C
Charbeau
Guest
Point taken.Shooting the messenger is rarely indicative of anything but contempt for the message. If you disagree with what he’s saying, try and point your disagreement in the right place- the message -rather than him.
This is what I take objection to, and I stand by what I wrote earlier that the addition of children into a marriage and the stress and time and consideration that each of them take for the parents is far MORE than economic. The OP states:
It breaks my heart to see threads on this forum and other forums, from unhappy husbands or wives talking about how their use of NFP is making their marriage difficult or unhappy. IMO A healthy, financially stable couple has no reason to use NFP.
The bolded sentence especially lacks perspective that direct experience will bring to him once he begins having his own children. Adding children to a family and keeping the family unit productive, stable and a nurturing environment for the children produced is a large part of the discussion in our household and IMO should be in every family. I do not see children as an obnoxious byproduct of sex, I see them as a blessing and a joy YET I do accept my own limitation and my ability to provide for them in every way that children demand of parents. Being thoughtful about adding children into a family is sensible, not selfish.Natural Family Planning should not be to appease immature Catholic couples who view children as an obnoxious byproduct of sex. Men and women preparing for marriage should be preparing for children as well by anticipating the financial needs and emotional needs of bringing up children, and preparing themselves mentally for that responsibility.
Sorry, but I do think an 18 year old single, childless male should find another horse to go sit high upon. I agree with a previous poster, he may be a member of a large family but he is not his sibling’s parent he is their brother and he does not have the responsibility that parenthood entails on his shoulders.