"Technically, it's not a method, but in some pamphlets and books, they have it listed as a "method." And I think the success rate is around 70%"A2A, this website lists it as higher than that. And all the books I have read had listed it higher. It is a method of birth control. It is natural method, maybe you people are thinking or artificial contraception, of course it isn't that. I'm here to give the facts, and the fact of the matter is, dispite what others are saying, according to scientific research the withdrawl method is approx 80% effective. Spermicides are 75%, cervical caps between 60-80%, the female condom 80%. So, if you consider those methods of "reliable" birth control, why noy withdrawl.
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Scared for taking too long to orgasm?
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"Around here you won't find that listed as a "method" of birth control"
Then why is it listed under 'birth control -> contraception techniques -> other methods -> withdrawal method'?
Just pointing things out here.
"Oh well, you can only give people the information and than hope the use it right?"
I can agree with that. :smile:
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It may be a method of birth control, but I wouldn't use it. It's generally ineffective against pregnancy and STDs.
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A one in five chance, when talking about something this important, is not chance I would take.That would be one-in-five, or 20%, over the course of a year. Birth control failure rates are always given in "per year" terms.From what I've read, the coitus interruptus method has a 15-28% failure rate (per year) in typical use.
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No, my original question is far from pointless. It is actually revolving around the fact of me worried I last too long, and the "secretly gay" part was just a joke.
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If you intentionally "stop" yourself from cumming than the question is ridiculous. If you let yourtself cum, then you wouldn't have "lasted" as long as you did, hence, no worry.
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I didn't ever intentionally stop myself from cumming. Well the last time we did it yes, but the first 2 times, no.
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Then why is it listed under 'birth control -> contraception techniques -> other methods -> withdrawal method'? Sorry I was not very clear. When I said "around here" I actually meant in the area where I live. I've helped down at the clinic here and in all the literature on Birth Control; it mentions nothing about the "pull out method". Sorry I wasn't more clear (I was very tired yesterday lol)
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At the end of the day, what matters is how effective each method is. Some of the common methods have high failure rates, especially when used the way real-life people use them. If used use the way people typically use it, there's a pretty reasonable chance of a pregnancy over the course of a woman's fertile years if she relies on the birth control pill alone.Aside from that, non-barrier methods are no help in preventing STDs.
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I completely agree.Just the STD reason alone should give a good reason why a condom needs to be used whether she's on birth control or not.