Who are you people |
Hello, I'm Anna! I'm a junior in high school and hopefully an artist someday. I like Doctor who, Supernatural, and Homestuck among other things. I'm very friendly so if you ever want to say hi :) My art |
Elizabeth Banks: I Thank Birth Control Pills for My Son
Just over a year ago, my son Felix was born via gestational surrogacy. He came out of me nine months early and because of my broken belly, his babycake was baked in a wonderful angel’s oven and now — I can’t believe it — he’s a year old and walking. He has expanded my capacity for joy a thousand-fold.
His life would have been much harder to come by if not for the birth control pill. How’s that, you ask? Well, it’s a simple fact: The pill is used for many situations that have nothing to do with the prevention of pregnancy. The pill was prescribed to me when hormonally induced migraines kept me locked up in dark rooms for days at a time. It was prescribed to me to regulate insanely painful cramps every month — cramps so painful that I often vomited.
And here’s a little secret I am happy to blow the lid off of: The pill is often prescribed during the IVF (in vitro fertilization) process to help MAKE BABIES! That’s right, women dealing with infertility are often put on the pill to help regulate a cycle so that they might have a more successful IVF. The pill is used to manage ovarian cysts, endometriosis and other conditions too. Not to mention, it helps couples plan for wanted children.
Obviously, I’m not a doctor. I’m just a woman grateful for my necessary and very helpful medication. And I’m sure glad I don’t have to discuss any of these conditions, including infertility, with my employer.
A girlfriend and I recently wondered what would be more mortifying: having to tell her male employer she needed birth control to mitigate a heavy flow or just bleeding all over herself in the office?
So with that image in mind, I encourage all women — and the men in their lives — to protect access to birth control, and encourage our politicians to take women’s health issues out of the political process.
For more information, please visit the most comprehensive and willing advocates for women’s health in America: www.plannedparenthood.org.
(Source: judygrimes, via gyzym)
This is hormonal birth control.
As you can see on the box, you take exactly one pill per day. To make sure it works, you need to take one pill every day at the same time, or it stops working. You take only one pill, and you keep taking them…
(via awkwardbirds)
You’re bad at this, Rush Limbaugh. You don’t even understand how babies are made, let alone how people can have sex without making a baby, and you would like the government to take over decision-making on these issues on your say-so. And you don’t get it. You biologically don’t get it. You just don’t understand it. You were absent that day. - Rachel Maddow
Oh Rachel, I love you for this segment.
This segment was flawless.
Hey girl… I love you.
Rachel Maddow let me kiss your perfect face
I think Limbaugh confused birth control pills with condoms, so the fact that he would misinterpret birth control pills to be something women have to take for every round of sex as if they’re condoms ALSO would show his unwillingness to take any form of responsibility if he himself forgets a condom and getting a kid he doesn’t want to have.
It’s him who wants unlimited sex without repercussions.
The real question here is, why is that headline in Hobo
All I can say is that I’m sorry.
Look at this cute fucking thing.
I want twenty of them.
OMFG BABY
omg
Okay so I followed this video about foreshortening and…
Sycra. I love you so much for making...
Everyone on my...
I love to watch on the wings of angels.
I used to love...
This is literally breathtaking.