Happy Earth Day, readers!
Surprised to hear that from yours truly? Well, let the record state that while I remain miserably apathetic about recycling (because it's stupid and it
uses more energy to break down and refashion the original materials than it saves), I am totally and 110% crunchy when it comes to avoiding - and helping my family avoid - hormonal pollution.
On a practical level, that means we make careful choices with our dairy and meat purchases, we don't drink the appalling tap water available to us here in bella Roma, and I don't use hormonal contraception. Now, I have one or two other reasons for refusing to pop the Pill, but for the sake of this post, let's focus on the simple fact that it's bad for you.
Like very, very bad. And also pretty terrible for the environment and surrounding inhabitants, e.g. your neighbors. Human and animal alike.
So without further explanation, I offer to you (and I will permanently link
this on the header bar at the top of the blog) my semi-infamous 'Green Sex' talk.
When I was a FOCUS missionary and way back even before that when I was a grad student at good 'ol Steubie U, I began to draft and then revise this talk, giving it every couple of months or so to varying crowds of (mostly) college-aged audiences at conferences and at colleges around the country. While I've been off the speaking circuit for a good long while now, popping out babies and moving overseas and whatnot, the content is still relevant - perhaps more so with all the HHS nonsense still brewing at home - and so I want to share it with you here.
Green Sex
Green sex is the concept of sex ‘au natural,’ as God
– or nature – intended. Sex without
props, potions or procedures. One man,
one woman, no equipment necessary. It’s
cost effective, has a carbon footprint of essentially zero, and is a basic
proven predictor of marital longevity.
In laymen terms: it’s free, cheap and easy.
Green sex is also the idea that contraceptive use –
or the deliberate destruction or suppression of the reproductive functions – is
in fact seriously deleterious to the environment and may indeed be harmful to
the human person - physically, psychologically and relationally.
So why aren’t we hearing more about it?
It seems like the green thing to do – in light of mounting evidence of
the effects of chemical contraception on the natural environment, would be to
cease and desist all chemical contraceptive use at once. Or else.
But… that doesn’t seem to be on anybody’s
political agenda these days.
Because the idea of "green sex," for all
it's shock value and buzz-worthy appeal, isn't exactly catching on like
wildfire. Cosmo hasn't run any features
exposing the rampant estrogenic pollution of our streams and waterways
resultant from the disposal of human sewage laden with prolific amounts of
artificial hormones.
The White House hasn't introduced any sweeping
initiatives to enact protective measures for transgendered trout whose
sexuality has been swayed by human interference...
But the consequences of contraceptive use on the environment - both externally,
in nature, and internally, within the human body - are staggering.
First, a little background on who is “using:” From a report by the
Guttmacher Institute (the research arm
of
Planned Parenthood), issued in
January of 2008, we have the following statistics:
• 62 million U.S. women are in their childbearing
years (or fall in the age range of 15–44)
• Of these 62 million women, 43 million, or 7 in
10, are sexually active and do not want to become pregnant, but could become
pregnant if they or their partners fail
to use a contraceptive method.
• Millions
of these women are teenagers. Of the 3.1
million teenage women who use contraceptives, 53% of them—more than 1.5 million
teens—rely on the pill.
• The typical U.S. woman wants only 2 children. To
achieve this goal, she must faithfully use contraceptives for roughly 3
decades, beginning in her teen years and continuing well into her forties.
Good to know.
Let’s build upon this
information with some facts from the front line, taken from
the drug info packet of Ortho Tricyclen – the number one prescribed oral
contraceptive in the United States:
"Taking
the Pill at a younger age may increase your risk of being diagnosed with breast
cancer. Particularly if taken for five consecutive years prior to a woman's
first pregnancy"
Let's break that down. According to the drug manufacturer’s own
warning label,
Taking the Pill:
1. “may increase your risk of being
diagnosed with breast cancer"
Which, could also be loosely
translated to “might give you cancer."
Sounds a little more ominous that way, no?
Taking the Pill:
2.
"...at a younger age."
Let’s examine this
one. The average age of onset for
hormonal contraceptive use in the U.S. is between 15 and 22 years of age.
Let's say a 17
year-old, high school junior obtains a prescription from her general care
practitioner and remains on the Pill for the remainder of high school and then
continues through college and grad school. Assuming she finishes her MA at age 25. She's
now been on the Pill for 7 years... Hmmmm....
Taking the Pill:
3.
"prior to a woman's first pregnancy"
Let's presume the young
lady in our above example marries around age 28 (early average, by today’s
standards) and waits 12-14 months to conceive baby number one (again, pretty
quick by today's standards.) She has now been on the Pill for more than a dozen
years prior to her first pregnancy...
So, transgendered trout aside, it would seem that there
are plenty of humane
reasons to think before popping those little pink Pills - humane in the fullest
sense of the word.
But seriously, does the phrase "Green Sex"
do a number on your psyche? Make your
stomach feel a little... off?
Mine too.
But I haven't thought of a more fitting name for it yet, so "green
sex" it is.
Some food for thought:
Why aren't we hearing more buzz about "greening” our sex lives? Why hasn't there been public outcry over the
massive amounts of environmental pollution produced by hormonal contraceptive
use? And perhaps most disturbing of all,
why aren't women up in arms about the ramifications that even short-term
contraceptive use has on their health?
Because going green - in the bedroom - is not the most convenient option. Because we don't really care what we're doing
to our bodies, as long as our bodies are performing exactly as we tell them to.
It’s funny though, because for a society so
infatuated with the practice of lessening consumerist tendencies, it's awfully
fishy that no body's pointed a finger at Merck or Wyeth or one of the
pharmaceutical companies’ other big players, asking the tough questions about
energy output and the environmental ramifications of pumping billions of
gallons of estrogen-enhanced waste through our waterways – not to mention
through our bloodstreams.
It sure gets you thinking...
Maybe – just maybe – contraception
is bad for the environment. Maybe it’s bad for our own internal
environments, too. Maybe, in spite of
everything we’ve been told about “responsible” family planning and good
stewardship, we’re actually doing more harm than good in our misguided attempts
to outwit our own biology.
Need proof? We
could try calculating the carbon footprint produced by the laboratory
production, packaging, marketing, shipping, stocking and consumption of
Ortho-Tricyclen in the United States alone, and you have an energy output far
outpacing that of other more popularly-critiqued industries that have come
under recent heavy media fire for failing to properly steward their resources
and reduce their footprint.
In an era where incredible emphasis is placed upon
social-responsibility, and where those whose endanger the natural world are
condemned unanimously… why hasn’t anyone taken up the standard against the
toxic wastefulness of artificial – and specifically chemical –
contraception?
Let’s back up and begin with the basics; those three
fundamental claims made in favor of contraceptive use, the “Big Three” for Big
Pharma.
They’ve been ingrained into the minds of women (and
men) over the course of years of careful public health campaigns in public
schools and marketing efforts in medical offices and pharmacies, and they are
as follows:
1.
Contraception is convenient
2.
Contraception is responsible
3.
Contraception is liberating
Myth
# 1: Contraception is convenient:
Truth:
Contraception as a convenient means of manipulating or “controlling” one’s
biology has perhaps become the single biggest selling point for the
product. In a culture which praises
immediacy and action, there is nothing more appealing to the consumer than the
“quick fix.”
We see it in the marketing of diet pills and
supplements, in the advertisements for internet service providers, and in the
never-ending quest for quicker service at the pump or in the drive
through. We are a people obsessed by
productivity – or the promise of it – and who will sacrifice almost anything to
shave a few minutes off our times.
Let’s examine the promise of convenience as it
relates to the proper use of hormonal contraceptives:
1. You
must take your Pill at the same time, every day. If you miss a dose, its efficacy is
dramatically lowered.
Check out Planned
Parenthood’s instructions for missed doses: (read this fast for best effect)
- If
you miss 1 pill, take it as
soon as you remember.
- Take
your regular pill at the usual time, even if it means taking 2 pills in
one day.
- Continue
taking your pills, but use another effective method of birth control (in
addition to your pill) for 10 days, even if you begin a new pill pack or
have your period.
- If
you miss 2 pills, take two
pills at once, then 2 pills the next day.
- Continue
taking your pills, but use another method of birth control for 10 days.
- If
you miss 2 or more pills at the
start of a new pack of pills and have had sex, you are at risk for
pregnancy.
o
Take your pill at the same time every day. This
keeps hormone level steady and prevents ovulation.
o
If you ever vomit within two hours after taking
your pill, take another pill
o
If you take your pill late, you may have
spotting (bleeding). The best time to take the pill is after a meal.
Sounds rather complicated.
But what
if you
are taking your dose on
time?
Read on:
·
Begin your first pack of pills by taking the first pill on the first Sunday after your next
menstrual period starts.
·
You will always start each new pack of pills on
a Sunday.
·
If you are using a 28-day pack, begin a new pack
immediately. Skip no days between packages. Your period will come sometime
during the last 7 days.
·
If you are using a 21-day pack, you will take no
pills for 7 days and then start your new pack.
So by convenient, I suppose the manufacturers mean mind-numbingly
complex.
If Tylenol had such stringent
dosing practices, I wonder whether it’d be the number one painkiller on the
market.
Myth # 2: Contraception is
responsible:
Facts: Billions of dollars are spent on the
research, development, production, advertisement, packaging and distribution of
contraceptives - from pill packs to condoms, and everything in between.
Our waterways are becoming saturated with astronomical levels of estrogen,
decimating animal populations in the surrounding ecosystems. Case in point: Boulder Creek – (yeah, this
town gets a lot of weird press) is now home to a bizarre, mutated kind of “transgendered
trout.”
“They [EPA-funded
scientists at the University of Colorado] studied the fish and decided the main
culprits were estrogens
and other steroid hormones from birth control pills and patches,
excreted in urine into the city’s sewage system and then into the creek. Randomly
netting 123 trout and other fish downstream from the city’s sewer plant, they
found that 101 were female, 12 were male, and 10 were strange “intersex” fish
with male and female features." National Catholic Register, July 2007
These are not the chemicals leaking downstream from
a steel mill or a pharmaceutical factory, which would surely have local
activists up in arms. These are chemicals being excreted in human waste; read: they are coming out of our bodies
and causing genetic alteration - mutation in some cases- in local
wildlife.
Curt
Cunningham, water quality issues chairman for the Rocky Mountain Chapter of
Sierra Club International, worked tirelessly last year on a ballot measure that
would force the City of Boulder to remove fluoride from drinking water, because
some believe it has negative effects on health and the environment that
outweigh its benefits.
Cunningham
said he would never consider asking women to curtail use of birth control pills and
patches
— despite what effect these synthetics have on rivers, streams and drinking
water:
“I suspect people would
not take kindly to that,” Cunningham said. “For many people it’s an economic
necessity. It’s also a personal freedom issue.”
And all the while, we're being told in firm,
sensible tones: do your part. We only have one earth. Switch to high
efficiency lightbulbs...
Boulder, Colorado is turning a blind eye to one to the mutation of one of their
beloved indigenous animal species for the sake of … convenience? A strange phenomenon for a city known to be
infatuated with all things animalia...
but then, stranger things have happened in Boulder.
But would anyone consider making the switch from
synthetic hormonal contraceptives to something a little, well, greener? Something with zero impact on the
environment and a significantly positive effect on the sociological state of
affairs? Has anyone stopped to consider
the very real ramifications of literally millions of couples
eschewing sex "au natural" in favor of a more controlled and
convenient conjugal collaboration?
Myth # 3: Contraception is liberating
Truth: Contraception is anything but freeing.
Need we revisit the tedious litany of
instructions for proper use of the Pill?
The truth is, contraceptives have made women
less free, not more.
Because
for every claim of convenience –
·
“No risk of pregnancy!”
·
“Casual, consequence-free sex!”
·
“Guilt-less hook-ups!”
There is an equal and opposing consequence – take the following three
examples:
1.
Use of the Pill increases
the risk for sexually transmitted infections based upon increased sexual
activity:
“The morning-after pill is also having a damaging
social effect by lulling young women into a false sense of security,
encouraging a more casual attitude to sex, and exposing them to increased risk
of sexually transmitted infections.” London Daily Mail, May 2009
2. Use
of the Pill encourages promiscuity: take the following statement from one of
the inventors of the birth control pill, Dr. Robert Kistner of Harvard:
“For
years, I thought the pill would not lead to promiscuity, would not cultivate
dangerous sexual behavior… but I’ve changed my mind. I think it probably has.”
Nobel-prize
winning economist and professor at the University of California at Berkley,
George Akerlof,
agrees. He found that:
“Instead of freeing women, birth control
obligated them to have sex before marriage in order to compete in the
“relationship market.”
And finally:
3. Use of the Pill gives women – especially younger women – a false
sense of security and safety. According to
the Guttmacher Institute in a 1996 study:
“A teenage girl who has unprotected sex just one
time has a 1% risk of contracting HIV, a 30% risk of contracting genital
herpes, and a 50% chance of contracting gonorrhea.”
What it's really about, this acceptance of contraception
as a necessary and indeed essential component
of modern life is convenience at any cost. At all
cost. For some, the cost will be
greater.
Take the following story from
the Australian News Service published April, 2009:
“Tanya Hayes, a student from Croydon in Melbourne,
Australia, died Monday, hours after collapsing in her car.
Hayes had been taking Yasmin, an oral contraceptive
recommended for patients using the acne medication Accutane, for about four
months.
Hayes had ignored symptoms of a pulmonary embolism
for about two weeks, including "breathlessness" and "a nasty,
hard cough," according to her family.
She collapsed outside a restaurant late Sunday
night and was rushed to Angliss Hospital in Melbourne, Australia.
Hayes died less than five hours later after a
pulmonary embolism, or blood clotting, occurred in her lungs.”
Tanya may
have paid the ultimate price for her use of contraceptives, but every one of us
is paying something.
And while it would seem that while there most certainly
are individuals and companies who are benefitting from the
tremendous sales of contraceptive products, we – the women who use them and the
environment in which we live – are not making out so well.
Perhaps the biggest myth enshrouding the practice of contra-ception, Latin
for
against the
beginning (of life) is the unshakable claim that somehow those
little pink pill packs have made us, as women, free.
To read much of recent modern feminist
literature, one might very easily assume that the entire achievements of
equality enjoyed by the fairer sex in the past century were accomplished thanks
to the invention of the Pill.
Truth be told, the assumption that any woman could be, potentially,
‘protected’ from the dangers of an unwanted pregnancy and available for sex
sans consequence has led to the expectation that every woman is exactly that:
available.
A girlfriend of mine was recently dating a guy – very casually – and they
ended up back at her apartment one evening after dinner, chatting on her
couch.
After a few minutes of small talk
this ‘nice guy’ got down to business, asking if they were, you know, ‘safe’ to
hook up.
“So are you like, on something?
I
mean, are we safe?”
“Are we safe?” she wondered incredulously..
He turned red (to his miniscule credit) and elaborated “You know, are you
like, on the pill?”
“Um, no, I’m not.
And is that
seriously how you just asked me to sleep with you?”
The conversation – and the brief relationship – ended about 3 minutes later.
The point was, the assumption, the entire burden of ‘responsibility’ was on
her shoulders.
Only difference between
this guy and a million other dudes on campus was that he had the crass to say
it out loud.
And neither a condom nor a chemical contraceptive can guarantee
‘protection,’ whether from deadly disease, unwanted pregnancy or
no-strings-attached sex.
Despite what
you may have heard in health class, or down at the campus health center (which
very conveniently stocks loads of free samples from dozens of pharmaceutical
companies hawking
product and
brochures from Planned Parenthood hawking, you guessed it,
product).
According to a 2010 economic analysis of contraception by economist Timothy
Reichert entitled ‘Bitter Pill,’ “Contraception creates a demand for
abortion.”
He likens
contraception and
abortion to complementary forms of insurance that resemble
primary insurance
and reinsurance.
“If contraception
fails, abortion is there as a fail-safe.”
Data collected from 1960 to 2005 confirms his thesis that the practices of
contraception and abortion should rise until equilibrium levels of sexual
activity are reached – and indeed, the statistical evidence shows a strong
correlation between the rise in legal abortions and the rising use of contraceptive
technology.
But we are not simply a target demographic, potential customers and
consumers.
Women in particular have been
gifted with a unique and complex sexuality which lends itself to long term
investment in a lasting sexual relationship.
Because of the widespread availability of contraceptive technology, a
woman is now compelled to enter the sex market at a younger age and ‘compete’
while she is a scarcer commodity, while at the same time driving the cost of
abstinence for other women to an historical high.
Women who choose to delay their entrance into the sex market until they
desire to marry find themselves at a profound disadvantage, both from the
perspective of availability of potential mates and the stiffer competition from
younger sexually active women who, by
nature of their suppressed fertility, are available for consequence-free
sex.
In plain terms, what this essentially means is that from a strictly economic
perspective, the availability of contraception compels women to make themselves
‘sexually available’ in order to compete with their peers for a rightful share
of the market.
It’s a rather grim way of
looking at romantic relationships, but there’s evidence of it in every aspect
of modern society.
Sex has essentially
become the currency and women the desirable product or service.
Not an especially attractive scenario, from a
feminist perspective.
Which is why I
would advocate that authentic feminism must embrace the
whole person rather
than reducing her to parts or performance ability.
Being a woman, having the capacity to conceive and nurture new human life,
is not a design flaw.
It doesn’t need to
be sutured, suppressed or tied off in order to ‘protect’ men from the
consequences of intimacy with us.
Similarly, we needn’t defend ourselves against the scourge of male
fertility by means of barriers or chemical repellants.
We are not at war with one another.
But we are making war on our own bodies, and on the environment in which we
live.
As human beings we are entrusted with an awesome responsibility to till and
keep the garden of the natural world.
We
are to be stewards and guardians, not polluters and consumers.
Not of the environment, and not of each
other.
So the next time somebody engages you on the topic of responsible environmental
stewardship, ask them what they’ve done for the planet lately, and maybe think
twice before popping your morning Pill.
Because you never know who’s downstream.