Boston, who used to be a PRC director before taking her position at Heartbeat International, tells of a pregnant woman who’d just received a stage 3 breast cancer diagnosis. She was set to begin chemotherapy the next week and was told that she had to get an abortion.
When the women first arrived at the PRC, Boston says, she was weeping uncontrollably. “I’m pregnant and they told me I have to terminate, but I don’t want to do that,” the woman said. “But a nurse handed me your business card and said you might be able to help me.”
This woman knew the risks. She’d been warned of fetal abnormalities that could result from the chemotherapy. She was told not only that the child might die, but that her own life was also in danger.
“They gave her the worst-case scenario on everything,” Boston says. “But she said to us, ‘If you will stand with me, I will carry this baby to term.’ ”
So every week for eight months, she went for her chemo treatments, then came over to the PRC.
“We prayed with her, mentored her, gave her gasoline cards, paid for part of her housing,” Boston says. “While fighting for her life and her child’s, she shouldn’t have [had] to fight financial pressures, too.”
The story had a happy ending: “That baby was born beautiful—perfectly healthy.” But Boston remembers the story not just for the result, but for what it dramatically illustrates about the work of PRCs everywhere.
“These centers just step up to the plate and do whatever it takes,” she says. “That’s one example of what they do every day – throughout the United States and the world.”