Archive for 2009

7. Ecological breastfeeding does space babies.

Friday, August 7th, 2009

“I am currently nursing my 17 month old without a return of my periods.”

 

“My son nurses on and off during the nights.  He is 22 months old and I have not had a period yet.”

 

“I thank you for the positive effect you’ve had on my mothering skills.  I nursed my first baby for 4 months and quit because of the inconvenience.  I nursed my second baby for 22 months because it was so very convenient.”

 

“Breastfeeding has a very definite effect on child spacing.  With my bottlefed children I conceived again at 8 months after childbirth despite other contraceptives.  It has been 15 months since the last baby was born.  No period yet.”

 

“We have a 21-month old boy, and I am still ecologically nursing him.  We have been trying to get pregnant since January.  I am so glad that I am still nursing my son, because I know that it is so beneficial for him.  But I have to admit I am starting to worry that our babies will be so far apart that I won’t have very many!  My husband and I would like a large family, but I probably just need to work on my patience?  At first, I thought about weaning my son so that we could more easily get pregnant, but my husband didn’t think that was a good reason to wean.  I think I agree with him now, because I see how good nursing is for my 21-month-old.”

 

“My religion, Islam, encourages breastfeeding for two years and, according to some Muslim scholars, allows birth control to be practiced within that two-year period.  I feel that so many people ignore breastfeeding as a form of natural child spacing.  The techniques you describe are entirely compatible with my religion.”

 

“As a Protestant, eco-breastfeeding had never been presented to my husband and me as a logical way to have a family.  Many of my acquaintances are put right on the IUD after their first baby, and I think it’s a shame when God intended His way of spacing little ones.”

 

“[As a Jewish mother] I practice ecological breastfeeding (I nurse my babies based on Sheila Kippley’s book) and therefore have gotten a 26 month space between my 2 girls. My husband and I don’t want to have to decide when to have or not have a baby. We are only smart enough to know that we aren’t smart enough to know when is really the “best time” and we would rather if Hashem took care of that decision.  But what I do think is important for women to know is that you do not have to have your babies a year (or in some cases 11 months) apart in order to be a good Jewish woman. If you practice ecological breastfeeding which in a nutshell includes unrestricted nursing (no feeding schedules!), and no bottles or pacifiers you can get that breather between babies naturally—as it was meant to be—from Hashem!”

 

            Interested in God’s plan for spacing babies?  Read the book on this topic, The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor. 

 

Sheila Kippley

The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor

6. Ecological breastfeeding does space babies.

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

            Professionals and clergy can change.  Dr. Otto Schaefer, a German doctor, went to the Inuits in Canada, teaching the merits of formula.  He wrote down everything he observed and soon realized he was dead wrong about formula.  The observed facts led him to conclude that “breastfeeding had a greater influence on the life and health of infants than any other single factor” and that “the traditional Inuit custom of breastfeeding up until the age of three years…provided an effective type of birth control.” 

            Breastfeeding is God’s plan for baby care and baby spacing.  Today the Catholic Church speaks out against contraception in Humanae Vitae, and many in the Church promote natural family planning by charting the woman’s fertility and promoting the theology of the body.  John and I have promoted and taught ecological breastfeeding to space babies since 1969.  The research is there.  Ecological breastfeeding has so many health and emotional benefits for the mother and baby, including natural child spacing, that it should no longer be ignored by other NFP organizations, the clergy or church representatives.

            Learn God’s plan for natural child spacing by reading The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor.  Learn how the “theology of the body” is related to breastfeeding by reading Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood.

 

Sheila Kippley

The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor

5. Ecological breastfeeding does space babies.

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

            In 1972 with 29 ecological breastfeeding cases and in 1989 with almost 100 ecological breastfeeding cases studied, we published similar results.  American mothers doing ecological breastfeeding according to the Seven Standards averaged 14.5 months without menstruation after childbirth, proving that breastfeeding can be used by American mothers to space their babies naturally.

            The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention studied 173,205 births in Utah from 1989 to 1996 and found that babies were at higher risk for poor health if born too close or too far apart.  This study concluded that the best spacing for the health of babies was a 2.5 year interval.  Such a study of a selected culture is more suggestive than conclusive.  But it does suggest that the natural spacing via breastfeeding may have another benefit.  In our studies, 70% of the eco-breastfeeding moms had their first period between 9 and 20 months postpartum.  If they became fertile and pregnant immediately, they would have births between 19 and 30 months, for an average of a two year natural spacing.

            Learn to appreciate nature’s way built into a woman’s reproductive system and the importance of ecological breastfeeding in this whole process. 

 

Sheila Kippley

The Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor