If you're
not on birth control, you should have a period by 8 weeks after your abortion.
If you have a condom mishap and you're
not on another birth control method, emergency contraception (the morning - after pill) can help prevent pregnancy up to 5 days after unprotected sex.
I'm a 30yo 5» 8 216 lbs AA / Asian female, vit D deficient on a 8 week vitD2 regimen and
not on any birth control, no children.
Not exact matches
On the other hand, 71 percent favor the law's Medicaid expansion, 66 percent of young adults favor the prohibition on denying people coverage because of a person's medical history, 65 percent favor requiring insurance plans to cover the full cost of birth control, 63 percent favor requiring most employers to pay a fine if they don't offer insurance and 53 percent favor paying for benefit increases with higher payroll taxes for higher earner
On the other hand, 71 percent favor the law's Medicaid expansion, 66 percent of young adults favor the prohibition
on denying people coverage because of a person's medical history, 65 percent favor requiring insurance plans to cover the full cost of birth control, 63 percent favor requiring most employers to pay a fine if they don't offer insurance and 53 percent favor paying for benefit increases with higher payroll taxes for higher earner
on denying people coverage because of a person's medical history, 65 percent favor requiring insurance plans to cover the full cost of
birth control, 63 percent favor requiring most employers to pay a fine if they don't offer insurance and 53 percent favor paying for benefit increases with higher payroll taxes for higher earners.
I didn't know how this had happened since I was
on birth control,» Freeman told INSIDER in an email.
Some women miss periods
on hormonal
birth control, even when they are
not pregnant.
But first of all, please understand that as you are
on hormonal
birth control, you are
not actually having real periods.
Maybe
not quite similar, because the religion you accept does depend
on some arbitrary factors out of our
control, such as the country of our
birth.
The church's position
on birth control is
NOT dogma.
I don't think that its feasible to expect everyone to follow NFP, though I'm personally a huge proponent and believe women need more education
on their bodies and menstrual cycles, and condoms while
not «moral» persay or in line with the church's teaching are a much better option than hormonal
birth control or Plan B as they are simply a barrier method
not an abortificant.
I am a women in her late 40's and was
on the
birth control pill for many years
not realizing the great increase risk of breast cancer the pill causes or even the church teaching
on birth control.
Good for you and your husband
on not using
birth control, we're very impressed that you only have 2 kids.
I may be Catholic, but I'm
not a maniac about it, runs their unofficial subtext — meaning: I'm happy to take credit for enlightened Catholic positions
on the death penalty / social justice / civil rights, but of course I don't believe in those archaic teachings about divorce / homosexuality / and above all
birth control.
The Catholic Church's position
on artificial
birth control has NO basis in the teachings of Christ... it was
not an issue then... the teaching is solely based
on the opinion of the men running the church who claim «divine inspiration»... BULL... they wanted people to have more kids so they could contribute more money to the church so that the so - called «princes of the church» could maintain their princely life - style.
Interesting idea but I don't think there's a danger of anyone fornicating
on bin Laden's hypothetical grave so your concern about
birth control is a bit misplaced.
Appeal to authority
on questions such as
birth control, divorce and women priests «did
not satisfy an educated people who wanted to be convinced with arguments».
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..
Having free access to
birth control and the education
on how to use it wouldn't help poor people?
In essence, the Catholic church, in my opinion, should agree to pay for
birth control on the basis it be used to treat symptoms if needed,
not prevent pregnancy.
In 2014, when Obamacare came before the Supreme Court via the Hobby Lobby case, the court ruled 5 — 4 that employers who objected to the contraceptive mandate
on religious grounds didn't have to offer
birth control directly to female employees.
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.
Because the
birth control cases all focus
on a 1993 federal law, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act,
not the Constitution, the Justices will face questions about whether the mandate to provide free access to 20 forms of
birth control drugs or devices, sterilization, screenings, and counseling imposes a «substantial burden»
on religious freedom of nonprofit employers with religious objections to some or all contraceptives, whether the mandate in fact serves a «compelling interest» of the government, and whether an attempt to provide an exemption from the mandate satisfies the requirement that such an accommodation is «the least restrictive means» of achieving the government's policy interest.
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.
We do
not have to look far for examples of these assumptions, FACT contended; for example, a number of states until recently restricted the circulation of
birth -
control information
on the grounds that it fostered immorality and undermined the family, and statutory rape laws still assume that young men are responsible for their sexual behavior and young women are
not.
I read somewhere that in Argentina he has
not been as dogmatic as his successors
on the Catholic Church's ban against
birth control.
If you don't have ten kids than you are practising
birth control on your own anyway so quit being hypocrites.
I know the Catholics have a particular stance
on birth control... But shouldn't they really be saying, «As Christians, you shouldn't be having pre-marital se.x.
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.
And in the case of this story, if the RCC hadn't spent the last several decades inst.itutionalizing se.xual abuse and conspiring to cover it up and protect the offenders, or alienating folks with their stance
on reproductive rights and
birth control which is decidedly misogynistic and has contributed to the spread of HIV and other STDs, or if agents of the Church hadn't kidnapped and effectively sold thousands of Spanish, Irish, Australian and American children from the 1940s to as recently as 1987 — then folks wouldn't be leaving the Church in droves and you wouldn't be seeing stories like this one either.
I consider myself Catholic and although I disagree with many of the Church teachings that are based
on dogma, like
birth control, etc., Maybe it is the way I was taught what being a Catholic means but I would
not nor have I ever considered changing religions.
But
not providing
birth control for employees forces an unwanted religion
on the employees.
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...
It is time the church stayed out of the bedroom and educated themselves
on the true benefits of
birth control (
not just meant to prevent pregnancy but then again maybe ensuring a woman's health is protected in other ways means nothing to you).
People born with
birth defects so they can't choose, people who are psychotic or sociopaths and incapable of
controlling their minds, people who are born in fundamentalist Muslim areas who never had the opportunity to choose or who would be murdered
on the spot if they so «chose», people who God gave too much intelligence too to believe such an inane demand without more evidence, people who die in natural disasters before they were quite willing to convert etc. etc..
David Axelrod, a key Obama political adviser, signaled Tuesday
on television and radio that the Obama administration might be up for a compromise of some sort
on the
birth control issue, but none of these bedroom issues is going away, at least
not until the 2012 presidential election is over.
1) Charities spend their income
on necessities, such as food and utilities, which ever - so - slightly re-orients our economy toward recession - resistant products, rather than luxuries 2) Charities spend their money quickly, but
on independent schedules, making for a smoother stimulus effect
on the economy 3) Charities make purchases tax - free, meaning that $ 1 spent by a charity generates a full $ 1 of private economic activity; furthermore, much of those tax revenues are recovered as income tax
on the grocery stores, utility companies, etc. that might
not have received that income otherwise 4) Charitable giving is by far the most democratic way to improve society; from
birth control to bombers, government assuredly spends money
on something you don't like, and charitable giving restores your say - so 5) Charitable donations are tax deductible, meaning you keep those tax dollars in your local community 6) Charitable donations provide the funds necessary for volunteers to serve the needy, thus giving «the average citizen» a chance to meet and interact with the needy, breaking down stereotypes
I read Martha Beck's memoir «of
birth, rebirth, and everyday magic»
on a long flight to Los Angeles and could
not control outbursts of both laughter and copious tears.
Even if I'm
not on the pill for
birth control!
These people (men included if they agree to their wives being
on birth control), would
not be able to repent sincerely and so will go to hell.
We don't want religion telling us that the world is flat, that slavery is ok, that women can't use
birth control or any of the other millions of statements the church has made in history and been wrong
on.
But a CNN / ORC International survey also indicates that you shouldn't expect them to pay any more attention to the new pope's teachings
on issues like
birth control than they paid to his predecessors.
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.
«Yet,» she says, «the Latin American liberation theologians have
not harshly criticized the Vatican for its stand
on birth control and the status of women in the church.
This
birth control pill is drawing so much debate and controversy
on whether insurance have to cover it or
not.
You know, every morning I wake up and think to myself, what will I do if we don't come to a conclusion
on this
birth control issue?
As an employer, you can have the right to have an opinion
on if a «good catholic» should use
birth control or
not but you sure as hell don't have the right to prevent your employee from obtaining a reasonable preventative medication!
Not allowing
birth control coverage is pushing religious morals
on others.
When it comes to the health care plan, why don't the churches rely
on their teachings to «keep» girls off
birth control?
This does
not infringe
on my religious beliefs, since it is my choice to actually use
birth control.