It is strange though, to bare the story of Zoe’s life
over and over these past few years. There were entire months after she died
when I couldn’t even speak my daughter’s name. Evoking her memory and all that
came with it would throw open those doors, and what was on the other side would
fall out and crush me underneath its vast weight. There was too much pain and
not enough of me to hold it back ― too much rage and grief to even begin to
figure out how to live with it.
For
a long time, I didn’t want to live with it. Sometimes I still don’t. I look out
into my future, and all of the past stays clinging to me. I sit here now and
begin to write this all down for the hundredth time ― now in the shadow of the
Court’s insane and barbaric decision ― and hate myself a little bit for trying
to affix some purpose or meaning to what happened to me and Zoe. All these
years of searching, and I have yet to find any context so significant that it
would soften the cruelty of being robbed of dignity, autonomy and sexual
agency.
I
know the architecture of a life that has been marred by the consequences of
forced birth. I know the shame and the indignity of that hospital bed and what
it leaves you with after. It has been 16 years, but I can still hear myself
begging my mother, my doctor, not to make me do this ― please don’t make me do
this. Forced birth was tantamount to the rape I experienced; in some ways, the
violation of it went deeper.
The
birth wasn’t easy. I quickly became preeclamptic ― my blood pressure surging to
dangerously high readings. Alarms began to chime around me. All I could do was
lie there and shake and breathe and breathe and breathe. At one point, a nurse
or a doctor, I’m not sure which, warned that I was going into shock.
I
think my mother must have asked what that meant ― what was happening to me ―
because I heard some distant explanation about seizures and stroke and
hemorrhage. It sounded like death. I yearned for the simplicity of it, to let
my life fade away so I could stop being a thing that thinks and feels, that
could understand what was happening to me. Perhaps one moment of pain, and then
a great slur of nothingness. In that capacity, Zoe and I were much alike ― both
of our bodies sustaining a shadow of a life, heart stuttering and blood
pumping, unable to escape the suffering ahead of us.
My body was resistant to any pain medication,
including the anesthesiologist’s efforts at administering an epidural. My legs
had no feeling, but everywhere else, there was pain. I remember the
conversation with the doctor prior to being induced, tears rolling down my
cheeks, and how I said, “I don’t want to feel anything. I don’t want to know.”
It
wasn’t because I was afraid to hurt ― pain didn’t mean much to me anymore ― but
being chained to this birth through involuntary labor repulsed me. I needed to
disappear, to be outside of myself ― to be in the air, or the tick of the
clock, or the cracks in the plaster. Anywhere but the bed, with the thin
hospital gown covering my bare body and the monitors strapped onto me and the
IV pumping, and the sort of hurting that demands your presence. I
was surrounded by strangers, everyone watching it happen, just a bunch of
powerless people spectating at the assault of an even more powerless teenage
girl.
Except this time, the perpetrator was my own body as
the Pitocin contracted my muscles and forced me along a path I never wanted. I
was terrified, humiliated — and in those moments, there was no difference
between the table in the kitchen where a boy pushed me down and raped me, and the
hospital bed where I gave birth against my will.
I
want you to know that I’ve never forgiven my body for that betrayal. Even now,
there are times I can’t stand to lay my own hands on my body, to wash myself or
remove my clothes from my skin. I have to sleep in bras because the feeling of
a T-shirt moving against my chest reminds me too much of being naked underneath
a hospital gown. My body still doesn’t feel like my own, and I hate my body for
it.
I
knew the girl that entered the labor room would not be the same one who left.
Zoe was born, and time began to tear through her life, taking with it the
person I might have been. Experiences and possibilities and the future I’d
worked for, they all died there in that room, on that bed.
I quit high school as a result of post-traumatic
stress, unplanned parenthood and fear of my abuser. I’d struggled to fit in
with my peers to begin with, but now the gap between us was impossibly great. I
was able to get into my local college with a GED, but just when I would muster
some resolve to live, the depression and anxiety would tear me back down to
size. I was exhausted from frequent hospital stays.
Zoe’s
inability to sleep coupled with the constant risk that she might aspirate or
suffer a fatal seizure at any moment kept me too hypervigilant to achieve
genuine rest. I struggled to be close to anyone, afraid of who they might know.
Who they might tell. I didn’t know how to relate to anyone as Dina anymore ―
she was gone, and I was what took her place.
I
was still a teenager, though. I was desperate for people to look at me and see
something worthy of their time. There had to have been things that were special
about the Dina that came before the one who had taken up residence in her
place, but I’d forgotten what any of it was. All I was good at anymore was
being afraid or numb or needy.
There
was this impotent rage over everything I’d lost ― not only my personhood, but
smaller things, too, like my senior year. Taking graduation portraits, as my
sister had done. Walking across the stage. Shopping for dormitory furniture.
Hating or loving or being indifferent to a college roommate. I wanted to attend
Troy University, try out for their vocal ensemble, go to a party and have new
experiences with new people, find freedom from the strict custody schedule of
divorced parents.
I
remember having a revolving door of ambitions: to become a journalist, maybe go
into politics, become an ambassador, a psychologist, an English professor, a
screenwriter. I had been on the precipice of becoming. These things meant something
to me. I couldn’t arbitrate with any logic how something I spent years working
toward could be so casually destroyed.
Zoe
was born, and those possibilities were extinguished. Studying nursing seemed
the only practical option. I had a child to take care of for however long she
lived, and the best way I could mitigate her suffering was to learn more about
how to treat it. But then Zoe died. Then I had nothing.
I unenrolled from college not long after. I couldn’t
keep up with my classes. I slept even less than I had before. I was messy and
desperate to find any escape from my reality. I tried to keep a job, but a
couple of months in, I would quit or stop showing up for a shift when I
couldn’t make myself get out of bed. I struggled to work around men ― I was
afraid to say no to them. I was afraid to have one in a position of power over
me.
I
got married when I was 20, and of course there was love, but I think he knew ―
must have known ― that part of it was about escape. For all my quiet
dysfunction, he loved me back and stayed in spite of it. We had three children
because it seemed like the natural progression of events, and I threw myself
into motherhood. I crushed down at the grief and unaddressed traumas and tried
to forget that I ever had dreams of my own. I made it past the first birth of
our daughter, whose red hair and big blue eyes reminded me so much of Zoe, but
with our second daughter, I broke.
There
was too much. Too much stacked on top of too much, all of it bearing down. The
pressure of being the primary caretaker, the never-ending chores, the isolation
of it, the disparities between myself and my husband, the total lack of
anything I could identify as truly my own ― the grief and repressed memories
fissured open.
It’s hard to remember much of that time. The
depression robbed me of most of my memories of our second daughter’s first year
of life. Yet another thing to add to the mass of guilt ― I can recall planning
how I was going to end my life, but I don’t remember my daughter’s first steps.
There
will be no conclusion to this grief, not ever ― it’s important you understand
that. It is the foundation on which everything else was built, and it is the
price I paid to try and survive this. My feelings don’t work right anymore.
Grief has changed the shape of my love. It stretches in ways it should not. It
keeps me on the other side of it. No matter how hard I try to shield it from my
children, I know, inevitably, my trauma will touch their lives too.
I
wonder what my daughters will make of me when, as adults, they perform the
autopsy of their childhoods to uncover the reasons behind the people they’ve
become. I wonder if I will be the antagonist of their story ― the mother,
strangely distant and present all at once ― or if they will give me grace and
understand the deeply flawed, wounded core of a mother who tried and who,
despite everything, loved them fiercely. I am trying. But
sometimes, it feels like my grief is what composes the bones of this house and
traps everyone within it.
A few days ago, my youngest was in the back seat. She
asked me, “Are you strong, mommy?” She
was wondering whether or not I could lift up our 50-pound pit bull to put in
her lap, but I was thinking about myself. I was thinking about my weakness and
my discontent, and how earlier I had been sobbing while cleaning the goddamn
toilet next to the bleach and the grout brush with those stupid rubber gloves.
Crouching
there, the thought had suddenly crept in: This is me now. This
is mine: the piss on the grout, the laundry on the table, the roast in the
crockpot, and the ghost of some girl I haul around whose aspirations I still
feel like phantom limbs. I’m what was born from all the mutilated bits left
behind. No matter how much distance I try to put between us, I keep coming
back, and every time, she’s still there ― laid bare on that hospital bed. Right
where I left her. I want so badly to put her at peace because that girl, that
child, she’s suffered enough. But I can’t.
Instead,
I have to stand here and listen to pundits and judges and politicians debating
the essential question as to whether or not I have the right to privacy and
autonomy over what happens within my body. It never fucking stops. How am I
ever meant to come to terms with the person I have become as a result of being
dispossessed of the very rights they are trying to debate away?
I
used to be so consumed with the scope of the other traumas involved in my
experience that I was afraid to be selfish, to ask people to care about my loss
of identity ― to ask for some part of it back. Until recently, I didn’t have
the language to even engage in recovery from my rape and the total lack of
agency I had in the resultant birth, two separate sexual violations. I still
don’t know if I can truly convey the violence of forced birth and how it sets
off a chain reaction that will echo into every fragment of a life.
So,
to those Supreme Court justices who just overturned Roe, I say: Tell me how to
do it ― tell me how to reconcile ownership to this body that has been overtaken
so many times. Would you choose this for your own children? How can you sleep,
knowing your hand has assigned this fate to anyone? How is deliberately condemning thousands of families to the type of generational trauma born of forced pregnancy and birth
an acceptable price to pay? Make no mistake, you are paying in our blood. How
does it not preoccupy you every single moment?
Answer
me. These aren’t rhetorical questions. I’m a human ― I’m the
one with fingernails and a heartbeat. I’m the one with experiences and feelings and a
reality fixed with limitations that I must constantly navigate. These aren’t
things you can simply regulate into nonexistence and expect those realities to
bend and fit into some fool’s paradise. I know the infinitely more likely truth
is that you already know this and simply do not care.
I realize these words will likely never make it to
their intended recipients, and even then, I am little more than another pound
of flesh against an extensive anti-abortion agenda that predates my own birth.
Perhaps
it is best that to you, I am nothing. I am not a famous writer or journalist,
there is no credentialing to my name and no lobbying firm or organization to
represent me. I am no one of any consequence in the world. It is because of
this fact that I would encourage you to read these words and consider, for one
terrible moment, the future you have so carelessly executed by depriving us of
agency over our own reproduction.
People
like me will comprise a huge percentage of those most affected now that Roe has
been overturned. My lack of a résumé is testament enough to the opportunities
and possibilities that I was divested of as a result of forced birth and forced
parenting. We are a paycheck-to-paycheck family. I’m only qualified for minimum
wage work. We get behind on the house note when the kids fall sick and we need
to spend money on the co-pay and medicine. I’m unable to afford the mental
health care to treat the PTSD left behind from the first compulsory birth, and
you would obligate me to another?
My
experiences and how I feel about them are not a matter of opinion. You cannot
take my life and draw different conclusions from it ― just as you cannot take a
person’s desire to abort an unwanted pregnancy and reduce their motives to some
nebulous inconvenience.
No
amount of diminishing language or fear tactics or subjugation will give you
ownership over us. To me, you are little more than just another perpetrator of
sexual violence ― unremarkable in every way, yet capable of such atrocities.
This is all I have to give you — not donations or power or paid-off debts in
exchange for sympathetic adjudicature.
My
words are the only real thing still my own. I refuse to believe they are of no
value.
Dina
Zirlott is a 34-year-old stay-at-home parent. She lives in Mobile, Alabama,
with her husband, three daughters and five dogs. In her spare time, she likes
to bake and decorate cakes with a highly questionable degree of expertise and
taste. Published in Huffpost, June 24, 2022.
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