I'm 15 and asked my mom to be put on. So we are looking into a good doctor and about how to be put on them. I'm still neverous about talking about it with her, and very scared about going to the doctor. Talk to your daughter, trust me she will appricate it. It will help take the edge off.
2006-09-10 10:56:30
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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15
2006-09-10 11:02:14
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Hopefully I would have a good enough relationship with my daughter for her to tell me when she became sexually active. If that happened, I would put her on the pill. If she wasn't sexually active, I would not force the pill on her. I don't think that a teenage girl should be put on the pill without any reason. If she was sexually active or if her cycles were irregular, I would put her on the pill. If neither of those things were the case, then I would not put her on it.
Teaching a person to wait for sex until marriage is both impractical and unfair. You can teach abstinence until you are blue in the face, but unless you also teach contraception, your child is going to be defenseless if they decide to have sex before marriage. Also, I think that abstinence makes people choose to get married because of all the wonderful sexual feelings that the two people involved mistake for love. Without any experience in the sexual area, the people involved don't know how to handle those intense feelings. They mistake lust for love. I think that's why we have such a high divorce rate.
2006-09-10 11:01:26
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answer #3
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answered by Bastet's kitten 6
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I am 15 going on 16 and even though my mom trusts me i would want to have birth control now. Girls should not be having sex now at this young of age but everyone is different. Some girls find a guy that they want to lose it to and that they care for. Even if you trust your daughter, which you should, you should put her on it just to so you don't have to spend so much time worrying about her.
2006-09-10 11:01:30
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answer #4
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answered by lvrntahter 1
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If recommended by a doctor for medical reasons then I would do it at whatever they suggested.
With my own daughter she knew when she started to consider having sex she could come to me and ask. I wouldn't put her on it without either the doctor recommending it or my daughter talking to me about it. She came to me this past year right after she turned 17 and said she was considering having sex with her boyfriend and would I take her to discuss birth control with her doctor. So within a month she started depo shots.
2006-09-10 15:50:20
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answer #5
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answered by curls 4
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My daughter went on birth control at age 16 as she was have very frequent irregular periods. We had and still have discussions about having sex, STD's and about having self-respect.
Shame on all those who look down their noses at a serious question about a young girl on birth control. You aren't living in the real world.
2006-09-10 11:15:37
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answer #6
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answered by porkchop 5
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If you have no previous expereince, you have no business putting her on birth control. Seek a doctor's advice. He/she has the experience.
If you are talking about your daughter's previous (I assume, sexual) experience, then don't wait until she begins. By that time, it may already be too late.
Following a doctor's recomendation, if I were you, I would try to get her on something as soon after she is able to get pregnant. Please don't get taken in by that old wive's tale that a girl can't get pregnant during her first sexual encounter.
It ain't so!
2006-09-10 10:58:56
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answer #7
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answered by Vince M 7
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“birth control means birth control.” No, birth control means controlling the type of stay births. birth control means controlling the type of conceptions. frequently, besides the undeniable fact that, both are lumped at the same time. Contraceptive contraptions, to illustrate the condom and IUD’s, ward off births with the help of scuffling with idea, yet others, like the “pill” ward off start with the help of scuffling with the embryo from coming up contained in the mother’s body “birth control isn't an abortion.” Many kinds of what are frequently referred to as birth control, mainly the “pill”, are abortion because they ward off the “fabricated from idea” from implanting contained in the uterus of the mother. The embryo (which has, with the help of how, an total, unique set of human DNA) is then expelled from the body. This expulsion is brought about with the help of the moves of the mother taking the pill with the particular objective of creating implantation very not likely. “…an abortion does no longer ward off idea.” No, it doesn’t, yet neither does the most widespread kinds of birth control ( a misnomer if there ever replaced into one) used with the help of ladies persons. possibly its time that you studied up a touch on precisely how the pill works. It does no longer ward off birth control BTW: Why don’t you basically call the “fabricated from idea” what that's; a toddler; an embryo; a fertilized egg? Do you imagine it makes you sound “more desirable clinical” to easily describe it? That’s like continuously calling the solar “our well-known means source ” and in no way basically calling it “the solar”. stupid.
2016-11-26 00:06:36
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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My parents put me on birth control at age 16 because I have endometriosis, and it was to help my monthly cycle regulate. Now I am a mom, and I would suggest talking this over with her doctor.
2006-09-10 10:56:50
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answer #9
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answered by thedothanbelle 4
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My daughters knew they could talk to me, but I would not simply put them on it assuming anything. They talked to me when they had their first periods. As for birth control, I found the best type was having the rule that any boyfriends had to come over for dinner each Friday night, before they went out. No dates other than Friday and Saturday nights. At dinner, we put saltpeter in their food. No worries about sex. I didn't get my first grandchildren until my youngest was 21.
2006-09-10 10:59:05
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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