Archive for the ‘NFP’ Category

3. Natural Family Planning: VISION NOW + 20

Sunday, November 23rd, 2014

The Organization

In its Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity, the Fathers of Vatican Council II described the model lay apostolate.

  • It would “encourage a closer harmony between the everyday life of the members and their faith”; such associations “must be given primary consideration” (n. 19).
  • In order to meet the needs of cities and rural areas, “laymen should not limit their cooperation to the parochial or diocesan boundaries but strive to extend it to interparochial, interdiocesan, national, and international fields” (n.10).
  • “In the present circumstances, it is quite necessary that the united and organized form of the lay apostolate be strengthened” (n.18).
  • “Scattering of energies must be avoided” (n. 19).
  • “Pastors should welcome the laity who work in this apostolate and should make sure that their situation meets the demands of justice, equity and charity” (n. 22).

In the closing passages of Humanae Vitae, Pope Paul VI endorsed a particular form of teaching natural family planning:  “Among the fruits which ripen forth from a generous effort of fidelity to the divine law, one of the most precious is that married couples themselves not infrequently feel the desire to communicate their experience to others. Thus there comes to be included in the vast pattern of the vocation of the laity a new and most noteworthy form of the apostolate of like to like; it is married couples themselves who become apostles and guides to other married couples. This is assuredly, among so many forms of apostolate, one of those which seem most opportune today” (n. 26).

Natural Family Planning International, Inc. (NFPI) is a fruit of Vatican II and Humanae Vitae.

Next week:  A Plan

John F. Kippley (September 2014)

 

Natural Family Planning: Breastfeeding and Bed-Sharing

Sunday, November 2nd, 2014

When promoting ecological breastfeeding for all its benefits including the natural spacing of births, bed-sharing is taught.  At one of Dr. James McKenna’s lecture, he gave out two bed-sharing papers.  One sheet showed 10 benefits of bed-sharing for the baby and the other, 10 benefits for the mother.  Interestingly, one of the 10 bed-sharing benefits for the mother was significantly highlighted.  That benefit was namely,  amenorrhea for the mother, which he noted “suppresses ovulation thereby increasing birth interval.”

We have been teaching ecological breastfeeding since the late Sixties, and no one has written us saying they lost their baby due to ecological breastfeeding.  The last blog I wrote mentioned how to do safe bed-sharing, and the NFPI website has information on this at the home page at “links.”

I recently heard from a mother who lost her baby while ecologically breastfeeding but she was not bed-sharing at the time. The baby was alone in an adult bed, slept on her tummy, and was developmentally behind.  The mother  obviously regrets leaving the baby alone, thinking she could have been there to help.  Here is part of her correspondence to me:

“I bought your book the Seven Standards of Ecological Nursing, and following your 7 standards helped me remain without periods till my 3rd child was 9 months old. I was so happy I even told all my friends about your book. I used your 7 standards for my 4th child and was still without menstruating at 6 months postpartum when she died suddenly in her sleep.. She loved nursing on demand, co-sleeping and being held in the moby  wrap.  Sadly she died in her sleep Friday, August 1st. In the evening I nursed her to sleep while we were both lying in my big double bed, then I put her sleeping on tummy (the position she preferred sleeping in) near corner of bed which was fully next to the wall. Away from my pillow. I covered her lower body with my quilt. She was dressed warmly and wearing a hat because it was such a cold winter night. (I live in the southern hemisphere). (She used to cry when she was too cold and usually cried when left sleeping on her back). The heater was on and window was slightly open. I left her sleeping peacefully in my bed and went out of the room. A bit later I heard her cry for a very brief short time and stopped crying. I didn’t go to her because I thought she went back to sleep like she sometimes does to resettle herself without me. When I was about to go to sleep I looked for her in my bed but I did not see her. Then I saw a lump under my quilt. I picked up my quilt and found my baby lifeless all the way on the other side of my bed under my quilt. She had never before moved herself such a far distance in her life. She had a constant runny nose and was slightly behind developmentally. No one in my house smokes or drinks alcohol.  I would love to co-sleep with my next baby g-d willing when I will be blessed with one.”  (The writer’s spelling of the divine name is a Jewish custom.)

I use this sad experience to stress one other rule regarding bed-sharing and ecological breastfeeding.  Never leave your baby unattendedKeep your baby with you in your area of activity or sleep, whether the baby is sleeping or not.

During the day if I was tired, I nursed my baby in our bed.  If I awoke, I would bring the baby to my area of activity. Many times I had a firm quilt on the floor in the corner of the dining room and nursed the baby to sleep and I rested there while doing so.  If I had to go downstairs to do laundry, the infant came with me.  In the evening I would nurse the baby to sleep and kept the sleeping baby near us until we retired for the evening and brought the baby to our bed.

Some mothers have written me that their baby awakes and cries because mother is not there.  With mother-baby togetherness, as I have described, this is rare because mother is right there or nearby.  I have always stressed that the key to ecological breastfeeding is mother-baby togetherness.  This togetherness is best for the baby, and it is also best for the mother.

Please read what the SIDS researcher said this month — that bed-sharing is NOT dangerous.

Sheila Kippley
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding (print or e-book)

Natural Family Planning: Breastfeeding and Bed-sharing

Sunday, October 26th, 2014

The most natural way to space babies is the one designed by God since the beginning of the human race.  Natural baby spacing is achieved by a natural form of mothering we call ecological breastfeeding according to the Seven Standards, maternal behaviors that foster frequent suckling.  One of these maternal behaviors associated with a lengthy amenorrhea is bed-sharing where the mother sleeps with her baby and nurses the baby while doing so.

Some parents are afraid they will harm their baby if the breastfeeding mother sleeps with her baby.  I know because I was once one of those mothers!  What does the research show?  As breastfeeding advocate Linda J. Smith (MPH, FACCE, IBCLC, FILCA) has stated on many occasions: “The sober, non-smoking, breastfeeding mother on a safe surface is NOT a risk to her baby.”  

La Leche League International recently made a similar claim in their online New Beginnings, Issue 3, 2014:  If you follow LLL”s  Safe Sleep Seven guidelines, “meeting all seven means that your baby’s risk of SIDS when he’s sleeping next to you in your bed is no greater than when he’s alone in a crib.”

The seven guidelines are these: 1) No smoking, 2) sober parents, 3) breastfeeding mother day and night, 4) healthy full-term baby, 5) baby on back [this usually happens automatically when baby breastfeeds], 6) no sweat and no swaddling, and 7) safe surface.

The main benefit to sleeping with your baby during the night is that it is one job you can do in your sleep and this means the mother is usually well-rested in the morning.

At NFPI’s website, on the home page, scroll down on the left side and click “links.”  At links, you will find all kinds of information on what constitutes a safe surface and how to bed-share safely.  More information on safe sleep is also available in The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor (e-book or print).

Remember Linda Smith’s words:   “The sober, non-smoking, breastfeeding mother on a safe surface is NOT a risk to her baby.

More on this topic next week.

Sheila Kippley
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor