G
Good_Daughter
Guest
You used two different words to describe the ways couples do not conceive. These words reflect the difference between contraceptive and non-contraceptive birth control. Contraceptive birth control seeks to prevent conception by working against or altering either the natural, healthy human body or the natural act of sexual intercourse. NFP seeks to avoid conception by placing the natural act of sexual intercourse at certain times in a healthy woman’s natural cycle. We may create our own fake infertility (against conception) or wait for the natural one (no conception to be against).All forms of birth control are means of people who believe themselves to be fertile seeking to engage in sexual relations while doing their best to prevent or avoid conception as a result of those relations…
…So, how do you think that women are being “reproductively oppressed”? Specific examples would be most helpful.
Women are being “reproductively oppressed” when they are not educated about their bodies or their bodies’ natural reproductive function. (I grew up middle class in a rich country that strongly promotes “sex education”, but I was in my 20’s before I knew what my own cervical mucus was-that frustrates me.)
Women are being “reproductively oppressed” when they are told by friends, family and the media that thier sexuality is primarily a tool for attracting and manipulating others, especially men. (You may use it briefly to have a baby, or even two, but then it’s back to business.)
Women are being “reproductively oppressed” when they are told that contraceptives are harmless and beneficial when in fact, they(and the sex they enable) leave people open to physical, emotional and spiritual harm.
Women are being “reproductively oppressed” when they have little or no access to healthy methods of birth control. I’ve had Catholic friends tell me, “You don’t want your NFP method working too well”-that frustrates me.)
Women are being “reproductively oppressed” when they, in distress, are encouraged to abort their babies without having all possible facts on human development and/or abortion.
Women are being “reproductively oppressed” when others (including mothers and grandmothers) lay selfish reasons on them for not having more children, ignoring the resources and wishes of a woman and her husband.
Some of these problems are as old as time and their solutions are not easily acheived. I’m glad the Church is willing to speak out counter-culturally, promoting the closest thing to true freedom for women that I’ve ever experienced, particularly on reproductive issues.