D
detles
Guest
I am feeling seriously drawn to returning to the Catholic (I was confirmed as a young teen but left the church in my late teens and only returned to Christianity in my late 20s/early 30s). I have some theological issues I need to work out, but there’s also the birth control issue…
My husband and I will both be 40 this year, and we have four kids. We are currently using a barrier method of bc, and while we would be open to life should God break through that barrier, we would both prefer to be done having kids. We don’t have any super-dire reason, but my husband does have some minor chronic health issues, I had some minor complications in my last pregnancy, and in general we’re just getting older and feeling ready to move past the baby/toddler stage of life.
If we joined the RCC, I would want to follow the teachings on birth control. It’s possible I’m not even particularly fertile at this point (although I got pregnant with my youngest at 36 on our first month of trying, so I’m not going to bank on that!), but I don’t know. I know that NFP can be quite effective when used consistently and correctly, but I’m unclear if 1) we’d even have a sufficiently serious reason to use NFP to avoid pregnancy and 2) NFP works as well for women who are getting older and nearing the start of menopause.
Has anybody begun using NFP later on in their fertile years? How did it go?
My husband and I will both be 40 this year, and we have four kids. We are currently using a barrier method of bc, and while we would be open to life should God break through that barrier, we would both prefer to be done having kids. We don’t have any super-dire reason, but my husband does have some minor chronic health issues, I had some minor complications in my last pregnancy, and in general we’re just getting older and feeling ready to move past the baby/toddler stage of life.
If we joined the RCC, I would want to follow the teachings on birth control. It’s possible I’m not even particularly fertile at this point (although I got pregnant with my youngest at 36 on our first month of trying, so I’m not going to bank on that!), but I don’t know. I know that NFP can be quite effective when used consistently and correctly, but I’m unclear if 1) we’d even have a sufficiently serious reason to use NFP to avoid pregnancy and 2) NFP works as well for women who are getting older and nearing the start of menopause.
Has anybody begun using NFP later on in their fertile years? How did it go?