Yes you can get HPV using the rhythm method if your partner is infected with HPV.
Many couples are using Natural Methods of Contraception including rhythm method.
Yes, you can transmit HPV or other STDs if you have been diagnosed with HPV. Using condoms can lower the risk.
he has rhythm she has lots of rhythm in the way the gives him oral sex
He's got so much rhythm; he could be a drummer! His tap dancing is very good; he has got rhythm.
The birth control pill is meant to prevent ovulation. If ovulation occurs, the timing will be unpredictable, making the rhythm method useless.
Because before a man ejaculates, he secretes pre-ejaculation fluid which he cannot feel. That fluid contains sperm. Also because not every womens cycle is always regular.
It doesn't work... there's an old joke about what you call people who practice the rhythm method, "Mommy and daddy". But if you insist: Find out when the woman ovulates, then only be intimate when you're more than a week away, either before or afterward. But it's almost guaranteed to make you parents. I heard that joke about withdrawal. The rhythm method does work but you have to be very controlled.
Other methods include -- QWERTY -- Rhythm -- Socratic -- IUD
I read that the Duggars use NOTHING, but they may avoid sex during certain times regarding their personal and religious health. I personally think they SHOULD use the rhythm method!
Ballad
A folk method of family planning is sometimes called a traditional method. These are methods that were used before modern birth control and include the rhythm method, withdraw method, and abstinence.
There is no commercially available test to tell someone they don't have HPV. An HPV test is sometimes done in conjunction with a Pap smear. This test looks for high-risk HPV subtypes on the cervix. It can't tell you that you don't have HPV. Most people contract HPV soon after becoming sexually active. If you are sexually active, you have probably been exposed to HPV. There is nothing special you need to do if you have HPV. You should consider getting the HPV vaccine, using condoms or abstaining from sex, and, if you're female, should get pap smears regularly as advised by your women's health care provider.