The Broken Dance
|
| MY BIRTH CONTROL STORY I came across this Substack research today called 'The Birth Control Testimonies.' (see below) and boy did it hit me hard. Wow, everything I had been surmising for decades just got proven in the cold hard light of good science. I’m one of those women who went on the pill in the mid 70s, and so 4 things resonated personally for me with this article/research: Infertility, Blood sugar issues, Candida and Destroyed partner-choice. Oh and let’s not forget Depression. Decades and Decades of it. In my early 30s, whilst in a lovely committed partnership, I went off the pill to protect my health. I didn't know then that it may have caused my blood sugar issues and infertility, I just thought it was a good idea now I was in a committed relationship. Pretty immediately, I became overtly turned off him. Not disgusted, just incredibly uninterested.... couldn't even look him in the eyes. And he was a lovely man who suffered hugely from this. As did I. Heartbreaking!! It broke us up. And I have not been in a functioning relationship since (now mid 60s). My hormones seemed to stay disrupted re partner choice. Apparently this is one of the findings of this research. The pill disrupts the woman's hormones, which negatively effects her capacity to choose partners. Whilst she is on the pill, she chooses a certain type of partner, and once she is off it - with different hormones flooding her system - she looses all sexual interest, or even gets overtly turned off. Around the same time, I also had a huge ovarian cyst that appeared soon after stopping the pill. That meant 24 hour pain for months and unable to have sex with my relatively new partner. (It took awhile for the sexual disinterest to become obvious.) Luckily I took no notice of the doctors, and found a way to heal it for myself. I was never able to have children but never knew why until I started researching a few years go. So due to Big Pharma, I have missed out on all the support and companionship of partnership and family. I also had chronic candida and chronic low blood sugar issues... maybe another consequence? So yes, this little pill has had huge consequences for my life. So good to see this research coming into the mainstream... makes me feel not so crazy and alone. The One-Minute Elevator Explanation The birth control pill works by delivering synthetic hormones that trick your brain into thinking you’re already past ovulation, preventing pregnancy by stopping egg release. But here’s what most people don’t know: those same hormones that prevent pregnancy also influence every system in your body, from your brain to your immune system. The pill changes who you’re attracted to—women on the pill prefer less masculine, more provider-type partners and may not be able to smell genetic compatibility. It can reduce sexual desire by suppressing testosterone, alter your stress response system like someone with PTSD, and increase depression risk especially in teenagers. Partner Selection Fundamentally Changes The pill alters women’s partner preferences at the deepest levels, changing attraction to physical features, voices, and crucially, scents that signal genetic compatibility. Women on the pill prefer less masculine partners and may choose men with incompatible immune genes, potentially affecting fertility and offspring health. These altered preferences can cause relationship crisis when women discontinue the pill and find themselves no longer attracted to partners chosen while on hormones, contributing to a pattern where pill-choosing women initiate divorce more frequently. REFERENCES Research article - The Birth Control Testimonies. More research - This is your brain on birth control: how the Pill changes everything (2023) References[1] Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals. Yaz (drospirenone and ethinyl estradiol) tablets prescribing information. FDA Reference ID: 5177006. [2] Barr Laboratories. Sprintec (norgestimate and ethinyl estradiol) tablets prescribing information. Revised January 2011. [3] Teva Canada Limited. Apri 21 and Apri 28 (desogestrel and ethinyl estradiol) tablets prescribing information. DIN 02352346 / 02352354. [4] Junel Fe (norethindrone acetate and ethinyl estradiol tablets and ferrous fumarate tablets) prescribing information. ANDA076380. Revised January 2025. [5] Teva Pharmaceuticals USA. Aviane (levonorgestrel and ethinyl estradiol) tablets prescribing information. Revised August 2024. [6] Skovlund CW, Mørch LS, Kessing LV, Lidegaard Ø. Association of hormonal contraception with depression. JAMA Psychiatry. 2016;73(11):1154–1162. [7] Skovlund CW, Mørch LS, Kessing LV, Lange T, Lidegaard Ø. Association of hormonal contraception with suicide attempts and suicides. American Journal of Psychiatry. 2018;175(4):336–342. [8] Panzer C, Wise S, Fantini G, et al. Impact of oral contraceptives on sex hormone-binding globulin and androgen levels: a retrospective study in women with sexual dysfunction. Journal of Sexual Medicine. 2006;3(1):104–113. [9] Wedekind C, Seebeck T, Bettens F, Paepke AJ. MHC-dependent mate preferences in humans. Proceedings of the Royal Society B.1995;260(1359):245–249. [10] Roberts SC, Gosling LM, Carter V, Petrie M. MHC-correlated odour preferences in humans and the use of oral contraceptives. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 2008;275(1652):2715–2722. [11] Roberts SC, Klapilová K, Little AC, et al. Relationship satisfaction and outcome in women who meet their partner while using oral contraception. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 2012;279(1732):1430–1436. [12] Alvergne A, Lummaa V. Does the contraceptive pill alter mate choice in humans? Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 2010;25(3):171–179. [13] United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. World Family Planning 2022: Meeting the changing needs for family planning. New York: United Nations, 2022. Reports 966 million contraceptive users worldwide as of 2021. [14] Institut National d’Études Démographiques (INED). Contraception across the world (2022). Reports the pill at 16% of all contraceptive use (approximately 151 million users based on UN population data). [15] GoodRx. America’s Most Prescribed Birth Control: Sprintec, Junel FE, and Apri. 2022. Identifies Sprintec, Junel FE, and Apri as the most commonly prescribed oral birth control options in the United States. |
Centuries later, the Rockefellers provided the next kill-shot when they started funding male-only medical universities etc, which seriously weakened the impact of the, until then, mostly female healers.
To this day, women are still dealing with the epigenetic trauma caused by this mass extermination of the feminine and the wholistic healer.
What sort of sane society would give the job of birthing to men??
For years now and especially under cover of Covid, we are now in the Third Wave where midwifery is again under attack...and any form of alternative healing is again being weakened or eradicated.
See here for a video exploring this topic in more detail
Categories
All
Dating
Feminism
Intimacy
Musing
My Poems
Myth Busting
New Masculinity
PERSONAL STORIES
Politics
Relationships
Sexuality
Spirituality
Author
Systems-Buster, Culture Creator, Visionary, Community -Builder, Writer and Speaker and Facilitator
-----
Energetic Healer, Conscious Relationships and Intimacy Counsellor, Coach,
For Solo and Couple Coaching,
LoveCoaching.com
Archives
December 2025
October 2025
September 2025
August 2025
June 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
June 2024
May 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
September 2018
RSS Feed