Green Umbrellas and Dead Sara - Two Tales of Hidden Grief

    

    In Fall 2007, singer and former child star Britney Spears was chased from her Beverly Hills home though the streets of L.A. by paparazzi jockeying for candid photos of the twenty-six year old. Having all but disappeared from the public eye after abandoning her tour schedule, getting married, and having two children, Spears' personal life had become a keen point of interest for fans who had begun to wonder what had happened to her. They missed her music, but they were also concerned for her well-being. Rumors abounded, courtesy of the Hollywood tabloids, that Spears had become mentally stable, based on erratic behavior and "wild" partying from the year before. Pictures captured by the paparazzi when they finally caught up with the singer at a local gas station only seemed to confirm that gossip. Their photos depict an irate and bald-headed Britney confronting them with a wild look in her eyes before turning to attack their car with, of all things, a bright green umbrella that she brandished like a battle axe. Swinging her weapons multiple times, she barely dented the vehicle but did permanent damage to her reputation once the photos were published. 
    In a moment, everyone "knew" that Britney was unhinged and, apparently, spiraling rapidly into early destruction like dozens of other child stars who had gone before her. But, rabid for the drama that Spears' behavior and subsequent public breakdown gifted them, the media, and, by default her fans, neglected to look beyond her behavior to see if there was a deeper root to her mania. If they had, they would have discovered that Britney's anger went far beyond and had, in fact, started long before the green umbrella ever made its debut.
    Unbeknownst to the media or her fans, but later detailed in her book The Woman in Me, Britney was dealing with a litany of issues that was wearing on her physical and mental health. She had spent years in the limelight with no respite, she was in the middle of a messy and custody-threatening divorce, and nearly a decade before (during her whirlwind romance with fellow teen star Justine Timberlake) Britney had had an abortion that weighed heavily, if unknowingly, on her soul. Recounting the event, the singer revealed that she had wanted to keep the baby and most likely would have if Timberlake hadn't insisted that she terminate the pregnancy. Spears wrote, "But, Justin definitely wasn't happy about the pregnancy. He said we weren't ready to have a baby in our lives, that we were way too young." Hopelessly devoted to the boy she thought was her prince charming, Britney trusted that he had her best interests in mind and took an abortion pill that killed her child and made her sick for an entire day. Spears admitted that in the moment she regretted the decision and, though she has championed the Pro-Choice stance every since, she wrote that, "To this day, it's one of the most agonizing things I have ever experienced in my life."
    Spears' story is not uncommon for Hollywood and, in fact, the industry is overrun with the abortion agenda as it aids the "glamorous" and "independent" lifestyle the entertainment industry promises. As a result, hundreds of celebrities have had abortions, sacrificing their children to build their careers, though many would never admit they endured the procedure. Despite the narrative that abortion is empowering, once an individual has experienced it, she is forever cursed with the understanding of its horror. Never again can she discuss abortion without remembering the grief of her own. Deep down, she will always feel the absence of her child (even if she "didn't want it") and that pain will inevitably seep into her work.
    In 1979, artist and lead Fleetwood Mac vocalist Stevie Nicks wrote the song "Sara" for the band's "Tusk" album. The six-minute song is dour and haunting with a heartbeat-like bass line that could be interpreted as an outpouring of grief, a thought Nicks confirmed in an interview with LifeNews, where she revealed the song was about a baby she conceived and then aborted with Eagles singer Don Henly. Nicks said, "Had I married Don and had that baby, and had she been a girl, I would have named her Sara..." Fearing that her burgeoning career would be hamstrung by a child and thoroughly steeped in Hollywood's agenda, Nicks convinced herself that disposing of it was the best option, and yet her account of the experience reveals that it stayed with her for decades.
    Strong women have routinely proven that unexpected children are not burdens to their lives. On the contrary, children often improve and broaden their mothers' world tenfold. And yet the abortion industry is allowed to warp that truth under the guise of health care, a care that contradicts the meaning of the word by killing children and leaving women with agonizing and volatile hidden grief that is written off as a "necessary evil" of empowerment.  




Photo Credit: Los Angeles Times, Vogue (edited by Heartbeat Press, Polish Photo Editor) 

Original Article 

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