LIFE
ISSUES
FORUM
For Immediate Release
Speaking
for Myself
June 20, 2014
By Erin Stoyell-Mulholland
The Obama
Administration has branded the HHS contraceptive mandate as a huge advancement
for women’s equality. In a 2012 presidential debate, when President Obama was
asked how he was going to promote women’s equality in the workplace, he
responded by talking about the mandate and his efforts to ensure that all women
have access to contraception. According to such statements, contraception leads
to women’s equality. The subtext is that if a woman wants to be successful or equal
in the workforce, she must suppress her fertility, which is viewed as a
hindrance to her goals and her fulfillment. Women are sent the message –
that there is something wrong with their bodies that needs correcting if they are to be equal. To be equal to men, they
must become like men.
This view is
demeaning to women. We are being told that if we want to achieve equality, we
should be contracepting. We are told that if we do become pregnant, whether
planned or unplanned, somehow we are unsuccessful, in effect we have failed.
If we choose to pursue motherhood, we are clearly not pursuing success –
at least not as the government defines it.
If the
government truly saw the choices for and against motherhood as equal, there
would be more support for women who become pregnant. Contraception and
abortion-inducing drugs and devices are offered for free through the HHS
mandate, but not all pregnancy-related costs are covered. By only offering
full coverage of options promoting the prevention or interruption of pregnancy,
the government is sending a subtle but clear message about what it means to be
a woman and what a woman's success looks like – and it doesn’t include her
fertility.
The Catholic Church’s teaching reflects a much more beautiful and pro-woman
view, upholding the dignity of women. The Church endorses Natural Family
Planning or NFP, which
allows couples to plan to avoid or achieve pregnancy. Natural Family
Planning also helps identify women's health issues, helping them to find real
healing and health management. NFP teaches women to understand their own bodies and to
identify times of fertility. It does not require women to ingest potentially
harmful hormones, risking their health, in order to attain so-called women’s
equality. The Catholic Church supports and upholds an authentic understanding
and appreciation of women’s whole being. The HHS mandate, by contrast, reduces
and limits the healthy functioning of women’s bodies, redefining fertility as a
kind of disease.
To claim that contraception
is key to women’s success is demeaning to all women. We need to promote real
resources to support women who are pregnant or parenting. Our efforts need to
be focused on providing mandatory paid maternity leave, better prenatal care,
better financial aid and medical care for women and children, and better, more
affordable childcare. Those avenues support all women’s success in the
workplace.
The government
claims to speak for all women and women’s needs, but on this issue it does not
speak for me. I am a woman, and I support the more than 300 plaintiffs that
have filed suit against the HHS mandate. Rather than telling me that my success
is contingent upon rejecting a part of my femininity, I wish the government
would respect me for who I am and how my body naturally functions. All women
deserve that respect.
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