J
Jennifer_J
Guest
And I actually see the definitions as different. I don’t think you would use them interchangeably in many circumstances. But I do think you’ve hit the nail on the head…You reject the cake–in that act the cake is rejected…just like contraception–each act is rejecting the fertility. With NFP, you are saving the cake for later, so to speak and the act of eating it is not altered, just when you eat it. The cake is still enjoyed, but you wait until you have free points the next day (I’m doing weight watchers, lol). The act isn’t altered, just done at a different point. Fertility is withheld and not rejected…I think I’m being redundant, but the children are distracting me…Aside from the defs that don’t apply, I think defintion 4 of rejection is the only one that seems to differ significantly from withhold. And I think the only act that may correspond with defintion 4 (“to discard as useless or unsatisfactory”) is sterilization. Otherwise, I think the words can be used interchangeably in or discussion.
Your example seems attribute a permancy to “rejection,” which I don’t think is necessarily the case. Perhaps I have good cause to not eat cake (I need to lose weight), so when the birthday cake is rightfully offered, I reject the offer…but that does not mean next year (or next week on someone else’s birthday) I will continue to reject it.
Similarly if I use contraception b/c I have just cause to avoid pregnancy and I reject her fertility, that does not mean I will not be willing to accept it sometime later…much like NFP.
–Rico