P
pkdsquared
Guest
First off, I should give some background. I am a newbie “revert” to Catholicism and prior to my reversion, I was fairly socially liberal. I was pro-choice in the sense that I was pro CHOICE, not pro-abortion, and while I never would have counselled anyone I know to have one, nor would I have had one myself, I felt that I couldn’t be the judge of people’s circumstances or reasons and only God knew their heart, etc.
That being said, I find myself up against a lot of my friends now that I am Catholic. I find that people tend to discredit things I say now or my opinions based on the fact that I am (what I like to call) “out of the closet.” While I typically try not to engage in these kinds of conversations, I find it frustrating that when I tell a good friend of mine that her doctor shouldn’t have given her an IUD because they are really only approved for women who have had at least one child, I get responses like “oh, well, you’re CATHOLIC, of course you would say that.” Like I am brainwashed or something (note that I didn’t say that she shouldn’t be on birth control at all. And that this information is in the commercials for the IUD.)
Sooo… to my point here. I have a very dear friend who is a very militant atheist and feminist. She is actually getting her degree in women’s studies. I feel like she is baiting me all the time. I try to at least logically present the stance of the Church, but it feels impossible sometimes.
Yesterday, she posted this article on facebook and tagged me saying she was interested in my take on it. I explained to her (after doing research on prolifephysicians.org and some other sites) that an “accidental” abortion happens in some situations, and doctors always try to save the life of the mother; that care was not being denied and that the feminist writer of this article isn’t a doctor and wasn’t in the ER and didn’t really have the qualifications to pass judgement on what is/isn’t medically necessary. I also countered that medicine is very biased pro-choice, and that people who go to Catholic hospitals go there for a reason and it’s not so they can get abortions.
It, of course, didn’t matter what I said, but I’m frustrated beyond reason. She essentially closed the discussion because she said “I just feel for anyone who gets forced into a situation where they have no control over their own reproductive system/life because of a hospital’s religious policies.”
How do you handle something like this? When they are trying at every turn to shoot you down. I WANT to say “Well, you know how you hate religious people who say they’re beliefs are the right belief because they are the ones who believe them? That’s what you do ALL THE TIME.” But I sense that would not be very charitable…
That being said, I find myself up against a lot of my friends now that I am Catholic. I find that people tend to discredit things I say now or my opinions based on the fact that I am (what I like to call) “out of the closet.” While I typically try not to engage in these kinds of conversations, I find it frustrating that when I tell a good friend of mine that her doctor shouldn’t have given her an IUD because they are really only approved for women who have had at least one child, I get responses like “oh, well, you’re CATHOLIC, of course you would say that.” Like I am brainwashed or something (note that I didn’t say that she shouldn’t be on birth control at all. And that this information is in the commercials for the IUD.)
Sooo… to my point here. I have a very dear friend who is a very militant atheist and feminist. She is actually getting her degree in women’s studies. I feel like she is baiting me all the time. I try to at least logically present the stance of the Church, but it feels impossible sometimes.
Yesterday, she posted this article on facebook and tagged me saying she was interested in my take on it. I explained to her (after doing research on prolifephysicians.org and some other sites) that an “accidental” abortion happens in some situations, and doctors always try to save the life of the mother; that care was not being denied and that the feminist writer of this article isn’t a doctor and wasn’t in the ER and didn’t really have the qualifications to pass judgement on what is/isn’t medically necessary. I also countered that medicine is very biased pro-choice, and that people who go to Catholic hospitals go there for a reason and it’s not so they can get abortions.
It, of course, didn’t matter what I said, but I’m frustrated beyond reason. She essentially closed the discussion because she said “I just feel for anyone who gets forced into a situation where they have no control over their own reproductive system/life because of a hospital’s religious policies.”
How do you handle something like this? When they are trying at every turn to shoot you down. I WANT to say “Well, you know how you hate religious people who say they’re beliefs are the right belief because they are the ones who believe them? That’s what you do ALL THE TIME.” But I sense that would not be very charitable…