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Saturday, November 12, 2016

We Do Abortions Here by Sallie Tisdale

stillbirths occur any day. In We Do Abortions Here, by Sallie Tisdale, she describes her dwells on the job as a nurse in an miscarriage clinic. She uses puzzleical strategies to convey her spatial relation toward her job. In her endeavor sortie feels that her job is violent n adepttheless merciful, and that it is a routine just horrific, and at the same time she loves and hate her job. Tisdale proves through paradox that abortion cannot be viewed only when as good or evil. This also shows how she feels about her job. In her description of her work, she says, It is a smart brutality we practice present. In this paradox, Tisdale acknowledges the harness of abortion. Abortion ends the life of a fetus before it has a jeopardy to grow into a child. This is a harsh truth. But jibe to Tisdale, it is so sweet. The coupling of these actors line suggests that abortion is merciful. A charge lifted, perhaps, for a mother that cannot guard her child. Tisdale states, Abortion i s the narrowest edge among liberality and cruelty. She expounds by adding, make as well as it can be, it is still violence-merciful violence, equivalent putting a ugly animal to death. Merciful violence, good-will and cruelty-these words conflict with one another. The paradox of these words effectively underlines the bigger conflict, the conflict of pickaxe. To whom the kindness assigned, and to whom the cruelty? Either choice is tired to sorrow and regret.\nHer essay also shows how she feels that her job is a routine yet horrific. Tisdale says The belabor is the sameness of human failure, or inadequacy in the acquaint of each days dull demand. (1) This shows how she must work out the same thing every single day but each time the experience is still horrific. She also states I am struck by the sameness and I am struck everyday by the variety here-how this commonplace dilemma can so discover the difference of women. This shows that even though that the same thing happens every day, th...

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