You obviously have no idea of my line of thinking if that is your conclusion.
People are treating a fetus that cannot live on its own (specifically solely dependent on its mother for its existence), nor near to living own its own, to an already born child. Sorry, but they are not the same.
That does not mean they are both entitled to life, but they are two entirely different circumstances.
The dead mother is extraordinarily relevant when discussing this matter. For some strange reason, many Catholics see no problem in treating things as if they are entirely independent of each, when in fact they are interconnected…that goes for fetus/mother, us and our environment, theory and practice, etc. The child is not a separate entity from its mother, regardless of how assertively one wishes to state it. Remove the baby and see what happens. The only mortal being that can take care of the child at 14 weeks is the mother, and the mother is dead.
Actually, in my world, you’d be healthy.

I am a middle-aged man with various health problems, but eat right, and work out to keep the in check.
But in the end, when God calls me home, I will not fight it. It’s just amazes me that so many talk about a wonderful afterlife, yet fear death and as a result cling onto life when the end is obvious with every ounce of their being.