L
liaeona
Guest
Hello,
I’m recently engaged and will be getting married this coming summer. My fiancé and I both travel 2-4 weeks per month for work and graduated college relatively recently. At this point in our lives, having a child would mean both of us needing to quit our jobs since the only role at our company we qualify for is this 50-75% travel role. Additionally, we are saving to pay for a wedding and hopefully buy a house, but we haven’t had many years of saving and we want to be on a stronger financial foot before having a child, particularly with the job transition consideration. We’d also like to have some time to grow in our relationship as husband and wife.
For these reasons, we’re on the same page about waiting to have children for a few years after marriage and we plan to practice NFP. Of course, we’ll lovingly accept any children even if it happens earlier than we’re planning, but we’d like to do our best to plan logically. As I’ve done more research into NFP, I’ve learned that the abstinence period is typically 10-14 days. This is much longer than my fiancé expected, and he’s very disappointed and thinks that number sounds wrong/high. The question also came up about our wedding night/honeymoon. He of course wants to have sex on our wedding night and honeymoon (as do I), but we’re on different pages bout what to do if I’m fertile at that time.
He seems to think that the chances of getting pregnant are very low, even when fertile, but I found that the odds are actually more like 30%. Additionally, he feels like our marriage won’t be valid until we have sex and that a sexless honeymoon is almost a waste of a honeymoon. I understand what he’s saying, but I don’t want to throw our plans to the wind just because society expects us to have sex on our honeymoon. If we’re waiting this long to have sex, what’s another week of waiting if it’s the best decision for us as a family? Also, if our honeymoon is 2 weeks long, we’re almost guaranteed to be able to have sex even with NFP at some point during that time frame. Sex is not the reason we are getting married, and I’m hurt that he’s acting like these facts about reproductive cycles are my fault or my doing.
I guess I’m looking for (name removed by moderator)ut/advice…am I in the wrong? Is he in the wrong? Has anybody else been through this experience?
I’m recently engaged and will be getting married this coming summer. My fiancé and I both travel 2-4 weeks per month for work and graduated college relatively recently. At this point in our lives, having a child would mean both of us needing to quit our jobs since the only role at our company we qualify for is this 50-75% travel role. Additionally, we are saving to pay for a wedding and hopefully buy a house, but we haven’t had many years of saving and we want to be on a stronger financial foot before having a child, particularly with the job transition consideration. We’d also like to have some time to grow in our relationship as husband and wife.
For these reasons, we’re on the same page about waiting to have children for a few years after marriage and we plan to practice NFP. Of course, we’ll lovingly accept any children even if it happens earlier than we’re planning, but we’d like to do our best to plan logically. As I’ve done more research into NFP, I’ve learned that the abstinence period is typically 10-14 days. This is much longer than my fiancé expected, and he’s very disappointed and thinks that number sounds wrong/high. The question also came up about our wedding night/honeymoon. He of course wants to have sex on our wedding night and honeymoon (as do I), but we’re on different pages bout what to do if I’m fertile at that time.
He seems to think that the chances of getting pregnant are very low, even when fertile, but I found that the odds are actually more like 30%. Additionally, he feels like our marriage won’t be valid until we have sex and that a sexless honeymoon is almost a waste of a honeymoon. I understand what he’s saying, but I don’t want to throw our plans to the wind just because society expects us to have sex on our honeymoon. If we’re waiting this long to have sex, what’s another week of waiting if it’s the best decision for us as a family? Also, if our honeymoon is 2 weeks long, we’re almost guaranteed to be able to have sex even with NFP at some point during that time frame. Sex is not the reason we are getting married, and I’m hurt that he’s acting like these facts about reproductive cycles are my fault or my doing.
I guess I’m looking for (name removed by moderator)ut/advice…am I in the wrong? Is he in the wrong? Has anybody else been through this experience?