Yep, retphxfire, poor women who can't get birth control for free because some narrow few use it for some other reason.
Not exact matches
She didn't
get monthly periods due to her
birth control and «didn't really gain any weight,» so it came as a complete surprise.
if your so called god will forgive murders and child molesters as long as they go to confession and say 10 worthless and meaningless prayers, don!t you think god would forgive a person the tales
birth control, if there really was a god, which there is
not, I do
not believe in god or wasting time going to church to try to
get myself into the dream world heaven, but if I am wrong I am going to hell because that's where all my friends are going and I don, t want to hang out for eternity with you morons in heaven.
Religious Freedom is and has been the issue, Flute is and was free to
get birth control, but her issue is she doesn't want to pay for it herself.
No, if the Republicans have their way and stop funding Planned Parenthood, women will
not be able to
get birth control for free.
The public has had more than enough of the service Ms. Fluke offers in exchange for benefits, but for the time being she can still
get birth control at no cost if she chooses a plan that doesn't offer it.
Condoms are
not enough especially when it is so easy to
get proper
birth control.
If you and your religious freaky deakies would
not simultaneously speak out against
birth control, then maybe we could
get somewhere.
I could see someone that's Catholic and
not using
birth control getting stressed out and starting to wonder if this kind of life truly is required by God or if it truly does make any sense.
if people won't let abortion become legal in the US, then at least let girls 17 +
get birth control!!
and that's why the Republicans want to cut funding for public schools — so ghetto kids will never be able to leave the ghetto because they have no education — and they won't be able to
get birth control either so they will proliferate and perpetuate their situation for generations — and this will never stop until America ends its dependence on fossil fools like Romney, McConnell, Cantor, Ryan, The Bohner, Limbaugh, etc..
When I claim that label, I'm connecting
not only with a number of active feminists who are working today to help women, but with an ongoing history of feminists who
got women the vote, who made
birth control happen, who
got women into positions of power in the government, who worked to rectify racial inequality and fight against things like mandatory sterilization of welfare recipients.
Conservatives don't want women to have access to
birth control... and if they
get pregnant, they don't want those women to have abortions.
I am no longer on
birth control for medical reasons (higher risk of clots in my family), but when I was on it, I used it because I didn't want to
get pregnant while working full time, writing full time, and living as a single woman.
No
birth control is 100 % effective (unless it is permanent) so there is a chance that a woman will
get pregnant at the time when she isn't able to have another child.
The priest celibacy issue is the only item even on the agenda, but without female clergy,
birth control and acceptance of gay relationships they haven't
got a hope in the modern world.
Beside that it is
not like that named self as» «pre-ci-se»» proving him self ig - nor - ant but it is that Muslims merry more than wife and
not believe in
birth control as to the number of children they
get, they consider ab - or - tion is a sin... and believe that each child is born, comes to life along with his sub-sis-ten-ce and that God provide that for him and that parents should
not fear poverty or the in - abil - ity to support...!
He
gets into the Obama Free
Birth Control Rule — recently and laudably enjoined against a company owned by Catholics — the German circumcision decision, and other cultural issues I haven't discussed here.
If a person went to school and
got a degree from say, BC, and it's well known that they are jesuit and don't believe in
birth control, all the hospital needs to do is reject them based on experience and
not religion and they'll find a more qualified candidate for the job.
How can you be breast fed when the catholic church does
not like
birth control — if mom is popping them out every year for the first 6 kids say it is tough to
get a breast?
If they truly want to be a witness, they should be taking care of their employees by [1] paying them a living wage and [2] supporting them with health care,
not trying to run their lives by denying it because they personally don't believe in
birth control *** AHEM HOBBY LOBBY, all you had to do was voice your objection and step aside, and the provider would absorb the cost, but NOOOOOOOOOO, you thought you knew better & said I FORBID YOU TO HAVE IT so your employees lost out on ALL health care, nice work in the name of the Great Physician *** or firing them because they
get pregnant BECAUSE you didn't let them have
birth control...
Nothing about this forces Catholic women to
get birth control, though I will tell you I don't know a single Catholic woman who doesn't use
birth control.
What if your wife couldn't
get health insurance for
birth control pills because she works for a religous company.
We will
get over it when you stop using your religion to legislate who people can marry, insisting on teaching your mythology into a science classroom, covering up crimes against children, allow
birth control in countries that can't feed themselves in the first place... need more?
Stumping in Iowa on May 24, President Obama declared, «We don't need another political fight about ending a woman's right to choose, or
getting rid of Planned Parenthood, or taking away affordable
birth control.
If you don't like it, you can either
get another job or buy the
birth control on your own.
Of course their is a planned parent hood, Wallmart or Target nearby or a short drive, Fluke was so dumb she did
not know their was Planned hood 2 blocks from her school or she could
get $ 9
birth control pills from Target -
Only one thing causes pregnancy, yet there are many ways to
not get pregnant with out people paying for your
birth control.
My FBG is in the prediabetic range since my son's
birth last year, but low - carbing has helped bring it and my weight down, so I will try to stave off the diabetes as long as I possibly can... and I know if I do
get it, I can
control it and hopefully
not suffer the pain my mom and dad went / go through.
When I decided I wanted to
get pregnant again, it was nice that I had to call the doctor and make plans, I couldn't be impulsive and just stop
birth control.
After all, what would seem to be the best way to keep a teenager from
getting pregnant — asking them to use short - term
birth control via condoms, taking the pill everyday, or ineffective pleas for abstinence, or would it be better to give them an IUD that they don't have to think about and is 99 % effective for the next few years?
And the truth is, no one really does,
not really, except maybe the women who troll these sites for
birth control fodder (which I totally understand), but then... the information never
gets out to those of us who really need to hear it.
Irregular / heavy menstrual bleeding can be treated in several ways: 1) Hormonal medication (a low dose
birth control pill or cyclic progestin); 2) A hormone - containing intrauterine device (the most common one used is the Mirena IUD, which manages bleeding very effectively and is placed during an office visit and lasts for 5 years); 3) Endometrial ablation is a surgery commonly performed as an outpatient procedure; the entire lining of the uterus is cauterized (many women never
get a menstrual period after an ablation); 4) Finally, I reserve hysterectomy as the treatment of last resort — typically only when the above options have
not worked for a patient.
Well if she wants children and he doesn't then she'll do what most women do — i.e. «forget» to take her
birth control pills while pleading ignorance as to how she
got pregnant.
So if you don't start using
birth control as soon as you start having sex again, you can
get pregnant even before having your first period.
If you have any concerns about what is safe and what isn't while you're breastfeeding — for example, is it safe to
get the flu shot during pregnancy or take
birth control pills while nursing?
Therefore, if you're involved in an intimate relationship, and you're
not using
birth control, you may find yourself expecting again without ever
getting your first postpartum period.
If you do
not want to
get pregnant, make sure to talk to your healthcare provider about what
birth controls are the best for you while you're still breastfeeding.
Again — a
birth plan isn't meant to
control the outcome of your labor, and it's
not one more to - do to check from your list; it's meant to
get everyone on the same page as to what you would and wouldn't like to happen during such a vulnerable experience.
I was still able to
get the pills covered having a condition that can be treated by
birth control, but it was still more trouble than it should have been and was still a rule that simply should
not have been there.
While you may be asked in the hospital what your method of
birth control will be, most people have
not yet
gotten their
birth control started, particularly if they are breastfeeding.
Half a year after the
birth, significant numbers of moms were still stressed out (43 %), couldn't
get their weight under
control (40 %), had sleep deprivation (34 %), had no sexual desire (26 %), and had backaches (24 %).
You are ultimately in
control of your
birth but you also can't
get so caught up that you lose sight of what is important, your life and the life of that tiny unborn baby.
: None (I want to
get pregnant) None (I do
not want to
get pregnant) Withdrawal (pull - out method) Calendar or Rhythm Method Basal Body Temperature Method Male Condoms Female Condoms Spermicides
Birth Control Pill
Birth Control Patch
Birth Control Ring Diaphragm or Cervical Cap Sponge IUD Depo - Provera Norplant Tubal Ligation Vasectomy
If you're
not planning on
getting pregnant again, then you need to consider some form of
birth control.
If you are over the age of 35, and you haven't
gotten pregnant after 6 months of well - timed intercourse without using
birth control, the recommend from the major fertility associations are that you seek the help of an obstetrician or fertility specialist (reproductive endocrinologist).
There are many different areas of the house to
get intimate in and it lends to creativity and even more mindfulness (helpful for
birth control when you have to wake up enough or plan enough to move little ones all to different rooms, or relocate ourselves (you don't put off
getting out the condom or diaphragm as much...) and you can be more alert and aware in the experience with your partner.
Breastfeeding can delay ovulation, but don't rely on it for
birth control unless you're comfortable
getting pregnant again.
If you really don't want to
get pregnant again, use some back up
birth control even if you haven't
gotten your period again.
You might
not get your period while you breastfeed, but that doesn't mean that you won't need
birth control.