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Women Speak on NFP: An Interview with Dwija

April 22, 2013 By Haley 15 Comments

Welcome to Carrots! I'm so glad you're here. This is where I share thoughts on liturgical living, faith, parenting, culture, and an extra dose of Jane Austen. You can sign up for my email newsletter here to stay in touch, or look me up on Instagram!

Welcome to Carrots! I'm so glad you're back. You can sign up for my email newsletter here to stay in touch, or look me up on Instagram!

This is a guest post by Dwija of House Unseen, Life Unscripted in the Women Speak on NFP series. In this series you will hear from women using various methods of NFP, some to avoid pregnancy, some trying to conceive, and their experiences.

Disclaimer: This series is not meant to be a substitute for any method of training in NFP! If you are interested in one of the methods introduced in this series, please contact a certified instructor for information about training in that method of NFP. 

(Dwija had the brilliant idea to make this post “interview” style. Hope you enjoy it! – Haley)

Haley: So, Dwija, you’re a Catholic convert like me, so I assume you haven’t always had the view of marriage and fertility that you do now. Tell me a little bit about your journey toward NFP.

Dwija: Okay, well…you know how I like to drop new tidbits about my weird childhood every now and then, right? Brace yourself: I was raised in an “unusual” faith community that taught that any sex, even within marriage, that wasn’t intended for procreation was a sin. So, the Church’s teaching that sex is both unitive AND procreative was pretty wonderful for me.

Between the time that I basically stopped believing in the faith I was raised with and my conversion to Catholicism, though, I had sort of a muddled view of marriage and fertility- one that I wasn’t ever able to flesh out until I came to the Church. But I basically assumed that any “regular” guy would expect consequence-free sex and I agreed to think that was reasonable so I could be “normal”. Lucky for me, my husband is faaaaaaaaaaabulous and selfless. Even in college, before we were engaged, he said that no man should expect any woman to alter her body for his pleasure. It was amazing. And that was the day my pro-NFP stance was born.

Haley: What method(s) of NFP have you tried? Did you have a good or bad experience?

Dwija: The only method of NFP we’ve ever used is the Sympto-thermal method, which I taught myself after our second child was born using Toni Weschler’s book “Taking Charge of Your Fertility.” Without getting into the reasons right now, we used STM to avoid pregnancy for five years after that. So if you need it to work to space the babies, it WILL work. But it’s not easy to abstain when you’re fertile because, well, it’s supremely natural to want to come together during that time, ya know? Since then we’ve not had as grave reasons to avoid having more children, so the spacing is a little closer, with an average of a bit more than two years between babies (so far!).

Haley: I know you have horrible, debilitating morning sickness during pregnancy like I do. Tell me a little bit about that and how it affects your child-spacing and NFP.

Dwija: Well, the sickness with each pregnancy has been totally different and did not depend on gender or personal physical fitness or anything that I can determine. Two of my full-term pregnancies have come with half-dead-for-months-how-will-I-ever-survive-this hyperemesis (one boy and one girl), two have come with “run of the mill” nausea, and one, our second child, was practically symptom free. Amazingly, as with labor, once you hold that baby in your arms, the physical discomforts all make sense somehow. Or are worth it. Or something. Basically I’ve given up on comfort being a deciding factor in any major life decisions. Like Papa B16 said “This world promises you comfort, but you were not made for comfort. You were made for greatness!“

Haley: How has NFP affected your marriage and spiritual life?

Dwija: NFP has been the tool that’s allowed us to consider children so often. Considering them, talking about them, knowing they could be on the horizon, keeps us grounded in our primary vocations as spouses and parents. The most difficult time in our marriage came, not coincidentally, toward the end of that long space between babies two and three. Although it is definitely sometimes necessary, it is not natural in a healthy marriage to abstain consistently for so long. After a while, that can put a strain on a relationship. Being able to identify that and get brave together about trusting God’s plan for our future instead of our own breathed new life into our family- figuratively and literally!

Haley: Your youngest baby is beyond adorable. Please elaborate on that statement.

Dwija: Ehrmagherd.  Right?  She is the bees knees.  She totally made friends with the cashier at the grocery store today.  Her two front teeth are enormous.  I love her chubby thighs.  Not a single older child can stay crabby when Mare Bear comes in the room.  Also, first home birth…so, super neat memories there and all that jazz, too.  You know: bonus!  I’m attaching a photo (of course) for your entertainment 😉

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headshot
Dwija is the beer drinking, joke cracking friend you wish you had in real life. In her (imaginary) spare time, she loves Will Farrell movies, 90s rap, and jalapeño kettle chips.  She lives in a fixer with her five kids in that she and her husband bought sight-unseen off the internet.  Clearly she makes prudent decisions. Visit her at House Unseen, Life Unscripted.

Related Posts

  • Women Speak on NFP: One Girl's Experience with the Sympto-Thermal Method
  • Women Speak on NFP

Filed Under: Baby, Catholicism, Children, Family & Homesteading, Marriage, NFP Tagged With: Catholicism, child spacing, dwija borobia, family, house unseen, marriage, natural family planning, nfp, sympto-thermal method, taking charge of your fertility, women speak on nfp

Comments

  1. Janice says

    April 22, 2013 at 8:04 am

    I am really enjoying this series. I am also a convert, NFP-er and mother of five.

    Reply
  2. michele says

    April 22, 2013 at 9:13 am

    Oh my goodness…that you for mentioning the fact that both of you have suffered from hyperemesis! I’m pregnant with my second (and have hyperemesis just like I did with my first…looking like I’ll have it in some form all the way to the end just like I did with her, too!) and I have found it so encouraging this time around to encounter other nfp practicing moms (with more than one or two children!!!) who have had to face debilitating nausea. It gives me a lot of hope! If you guys can do it, so can I!

    Reply
    • Dwija {House Unseen} says

      April 22, 2013 at 9:39 am

      I’m saying a prayer for you right now, Michele. You can dooooooooo it!

      Reply
    • Haley says

      April 23, 2013 at 12:05 pm

      Oh girl, I feel your pain! Still throwing up occasionally in third trimester with this doozy of a pregnancy. We should start a support group. I’m not joking! Some days I really need other moms who understand how hard it is to take care of kids and suffer through the hyperemesis to tell me, “we can do this!” And after Miss Gwen is born I’m going to work on replenishing magnesium in my body. Apparently you can’t absorb it well during pregnancy (maybe it all goes to the baby?) but a depletion of magnesium in your system can contribute to morning sickness issues. I’m going to give it a shot and see if my next pregnancy is any easier!

      Reply
      • Karen M says

        August 6, 2014 at 8:02 pm

        This is way late, but I just found your blog and of course had to read this series. Yes to the magnesium! I had minimal nausea with pregnancy number three after getting sick daily for four months with the first and having slightly reduced symptoms with the second. I used Natural Calm daily for about 6 months before conceiving the third and continued supplementing with it throughout the pregnancy. I also highly encourage protein and fat first thing in the morning, like a breakfast of scrambled eggs, perhaps heated up from a previous cooking session so that you can eat first thing after rising. Good luck! Love your blog!

        Reply
  3. Cari says

    April 22, 2013 at 9:23 am

    That quote from B16 is almost as fantastic as Dwija and Mare Bear.

    Reply
  4. LPatter says

    April 22, 2013 at 9:27 am

    LOVE Dwija and LOVE this series! Thank you for all the different perspectives – it gives so much life & insight into the NFP topic and experience. Wonderful ministry!

    Have a great week Haley!

    Reply
    • Haley says

      April 23, 2013 at 12:06 pm

      I’m so glad! It’s teaching me a lot and giving me so much encouragement to read these experiences. <3

      Reply
  5. Dwija {House Unseen} says

    April 22, 2013 at 9:41 am

    Thanks so much for having me, Haley. It was great to be able to try and articulate what is more of a lived experience than a routine. Wonderful opportunity for reflection!

    Reply
    • Haley says

      April 23, 2013 at 12:06 pm

      Thanks for sharing your story, m’dear!

      Reply
  6. Christy says

    April 22, 2013 at 10:29 am

    Yay Dwija! Loved this, of course! Its always great to hear others exciting NFP tales!

    Reply
  7. Meg Hunter-Kilmer says

    April 27, 2013 at 12:10 am

    “No man should expect any woman to alter her body for his pleasure”–I would have married him right there!

    Reply
  8. Suzette @ jambalaya says

    August 7, 2014 at 8:23 pm

    Still such a great post, even over a year later!

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Did You Always Think You Wouldn’t Use Birth Control? | Life Is What Happens… says:
    April 22, 2013 at 10:22 pm

    […] Uebbing on “What NFP Isn’t” –An interview with Dwija Borobia (who was born a Hare Krishna–yes, as in the cult!–and later converted to Catholicism) […]

    Reply
  2. You Were Not Made for Comfort says:
    October 22, 2013 at 1:01 am

    […] was chatting about NFP and pregnancy with a fellow morning sickness sufferer, Dwija, recently. I asked her how her struggles with morning sickness affected how she viewed NFP and […]

    Reply

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Welcome! I’m Haley Stewart, a bookish mama of four and wife to a beekeeper. Writer, speaker, podcaster, and Catholic convert. Homeschooling, bacon-eating, and bright red lipstick-wearing Jane Austen aficionado. My first book, The Grace of Enough: Pursuing Less and Living More in a Throwaway Culture is available now!

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