Living Within the Questions with Merle Hoffman

The Babblery
The Babblery
Living Within the Questions with Merle Hoffman
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Women’s Healthcare Pioneer:

When abortion became legal in New York State in 1970, Merle Hoffman didn’t celebrate—she got to work. While others were still absorbing the news, she opened one of the first standalone women’s health clinics in the country. No medical guidelines existed for a procedure that had only ever been done in secret, so she wrote them. Her patients didn’t know their rights, so she wrote those down, too—a document that became the blueprint for the federal Patient’s Bill of Rights.

Fifty-plus years later, Hoffman is still at it—still running Choices Women’s Medical Center in Queens, still fighting, and still asking the questions that don’t have easy answers.

“It’s an intrinsic trust in myself, which I’ve always noticed and always had. Things come to me and I feel them organically, and I want to do this, and I trust that my decision is the right decision. And I follow my own voice.”

To call Merle Hoffman the owner of an abortion clinic is only to scratch the surface of her complexity. She’s a pianist, a philosopher, an activist, a mother, and an adventurer in the world of spirituality. This is a conversation about courage, conviction, and what happens when we decide to trust ourselves.

“I can live in the question. I don’t have to know. I don’t know if we’ll ever know. But the question is so incomparably deep, profound, interesting, frustrating.”

Mentioned in this episode

Books

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Topics discussed

About Merle Hoffman

Merle Hoffman is an internationally known leader in the struggle for women’s rights, a healthcare pioneer, founder of women’s health, political, and reproductive rights organizations, and a prize-winning writer and publisher. Her work spans 52 years and continues today, proving to be more essential and relevant than ever in the ongoing fight for women’s human rights, including the ability to make their own reproductive choices.

About Merle Hoffman