G
gardenswithkids
Guest
TMC, I think your question is a great subject for a separate thread as that question alone could stir lots of discussion specific to hormonal contraception. To briefly give you some things to think about, some methods contraception alter “the act”, in ways that can clearly be seen–for instance by physically placing latex or spermacide between the husband and wife. The birth control pill doesn’t simply alter the act–it changes the act because it dramatically alters the woman so the couple can engage in sex without her getting pregnant.I guess I should quit because I can see I am not getting anywhere. I did not imagine I would change anyone’s mind, and am not trying to. I was hoping for a discussion that could present some rational reasons I could at least think about. Asserting that a chemical in the woman’s blood stream “alters the act” without explaining how or why does not mean anything. …
Birth control pills not only stop pregancy, they stop pregnancy by dramatically changing healthy parts of women’s bodies. (Side effects show the birth control pills affect many things beyond our reproductive parts, and many women refuse to use the pill apart from any moral consideration.) Fertility is a normal, healthy state. A woman’s body normally prepares for “the act” by producing a mature egg and preparing the lining of the uterus in the event that the eggs becomes fertilized. Hormonal contraception attempts to stop ovulation from happening, and in the event of “break through ovulation” it may work as an abortificant because of the effect those hormones had on the lining of woman’s uterus.
In contrast, NFP carefully studies and respects the way in which a woman’s body naturally works. While there’s nothing “natural” about recording temperatures or mucus, the temperatures and the mucus naturally change throughout a woman’s cycle. With NFP, the “act” is not redered infertile-avoiding pregnancy with NFP means the couple does not perform the “act” at all while the woman might be fertile.
As a side note: woman’s sex drive is normally at it’s highest when she is most fertile. That makes abstainance during NFP difficult. But studies on the birth control pill show a common side effect is that the pill reduces women’s sex drives–sometimes even irreversibly. Saying hormonal contraception alters “the act” isn’t just some high moral thinking–it can literally make the sex act less desirable to the woman, which I would consider a huge alteration to the act! When you take a healthy woman and make her artificially infertile, you can do more damage to her and the marital relationship than many realize.