Becca’s User Questionnaire

Current Method: Marquette
Previous Method: Creighton Model
๐Ÿ‘ฉ๐Ÿพโ€๐Ÿคโ€๐Ÿ‘จ๐Ÿฝโ›ช๐Ÿšธ๐Ÿฅผ๐Ÿ“ˆ๐Ÿ‘Œ๐Ÿป

  • Tell us a little about yourself.
    I am a Catholic woman, wife, and mama adjusting to life with our little baby girl. As a melancholic phlegmatic, INFP/INFJ, amateur faux-calligrapher who works part time at an outpatient clinic adults with neurological impairments as a speech-language pathologist, I also love learning about theology, watching my daughter learn and explore, relaxing outdoors, and supporting other women in my life as they go through similar stages of life.
  • What effects has fertility awareness had on your relationship?
    Learning FABMs has taught both of us more about my body than any health class ever did. Maybe more than my husband ever wanted to know! It has definitely been a test, one that challenges us to rely on more than sexual intercourse to express and receive affection and intimacy. We have had long periods of abstinence because of pregnancy and then postpartum recovery, which was frustrating at times, but alleviated a little by our appreciation for the benefits abstinence can have. We're still figuring out how to share fertility, but I would like to see my husband chart for us, so there is easier communication of what our goals are each month and when we are both fertile.
  • Current Method: Marquette - How did you find your instructor?
    I was directed to the Marquette instructor database (https://www.marquettemethod.com/instructors/), reached out to a few, and chose my instructor because she had the most personable response. Her soonest spot (virtual) was an individual training that cost $125 for the intro and a year of follow up consults. I have definitely appreciated being able to reach out to her after the intro because I am breastfeeding and return to fertility can be confusing!
  • Describe your daily charting routine.
    I began using this method around 6 months postpartum, so about 4 months ago. I mark on a paper chart and on the monitor when my period starts, and beginning on the indicated day as ovulation approaches, I test my first morning urine by peeing in a clean medicine bottle and use the approved Clearblue monitor to read the test strips. I do this on the days indicated by the method leading up to peak ovulation and stop testing once my monitor reads "peak" as taught by my instructor to save some money instead of wasting test sticks. I used to track cervical mucous but haven't been able to since I had a bad scar from a perineal tear in labor and am breastfeeding which affects mucous. Overall, it can be annoying or challenging to collect the sample because my daughter wants to be in the bathroom with me, but since that only happens first thing in the morning and not every day, it is pretty reassuring that I don't have to pay close attention or mark information down whenever I can run to the bathroom during the day.
  • What made you choose this method?
    We choose to use a FABM for religious reasons that are founded on moral theology, and I appreciate that I am not adding any chemicals or medicine to my body or repressing my fertility by using a FABM. We chose Marquette because I was comforted by the objective nature of using the urinary hormones and a monitor, especially since I wasn't 100% confident in my mucous observations pre-pregnancy, and that lack of confidence combined with less mucous to observe and physically healing from birth meant I needed a method that wouldn't rely as much on mucous observation. Even though we were not going to be able to return to sex quickly, I wanted to be confident in knowing when my fertility was returning.
  • Has charting helped you to understand your overall health?
    It did on the previous method we used more than with this method.
  • Did you switch to this method from another one? If so, why?
    We switched to Marquette from Creighton when I was postpartum after our (first and only) daughter's birth. We had chosen Creighton while we were engaged because of the low cost, and used it for two months intending to avoid pregnancy before our daughter announced her presence unexpectedly. I'm still not sure whether I made incorrect observations and that's what led to pregnancy, but regardless, I was no longer 100% confident in my mucous observations postpartum. That lack of confidence combined with less mucous to observe and physically healing from birth meant I needed a method that wouldn't rely as much on mucous observation. Even though we were not going to be able to return to sex quickly, I wanted to be confident in knowing when my fertility was returning. I was comforted by the objective nature of using the urinary hormones and a monitor, in spite of the additional cost required to use the method. The transition was fairly easy since I had only used Creighton for a few months and then stopped for about a year during pregnancy and immediately postpartum.
  • Previous Method: Creighton Model - How did you find your instructor?
    I located an instructor through our Archdiocese website of local instructors for different FABMs. She charged $453.20 for the intro ($35), materials ($65), year of 8 follow ups ($330), credit fee ($13), and shipping ($10). We had four follow up sessions before pregnancy, and attended a pregnancy evaluation and one postpartum follow up.
  • Describe your daily charting routine.
    N/a, no longer use this method
  • What made you choose this method?
    We chose Creighton initially because of the lack of continual costs once you are confident in the method, and for the information it reveals about your overall health. I disliked having to pay close attention and mark observations down every single time I used the restroom.
  • Has charting helped you to understand your overall health?
    Yes, it helped to identify multiple indications of low progesterone, which led my instructor to refer me to a NaPro physician and be able to start receiving bio identical progesterone three days after a positive pregnancy test, which I continued taking throughout pregnancy and now again postpartum after my fertility returned.
  • Did you stop using this method? If so, why?
    I was no longer confident in the accuracy of my observations, especially due to lack of mucous postpartum and the inability to determine sensation by wiping my perineum while healing from a 3rd degree tear and reducing scar tissue.

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Emoji Key For User Profiles:

Sympto-thermal method๐ŸŒก

Mucus-only method๐Ÿ‘Œ๐Ÿป

Sympto-hormonal method๐Ÿ“ˆ

Used when Married ๐Ÿ‘ฉ๐Ÿพโ€๐Ÿคโ€๐Ÿ‘จ๐Ÿฝย 

Learned when Engaged ๐Ÿ’

Used when single ๐Ÿงโ€โ™€๏ธ

Has kid(s) ๐Ÿšธ

Miscarriage ๐Ÿ‘ผ๐Ÿป

Use a method for health reasons ๐Ÿฅผ

Previously used hormonal birth control ๐Ÿ’Š

Infertility ๐ŸŒท

Religious โ›ช or Secular โœจ

Liability Release: We do not censor our user profiles nor do we fact check them. We believe this is the most effective way to show what happens when science intersects with real life.ย  This means that some profiles may describe misapplications of method protocols or cases of improper instruction. Consequently, these profiles should never be used to either learn a method or self-diagnose a medical issue. They simply describe an experience that could help guide method choice. While we maintain other areas of our website with information and direction for where to find accurate medical and method-specific information, all questions regarding method protocols or health concerns should be addressed with your instructor and care provider.

Liability Release: We do not censor our user profiles nor do we fact check them. We believe this is the most effective way to show what happens when science intersects with real life.ย  This means that some profiles may describe misapplications of method protocols or cases of improper instruction. Consequently, these profiles should never be used to either learn a method or self-diagnose a medical issue. They simply describe an experience that could help guide method choice. While we maintain other areas of our website with information and direction for where to find accurate medical and method-specific information, all questions regarding method protocols or health concerns should be addressed with your instructor and care provider.