand the horror of abortion and share their pro-life conversion stories.
Getting Out of Abortion

My way of getting out of NOW was that I was a guest speaker at a Virginia NOW dinner. I got up to the podium and I said, "Folks, I can't do this anymore. There is something wrong here and I can no longer be a part of the abortion industry or a part of the pro-choice movement and so I can no longer be a part of NOW."
I was asked to leave immediately. For a while there was a stir. These were people I had worked very hard with in the organization, people who I had trained to be escorts at the clinic.
My last official day at Commonwealth Women's Clinic happened to occur on the same day that a group of pro-lifers were having some rescues in the Washington D.C. area. Debra and I had become very close friends and she stayed with me when she came into town for these rescues.
I dropped Debra off downtown early in the morning -- it was in November -- and there were thousands of pro-lifers everywhere. I dropped Debra off and went to back to my clinic to set up the defense against the pro-lifers.
That day there was a group of men and women from the pro-choice community in France in town for Senate hearings on RU486. This was in 1989. These people from France wanted a clinic demonstration so they chose my clinic.
I was asked to give them a tour and explain the procedures to them. That was my last official job. I took the French contingency through my abortion clinic, explained it in detail and that was it. It was all done. I left.
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hprudavis Apr 8, 2011 @ 1:34 pm | delete
- I had an abortion when I was 23. Yes, I DO still have some issues with it but I KNOW that for myself, and my unborn child, that I made the correct decision. I quit the screwing around and NEVER got pregnant again, nor do I have any diseases. (Not sexual ones anyway) It took me a few years to get the help I needed to get off drugs/alcohol and get the emotional and mental health support I needed, but I eventually got there. Am getting there, and I now help to take care of drug addicts SEVERELY neglected children. Most recently, a little 6 year old who has been neglected her ENTIRE life and had Children's Services in her life her entire 6 years here. Had I not chosen abortion, that could be MY child who will probably end up an addict with a baby at a young age, and/or in counseling 20 years later for stuff that happened to her in her first 6 years. I am in still in trauma counseling for what I went through in those first 5-6 years of my life. There are SO SO SO MANY children out here (too many in my neighborhood alone) who are being neglected and will grow up with issues, perhaps some of their mothers should have had that (ONE) abortion? NO ONE WILL EVER CONVINCE ME WHAT I DID WAS WRONG!!! I believe it is a DEEPLY personal choice and no matter which way you go, ABORTION, OR LIFE, it is difficult. I don't agree with the part of your lens that states (re: abortion)
"If it was right, why was it so difficult?" Does this mean having and caring for a child is EASY??? Nope. It's difficult too, so does that make it wrong?
You have a great lens here, even if I do disagree with portions of it. Doesn't matter, I think you're one of the good guys, and so am I, so... Hello!!!
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WhitU4ever
Apr 9, 2011 @ 12:56 am | delete
- I'm sorry you had to make such a difficult decision.
But you can't mean what you said about neglected children. Let me get this straight... Do you actually feel that neglected six-year-old children should never have been born? Do you honestly think that neglected young kids will never see joy or laughter or singing or love? If they do experience some joy in life (no one's life is pure joy), do you honestly think that it's not enough of a reason to warrant existence... like, say, you and I have? I don't wish I never existed. Nor do I wish I were aborted. Do six-year-old girls, neglected or not, wish they were aborted? Or that they didn't exist? And are we so selfish that what we think is better for us is automatically what is best for that child? Are we so arrogant that we think we know what God wants for that child?
And do you really believe that mothers should abort a baby just to learn not to sleep around? You know, several of my own family members have lived through major difficulties and have had to make some tough decisions too. Some of them have been abused severely. Now, I would never wish those experiences on anyone, but God has a way of turning tragedy into triumph. With the right kind of encouragement, those of us who have been through a lot can teach others how to avoid making the same mistakes. But how can we teach them about our mistakes, unless we first admit that we have made them?
I know these issues can get really emotional, which is why I think both you and I would actually agree that we don't need to kill our children in order to learn that sleeping around is not a good idea. Just getting pregnant under less than ideal circumstances can teach us that. So can knowing someone else who did that. So can getting VD or AIDS. So can being dumped by someone who promised to never leave us. So can meeting someone who has abstained from sex until marriage and who encourages us to do the same.
Btw... we all have issues. Those who say otherwise are lying.
But here is one that abortionists don't suggest to the woman who finds herself pregnant in less than ideal circumstances: adoption; another difficult decision. Adoption will not only teach us not to fool around with anyone, anytime. It lets the child live and reduces the amount of trauma to the conscience and damage to the body for the woman. Compared with abortion, in which guilt continually tries to make it your mind's house guest, and can permanently damage your body's ability to have children in the future under more ideal circumstances. Women have had their cervix or uterus perforated, as well as other organs, such as the colon or bladder. Some of these accidents have required women to wear a permanent leg bag.
But, I haven't met one adoptive family that regrets it. Whether talking to the biological parent, the adopting parents, or those who were adopted, most are very grateful, and none of them wish they had never let them live.
I feel the struggles that you have dealt with and still are dealing with. Believe me... it is a huge relief to admit mistakes. It aids in getting past them. We've all made mistakes. When you have to shout that no one can tell you that you made the wrong decision, well, first of all, no one is trying to tell you that you were wrong. That's you battling your conscience. It's okay. It's over. We've all done things that we regret doing. We have ALL sinned. No one is righteous. Not one. Not me. Not you. Jesus took the hand of the woman who was caught in adultery, lifted her up, and said, "Where are your accusers?" Those who wanted to stone her were gone. Not one could say he had no sin. Jesus was the only one. He had no sin, and even He didn't accuse her. It was simply... "Go, and don't do it again." (I'm paraphrasing, but you get the idea.) That is where we find forgiveness and love and everything we have been looking for in all the wrong places. You are loved. Know that. And yes, we're the good guys, but only because of Him. Not because of us. The sooner we admit that, the sooner we are free from worrying about what others think about us. Who cares what they think? They didn't die for you, Jesus did. He's the only One worth living for. Everyone else is just like us... in need of His and our graciousness.
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poddys
Mar 20, 2010 @ 9:32 am | delete
- Very nice lens and on a hot topic. 5*****
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Who am I?
by WhitU4ever
"If you drive God out of the world, then you create a howling wilderness." ~ Peter Hitchens
I'm a Christian. Deal with it.
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