Natural Family Planning: Breastfeeding Spaces Babies

August 1st, 2019

Ecological Breastfeeding spaces babies naturally.  No periodic abstinence is required for this form of Natural Family Planning. I first learned about this in 1964 and wanted to learn more.  I was excited to begin my research on natural child spacing in 1966 at the University of San Francisco Medical Center library.  I continued my research in 1968 at the public health department library in Regina, Saskatchewan.  For fun and for this series of blogs, I reviewed all the research I collected up through 1968.  Here are the totals:  1 study in 1895; 2 in the 1930s; 6 in the 1940s; 7 in the 1950s; and 14 from 1960-1968.  All these papers dealt with the effect of lactation upon the reproductive cycle.  These papers dealt with full or mixed breastfeeding, but none of them dealt with the maternal behaviors which we have found are important for natural spacing.  We teach these behaviors with the Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding.  These Standards will be discussed soon in this series of blogs for World Breastfeeding Week.  The published research for each Standard or behavior required for natural spacing is in my book, The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor.  It is a short book, easy to read and costs little.  We give the book free to every couple who attends our local NFP classes in Cincinnati.

The daily blogs for this World Breastfeeding Week will focus on the research showing that a long absence from menstruation can occur for certain breastfeeding mothers.  Why?  Because a certain type of breastfeeding continues to keep the reproductive system at rest.

Because this information has been made available since 1969 through our books and our NFP apostolates, we are amazed that this information is ignored by most of those in the Natural Family Planning movement as well as by the Church and the government. 

In 1983, Daniel T. Halperin covered this topic for his master’s thesis:  “Infant Feeding in Honduras:  Mixed Feeding, Child Spacing and some Policy Implications.”  He was a strong promoter of natural birth spacing through breastfeeding.  He was exposed to parents and health workers in Honduras who laughed at the idea that breastfeeding could space babies.  “Neither of three family planning officials with whom I spoke believed that lactation had significant influence on fertility.”  Yet the women in Honduras said they would prefer “two years or more” spacing.  This culture, however, favored bottles, pacifiers, early solids, and practices which cause fertility to return early.  Most parents were Catholic and feared “the widely-reported physical dangers associated with birth-control pills, IUDs, injections, etc.”

Mr. Halperin stated that while technological contraceptive devices work “against God’s will,” lactation and its child spacing effect are forms of the natural carrying-out “of His will.”

Tomorrow.  Today we saw a Honduran culture where natural child spacing via breastfeeding was uncommon.  Tomorrow we will see a culture where traditional breastfeeding does indeed space babies.
Sheila Kippley
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding

 

Natural Family Planning Books by the Kippleys at 50% discount

July 29th, 2019

During NFP Week and running through the following World Breastfeeding Week (July 21-August 7), there will be a 50% discount at lulu on the following books below.  World Breastfeeding Week begins August 1 and runs through August 7.

Natural Family Planning:  The Complete Approach  (coil edition recommended for learners; perfect bound for libraries).  All you would want to know about NFP and all the fertility signs  plus related Church teaching.  Price: $18.95.  Sale at $9.47

The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding  The book to have if you want a natural spacing of births.  An abstinence-free NFP option for couples beginning their families.  Mothers who follow this natural mothering plan may go 1 or 2 years without menstruation after childbirth.  God’s plan for mothers and babies.  The best healthy option for both mother and baby.  Price at $11.99.  Sale at $5.99

Battle-Scarred: Justice Can Be Elusive  The Archdiocese of Regina has recently apologized, but 50 years ago why did a Catholic parish pay the Kippleys to leave Canada and never return?  Read about the early history of the NFP movement and the Couple to Couple League.  Why did the Kippleys start NFP International?  Price at $24.99  Sale at $12.49

Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing: The Ecology of Natural Mothering  This book deals with the culture and how the ecological-breastfeeding mother adapts to a bottle-feeding society. In this classic Harper & Row edition, witnesses express their enthusiasm for eco-breastfeeding.  Price at $14.95  Sale at $7.47

Sale begins July 21st and runs through August 7th.  E-books are not on sale.

Go to: https://www.lulu.com/shop/search.ep?keyWords=Kippley&type=  Or go to lulu.com and search Kippley.

 

Natural Family Planning and Humanae Vitae 17 and Sodomy

July 27th, 2019

The text of Humanae Vitae 17 from the Vatican.va website with my boldface:

Consequences of Artificial Methods

  1. Responsible men can become more deeply convinced of the truth of the doctrine laid down by the Church on this issue if they reflect on the consequences of methods and plans for artificial birth control. Let them first consider how easily this course of action could open wide the way for marital infidelity and a general lowering of moral standards. Not much experience is needed to be fully aware of human weakness and to understand that human beings—and especially the young, who are so exposed to temptation—need incentives to keep the moral law, and it is an evil thing to make it easy for them to break that law. Another effect that gives cause for alarm is that a man who grows accustomed to the use of contraceptive methods may forget the reverence due to a woman, and, disregarding her physical and emotional equilibrium, reduce her to being a mere instrument for the satisfaction of his own desires, no longer considering her as his partner whom he should surround with care and affection.

“Finally, careful consideration should be given to the danger of this power passing into the hands of those public authorities who care little for the precepts of the moral law. Who will blame a government which in its attempt to resolve the problems affecting an entire country resorts to the same measures as are regarded as lawful by married people in the solution of a particular family difficulty? Who will prevent public authorities from favoring those contraceptive methods which they consider more effective? Should they regard this as necessary, they may even impose their use on everyone. It could well happen, therefore, that when people, either individually or in family or social life, experience the inherent difficulties of the divine law and are determined to avoid them, they may give into the hands of public authorities the power to intervene in the most personal and intimate responsibility of husband and wife.”

Good books and many lectures have focused on the four boldfaced phrases above. The Pope was scorned for these predictions in 1968 but history has proved that he was indeed a prophet.

There is, however, a significant omission that is highly relevant to the sexual Scandal so publicized since 2002.  The Pope makes no reference to sodomy.  This is surprising for three reasons.  First, when the Anglicans were debating marital contraception in 1930, their conservative bishops warned that the acceptance of contraception would lead to the acceptance of sodomy.  How right they were; they now have bishops in same-sex marriages. Second, Fr. John Ford, SJ, a member of the papal birth control commission, had written about the Anglican discussion in a book on marriage morality.  Third, the Minority or the birth control commission clearly warned, as the conservative Anglicans had done, that the acceptance of marital contraception could not say “NO” to sodomy.  The Majority members replied that they did not accept sodomy, but that was only their personal preference.  They could not show that the logic of accepting contraception would not also allow sodomy.

The logic becomes clear if you ask yourself some basic questions.  1. Who put together in one act what we commonly call “making love” and “making babies”?  A theist has to answer, “God Himself.”  2.  What is contraception except the studied effort to take apart what God Himself has put together in the human sexual act?  That’s precisely what every form of contraceptive behavior is.  Thus the acceptance of marital contraception is not just the acceptance of a behavior.  It also entails the acceptance of the principle that modern man and woman can take apart what God has put together in the area of love, marriage and sexuality.  There is no question: the dissent from Humanae Vitae opened the door to the acceptance of sodomy.  In fact, that dissent opened the door to the acceptance of any imaginable sexual behavior between parties of legal age and mutual consent.

This is certainly not a secret.  In 1971, a theological journal published an article that showed that the decision-making principles of the dissenters could not say NO to spouse swapping,  And in 1977 a group of dissents published a book in which they confirm what I have written here.

Please pray for the bishops of the Church Universal that ALL of them soon preach and teach what the Lord Jesus teaches about marriage and which applies just as much to the marriage act as to the covenant of marriage: “What God has put together, let no one take apart.“

John F. Kippley
Sex and the Marriage Covenant