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In collaboration with Abortion in America, our latest episode of My Body. My Pod. with Mini Timmaraju features Julia and her daughter Daniela, a young immigrant whose access to abortion care was blocked by Florida’s abortion ban.
Before we dive in, it’s important to ground ourselves in what’s happening across the country. Right now, undocumented people, immigrants, and people of color are being targeted, surveilled, and subjected to violence. When leaving your house feels unsafe, fear shapes daily life—where people go, who they trust, and whether they seek help when they need it. That fear reaches into exam rooms and clinics. It affects access to abortion. It affects access to prenatal care. It affects access to basic health care. And when people delay care, avoid care, or are denied care altogether, the consequences are real—and often devastating.
Access to care is never just about whether a service exists. It’s about whether you can safely reach it.
That reality shapes Daniela’s story. When she needed an abortion, Florida’s six-week abortion ban left her with no real choice—just a deadline designed to run out before most people even know they’re pregnant. For Daniela, that meant leaving her home state to access health care that should have been available in her own community.
These laws force people across state lines, layering financial and logistical strain onto those with the least room to maneuver—including immigrants, people of color, young people, and families already navigating systemic barriers. When politicians restrict abortion this way, they don’t eliminate the need for care—they impose unjust burdens on individuals and families least able to carry them. At its core, this comes down to a simple principle: decisions about pregnancy should belong to the person who is pregnant, not the government.
Episode recorded on February 2, 2026
Thanks for listening! Make sure you hit the subscribe button to get notified when new episodes drop, and share this episode with a friend.
Explore more episode resources at reproforall.org/podEP12
Sign up to get involved with Reproductive Freedom for All at reproforall.org/podlistener/ or Text POD to 59791.
*By providing your phone number, you are consenting to receive mobile alerts from Reproductive Freedom for All at 59791 and other phone numbers. Message and data rates apply. Frequency varies. Text STOP to end. Text HELP for help.
Dig the new show? Help us spread the word! Like and subscribe to My Body. My Pod. on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts.
By Mini Timmaraju4.4
77 ratings
In collaboration with Abortion in America, our latest episode of My Body. My Pod. with Mini Timmaraju features Julia and her daughter Daniela, a young immigrant whose access to abortion care was blocked by Florida’s abortion ban.
Before we dive in, it’s important to ground ourselves in what’s happening across the country. Right now, undocumented people, immigrants, and people of color are being targeted, surveilled, and subjected to violence. When leaving your house feels unsafe, fear shapes daily life—where people go, who they trust, and whether they seek help when they need it. That fear reaches into exam rooms and clinics. It affects access to abortion. It affects access to prenatal care. It affects access to basic health care. And when people delay care, avoid care, or are denied care altogether, the consequences are real—and often devastating.
Access to care is never just about whether a service exists. It’s about whether you can safely reach it.
That reality shapes Daniela’s story. When she needed an abortion, Florida’s six-week abortion ban left her with no real choice—just a deadline designed to run out before most people even know they’re pregnant. For Daniela, that meant leaving her home state to access health care that should have been available in her own community.
These laws force people across state lines, layering financial and logistical strain onto those with the least room to maneuver—including immigrants, people of color, young people, and families already navigating systemic barriers. When politicians restrict abortion this way, they don’t eliminate the need for care—they impose unjust burdens on individuals and families least able to carry them. At its core, this comes down to a simple principle: decisions about pregnancy should belong to the person who is pregnant, not the government.
Episode recorded on February 2, 2026
Thanks for listening! Make sure you hit the subscribe button to get notified when new episodes drop, and share this episode with a friend.
Explore more episode resources at reproforall.org/podEP12
Sign up to get involved with Reproductive Freedom for All at reproforall.org/podlistener/ or Text POD to 59791.
*By providing your phone number, you are consenting to receive mobile alerts from Reproductive Freedom for All at 59791 and other phone numbers. Message and data rates apply. Frequency varies. Text STOP to end. Text HELP for help.
Dig the new show? Help us spread the word! Like and subscribe to My Body. My Pod. on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts.

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