M
marietta
Guest
brandymmiller:
After DepoProvera injections, it may take up to 18 months for fertility to be restored; because you have experienced infertility for 11 years since the injections, this could be an indicator of an allergy to medroxyprogesterone acetate, an ingredient in DepoProvera. I honestly don’t know how a physician would determine a patient’s possible allergy to this component of the drug, but what could the other reason(s) be for failure to regain fertility? Are you certain you were fertile before you had the injections? Why did you choose DepoProvera?
The depression is commonly listed as a side effect of the drug. Whenever I receive any drug from any source I request a physician’s insert so I can evaluate my response to the drug and know, roughly, what can be expected in the way of side effects. Before the drug is ever given I will research its efficacy and its appropriateness for me. I choose to be proactive because there are so many options, not all of which will be safe and/or effective for me. If you feel you were deceived, misled, lied to about DepoProvera and its possible side effects, there was a window of opprotunity for you to present your case to Upjohn (now Pfizer), the manufacturer; but as of 8/31/07 they are no longer accepting case inquiries. So this one goes down to God’s will for you.
As for the haranguing, if you tell *every woman you meet *who is considering her birth control options “what lies on that path”, you are making presumptions about her ability to choose for herself and about God’s will for her. To me, this would be akin to doing God’s job rather than doing His work. If someone asks me about my experiences with drugs, alcohol, the law, birth control, abortion, miscarriages, etc., I will then share my experiences. I will not overlay them, unsolicited, on top of someone, male or female, who is trying to make an educated decision about a life option. This is where we differ. Unsolicited “advice” is just a drag, no matter what intentions may fuel it. I don’t feel it’s my place to try to color someone’s perceptions with my typically disastrous experiences. If they ask, I will share. Otherwise, I let them choose unhindered: unharangued.
Now, the people who abandoned you in your early life, the ones you say you forgave for the parts they played in your anger and misery: did you ever confront any of them about their behaviors? Did anyone ever give you a satisfactory explanation as to why they did the things they did that kept you twisting in the wind? Or was forgiveness distributed evenly amongst them in order to shut up the memories? I don’t mean any disrespect here; this is just a tactic some of us use to cope.
One final note: anger in and of itself is not a deadly sin. It is a natural human response to events which occur outside of ourselves over which we generally have no control and which cause distress, discomfort, anxiety, or even rage. Wallowing in anger may be a deadly sin, unprocessed anger may be a deadly sin, neatly cultivated and maintained anger may be a deadly sin, but anger as a stand-alone emotion is not.
marietta
After DepoProvera injections, it may take up to 18 months for fertility to be restored; because you have experienced infertility for 11 years since the injections, this could be an indicator of an allergy to medroxyprogesterone acetate, an ingredient in DepoProvera. I honestly don’t know how a physician would determine a patient’s possible allergy to this component of the drug, but what could the other reason(s) be for failure to regain fertility? Are you certain you were fertile before you had the injections? Why did you choose DepoProvera?
The depression is commonly listed as a side effect of the drug. Whenever I receive any drug from any source I request a physician’s insert so I can evaluate my response to the drug and know, roughly, what can be expected in the way of side effects. Before the drug is ever given I will research its efficacy and its appropriateness for me. I choose to be proactive because there are so many options, not all of which will be safe and/or effective for me. If you feel you were deceived, misled, lied to about DepoProvera and its possible side effects, there was a window of opprotunity for you to present your case to Upjohn (now Pfizer), the manufacturer; but as of 8/31/07 they are no longer accepting case inquiries. So this one goes down to God’s will for you.
As for the haranguing, if you tell *every woman you meet *who is considering her birth control options “what lies on that path”, you are making presumptions about her ability to choose for herself and about God’s will for her. To me, this would be akin to doing God’s job rather than doing His work. If someone asks me about my experiences with drugs, alcohol, the law, birth control, abortion, miscarriages, etc., I will then share my experiences. I will not overlay them, unsolicited, on top of someone, male or female, who is trying to make an educated decision about a life option. This is where we differ. Unsolicited “advice” is just a drag, no matter what intentions may fuel it. I don’t feel it’s my place to try to color someone’s perceptions with my typically disastrous experiences. If they ask, I will share. Otherwise, I let them choose unhindered: unharangued.
Now, the people who abandoned you in your early life, the ones you say you forgave for the parts they played in your anger and misery: did you ever confront any of them about their behaviors? Did anyone ever give you a satisfactory explanation as to why they did the things they did that kept you twisting in the wind? Or was forgiveness distributed evenly amongst them in order to shut up the memories? I don’t mean any disrespect here; this is just a tactic some of us use to cope.
One final note: anger in and of itself is not a deadly sin. It is a natural human response to events which occur outside of ourselves over which we generally have no control and which cause distress, discomfort, anxiety, or even rage. Wallowing in anger may be a deadly sin, unprocessed anger may be a deadly sin, neatly cultivated and maintained anger may be a deadly sin, but anger as a stand-alone emotion is not.
marietta