Originally posted by Tama
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Am I selfish for wanting a vasectomy??
Collapse
X
-
Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
-
Originally posted by Racket_Man View PostThat may be true in our "modern world" but I am an "ooooppppppssssss" baby. back in the late 1950's/early 1960's "birth control" was "pulling out" or NOT doing anything during "the fertial" time of the month or using the Catholic roulette method. Vasectomeys were not really being offered at the time
Also, I know condoms existed back then, were they not as common as they are now or....??? (90's kid here)
Also re the vasectomy route, Cosmo did an article about young guys (my age) who'd gone and had a vasectomy just so they could have sex without needing to wear condoms. I do have to wonder how many times they've wound up "accidentally" fathering a child. (They also went into detail about the post-care: according to them, the first few ejaculations will be bloody and it takes up to 15 ejaculations to clear the sperm.)
Comment
-
Originally posted by fireheart17 View Post
Question: what the hell is the "Catholic roulette" method?
The current method is much more thorough.
Comment
-
Both me and my housemate have an instance of the mother/'sister' thing in our family trees. When there's a 25-year gap between eldest and youngest, and a decade between youngest and 2nd youngest... Our instances were both in the early 1900s, and where Housemate's was only inferred ('sent to the aunt's') mine was only told her true parentage at her 'sister's' funeral... >.<
Comment
-
My grandmother's best friend found out her sister was her mother when she was in her 40s. The revelation did not go well for grandma's friend, her sister/mother and her mother/grandmother.
As long as your wife is on board ignore the "what ifs" and have the vasectomy.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kheldarson View PostRhythm method. Which is a bit of a roulette since it presumes all women have the same rhythm.
The current method is much more thorough.
Comment
-
Originally posted by fireheart17 View Post
Is that the method of tracking your fertility cycle so you're basically screwing on the days you aren't ovulating?
Comment
-
Originally posted by siead_lietrathua View Postugh. calendar method. toted as foolproof by people that probably think they can also beat the house at a casino every time >.<
because, no matter how well you track, biology can always toss in a curve-ball.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kheldarson View PostNo more foolproof than using a condom properly. You take a risk when you have sex. Period. Because biology can always toss in a curve ball.
Comment
-
Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
to be fair, using a condom properly is significantly less risky than the rhythm method- the risk with condoms is pretty much entirely of the condom breaking. ( which is also why it depends on which condom you use) and IIRC, when used properly, they are 98% effective. The rhythm method is something like 70% effective. (on average, not doing anything at all has about the same chance, if I remember the statistics correctly.
What's used today is Natural Family Planning which relies on basal body temperature, cervical mucus, and cervical height. You chart your personal cycle to determine the best days to have sex. If you have sex in your non-fertile period following the fertile period only, it is also 98% effective.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kheldarson View PostThe rhythm method, yes, is only 70% effective because it does not take into account a woman's personal cycle. It is no longer taught or encouraged.
What's used today is Natural Family Planning which relies on basal body temperature, cervical mucus, and cervical height. You chart your personal cycle to determine the best days to have sex. If you have sex in your non-fertile period following the fertile period only, it is also 98% effective.
Comment
Comment