Where Women Aren't As Free

  • Dates
    2021 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Locations United States, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Texas, Tennessee, New Mexico, Ohio, South Carolina, Illinois, Virginia, North Carolina, Iowa, Nebraska, Mississippi, Louisiana

Where Women Aren’t As Free is an ongoing documentary project chronicling the continuing battle over women's bodily autonomy and the erosion of abortion rights across the United States.

I never asked to be born nor blessed with this body - I didn’t have a say in whether or not my form carried the communal consequences for the acts of two. I never asked for the privilege of a body that bares children - it was thrust upon me like blue eyes or white skin or blonde hair; inherent from my conception, biologically undeniable, unquestionably inevitable, genetically unchangeable. From the first breaths I took on this earth, it was pre-determined that my body would rebel against my own personal preferences, my dreams and intentions; it carries a mind of its own, an instinctual survival mechanism I never wished for. For some it is an immeasurable blessing - for those of us not ready or willing, it is a nearly unbearable burden. 

I remember: my coworkers in college debating the validity of my pro-choice stance, arguing the best birth control was to keep an aspirin between my knees; being debilitated by the side effects of a quarterly needle in my arm as depo provera leached calcium from my bones, a birth control so severe in side effects that they don’t advise taking it for more than 2 years; sitting in the planned parenthood office, terrified that my rapist had gotten me pregnant during my inebriated state, as he could have easily removed the condom; waiting 6 months to ask my doctor at the age of 30 about tubal ligation (she told me we could talk about it in a year or two) just to prove to a mansplainer who’d argued with me how nearly impossible it is to get permanent contraception unless you’re already married or have kids; suffering a panic attack when my doctor discovered my IUD had pierced the back of my cervix 3 months into the Trump presidency, (when they were attempting to remove the birth control mandate from healthcare law), which would have left me incapable of affording ($600) the only other form of contraception I could take due to pre-existing conditions (that I should not have to explain); my ex-partner adamantly refusing to get a vasectomy, even though he was 10 years my senior (40) and explicitly stated he did not want children, despite my desperation to be IUD-free due to crippling pains that left me nearly collapsing on NYC sidewalks walking to the train; having dozens upon dozens of people tell me since age 15 that I would change my mind nearly every single time I’ve expressed publicly and verbally my innate lack of desire to ever have children - I am still hearing it now at 33 with infuriatingly consistent frequency. 

I would gladly trade these ovaries in if it were that easy; the fact of the matter is, it’s simply my biology. I love being a woman, embracing my femininity, and that doesn’t mean I need to carry with it a dream-life-death-sentence where all my hopes are perpetually threatened by a procreative predisposition I never asked to have, the risk of a mother I never wanted to be. No (cis)man has ever been forced to provide his body, wellbeing, life, and sustenance to support another entity, and I deserve every right a man has in his ability to predetermine his own destiny. My body is not just a birthing chamber for your blessed babies; it is mine, and mine alone - it does not belong to you, not to anybody but me.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The grounds of a then-recently-closed clinic, after Texas lawmakers passed legislation (the Texas Heartbeat Act) in May 2021, banning abortions as soon as fetal cardiac activity can be detected. Photo taken October 21st, 2021, in El Paso, TX.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

A religious protestor cockily mocking pro-choice advocates and potential patients outside of an abortion clinic in Baton Rouge, LA - a daily experience at clinics. Abortion is now outlawed in Louisiana.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The extensive fencing, barriers, and walls outside of a still-practicing Planned Parenthood that no longer is providing abortion services in Austin, TX - a truly inviting and peaceful environmental experience for patients.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The modern day protective measures via landscaping made to ensure physical safety for the staff and the patients at a (now-defunct) clinic in Austin, TX.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Anti-abortion propaganda material stapled to a telephone pole outside of a Planned Parenthood in New Orleans, LA. After Texas banned abortion, New Orleans clinics were flooded with out-of-state patients who had their bodily autonomy rights stripped.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The visual remnants of an abortion clinic already shut down in El Paso, TX after the passage of Texas Senate Bill 8. The bill banned abortions as early as five weeks after the start of a patient's last menstrual cycle, effectively banning abortion.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

A protestor (so conveniently and frequently men) violating the property boundary of the only abortion clinic (now closed) in Mississippi while shouting at clinic patients in the parking lot. Clinic escorts, as seen here, ensure protestors do not trespass.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Mississippi's Pink House, the last, and now lost abortion clinic in the state of Mississippi. The former Jackson Women's Health Organization was purchased and has since been turned into a consignment shop.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

A male protestor outside of the only abortion clinic in Jackson, Mississippi, which has since closed due to the fall of Roe v. Wade. A common demographic of protestors: men (who will never face this choice) & the elderly (who no longer are affected).

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Apregnancy crisis center in Denver, CO, directly across the street from a local Planned Parenthood. This convenient and intentional location choice is a common tactic of the anti-choice movement, in an effort to mislead & dissuade women seeking treatment.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

A protestor harassing a patient in the clinic parking lot, callng to her to come speak with him (as he cannot cross the property line), presumptuously assuming her to be seeking an abortion. Taken in Charlotte, NC.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Along the highway in rural Iowa - Nothing screams advocating for smaller government like legislating the interior experience of the female body. The hypocritical irony of concurrent signage and doublethink mentalities.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Blatant Christian iconography outside of a prominently displayed pregnancy crisis center in Atlanta, GA. It sits only one building down from the actual clinic, which is completely nondescript, hiding in plain sight - a necessary protection for clinics.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The consistent signage seen outside of abortion clinics throughout the country, a perpetual plea for respecting bodily autonomy. Photographed in Atlanta, GA.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The frequent misinformation perpetuated by pregnancy crisis centers across the country - the (inaccurate) ability to reverse an abortion. Taken in Greenville, SC, directly across the street from the only abortion clinic in the state.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

The prominent Christian iconography found along the Tennessee highway, deep in the bible belt. An omnipresent reminder that the separation between church and state is continually being eroded in the United States, at the expense of women's health.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Her - "This is intimidation!" Me - "Like you're not intimidating patients? You harass women, I harass you." Her: "I'm not harassing, I'm helping!"Proceeds to immediately flag down car pulling into clinic driveway with frantically waving hands & pamphlets.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

A billboard outside of Cincinnati, OH, depicting the standard, religiously driven anti-abortion propaganda, consistently reminding women that their body isn't their choice.

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

A protestors' vehicle parked outside of an abortion clinic in Dayton, Ohio. While talking with these protestors, they spouted substantial medical misinformation, including the ability to reverse an abortion (which has been repeatedly debunked).

© Alyssa Meadows - Image from the Where Women Aren't As Free photography project
i

Something I've experienced repeatedly with these protestors - intimidation tactics. Not only do they photograph my face aggressively once they realize I do not support their efforts, they also have photographed my license plate in an attempt to scare me.