You say you would have taken any level of risk? And you believe that would see you between a rock and a hard place - the rock being death, and the hard place being “childless”. But childless is not wrong in your situation - so that place can’t be called “hard” (perhaps “sad”).
Your statement that God did not put you there is right. The doctors only “put you there” if they are exaggerating. If they are right, you simply are there and you are called to make the best decision you can. While doctors are not infallible, they are, fortunately, risk averse too.
I think you misunderstand. When a woman goes to
a doctor already pregnant after being told she was
not capable of conception in the first place and gets
told she must now abort that baby or she and the
baby will die- that is the rock and the hard place.
I don’t advocate women going around deliberately
putting their lives at risk.
At the same time God does not enact
miracles (conception in the face of infertility) on
a whim or just changes His mind with a whoops
sorry about that- wrong woman conceiving here.
At some point in the pro abortion, pro euthanasia
society we live in every Catholic needs to sit down,
take a deep breath and ask themselves? Is this
scenario reasonable? Is this really how God behaves?
The tendency these days is to assume the Church is wrong-
that psychotic old celibate men who hate women hand
down rules people can’t live with.
Catholics in general these days need to think clearly
about the culture their doctor is coming from instead.
My doctors came from a culture that says abortion is
not only okay but preferable to other risks.
However for me the idea that I and the baby might
die was ONLY a risk where in having an abortion
the death of the baby was a certainty not just a risk.
There are literally two cultures at play. One is death
and one is life. A doctor might have the best of intentions
with his “risk adversity” as you call it but nevertheless
we have to ask ourselves- from which culture is he
really operating from?