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Our
daughter is a newly married woman who does not have
regular cycles, really unable to use NFP because of
that, and has no other choice (in her mind) than to
contracept. She knows NFP has worked for us; however
I do know when I ovulate so NFP has been, thank God,
very easy to do for us. How do you advise someone
like that? There is no way she could pursue her PhD,
and have a child right now.
As her mother, I told her she needs to realize we
must not take decisions like this into our own
hands. It is not our place to decide when is the
right time for us to bear a child. That is God's
decision, and he will not give us anything we cannot
handle. I explained giving birth is the closest she
will ever be to God as she will be part of creating
life and be a part of God's plan. Yet, the highly
educated mind of hers researched the fact that NFP
statistically doesn't work, mostly because she
cannot tell when she is ovulating due to her
irregular cycles, and she cannot successfully do
this. I also told her God gave her free will as
well. I cannot 'tell' her what to do but I told her
how I felt about it, and she needs to pray about it.
She talked to a priest before marrying. He told her
in her circumstance she has no other choice, so in a
way he told her that she has to do whatever she
needed to do. I appreciate any advice you can give
me. – A Distraught Mother |

Dear Distraught Mother,
Thinking that NFP cannot work due to irregular menses is
predicated on the old "Rhythm Method." Unfortunately, the
pharmaceutical companies perpetuate this with their products
designed to replicate the "normal cycle." Ovulatory cycles
range from 26 to 35 days and do not obey calendars.
The great news is that the same researchers who brought the
birth control pill to the market in 1960 have spent their
careers researching natural fertility regulation. Please
recommend the WOOMB website to your daughter (www.woomb.org ) and click on the OMRRC (Ovulation
Method Reference and Research Center) for the history and
research behind the simplest and most scientifically pure
NFP method. All women, despite their reproductive history or
stage in life can easily identify the roughly 96 hours of
fertility per month. The numerous studies cited will testify
to the 99.5% effectiveness rate. Experts in my field quote a
pregnancy rate of 10% with typical use of the pill (Trussell,
Pearl Index).
More importantly, if cycles are irregular, there is usually
an underlying metabolic disorder which lies undiagnosed with
typical gynecologic treatment. The Billings Ovulation Method
chart is a bioassay of the ovarian hormones. This means that
the charted changing or unchanging pattern of discharge is
diagnostic and guides treatment. While there may be other
NFP methods with varying detection methods, only the BOM
chart reflects the actual production of estrogen and
progesterone. One million hormonal assays and 55 years of
research confirm this.
Best wishes,
Mary W. Martin, M.D.,FACOG
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