Archive for March, 2010

Fr. Marx, Manual Update, and Doering Study

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Fr. Paul Marx, OSB
At about 8:10 a.m. on Saturday, March 20, just shy of his 90th birthday, Father Paul Marx, OSB, went to his eternal reward.  In his college years at St. John’s in Collegeville, MN, he and Dr. Konald Prem played on the same football team.  He was ordained a Benedictine priest in 1947 and then earned his doctorate in Family Sociology.  In the Fifties and Sixties, as a professor at St. John’s, he promoted natural family planning in his sociology courses.  He liked to tell us newcomers to the pro-chastity movement that he used to be called Father Temperature.  He was the priestly patriarch of the pro-life movement, and he knew from the beginning that a society’s acceptance of contraception inevitably leads that society to accept abortion.  He founded the Human Life Center at St. John’s University in 1972 to promote natural family planning, and in 1980 he founded Human Life International to continue that work and to focus even more on combating the growing international acceptance of abortion.  When he returned to St. John’s Abbey about ten years ago, he continued to support pro-life endeavors behind the scenes.  Since we founded NFP International in 2004, Father Marx has been a regular contributor and correspondent.  John has been privileged to visit him three times in those years.  We pray for him and to him for his intercession for this pro-family and pro-life apostolate.

Updated First Edition of NFPI Manual
An updated version of Natural Family Planning: The Complete Approach has been posted to the NFP International website and is also available for purchase from Lulu.com.  At the website, the manual is now in one PDF instead of ten separate PDFs.  We are also asking for registration and a donation of $10.  For those who are truly poor, it is still available for free.  

Doering’s Temperature Study Available in English
In 1967 Professor and Doctor G. K. Doering published his temperature-only NFP study in a German language medical journal.  We have quoted from its abstract in English for many years, but we did not have an English translation.  Recently, we hired a translator who produced a good literal translation.  Then our Czech-Republic and German-speaking colleague, David Prentis reviewed it and modified it in terms of specialized NFP terminology.  We are pleased to have it available at the NFP International website.  It provides excellent support for continuing to teach and use the temperature sign, and it is well worth your reading.

Students can Breastfeed

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

A theology professor and friend told me that some students were bringing their breastfed babies to school!   However, the mothers are not allowed to bring their babies to class.  When the mother is in class, someone else takes care of her baby.   The mother is allowed to breastfeed her baby in the student lounge.   

The following is a detailed explanation of how one mother breastfed her baby while going to school.
       “I was given a copy of [your NFP manual] as a Christmas gift a few years ago at the Catholic school where I was working part-time.  What an awesome gift!  I was so glad that the information on ecological breastfeeding was included in my edition, because I was two months pregnant when I was given the book.  I feel that the sheer volume of conflicting information on infant care can be dizzying for a first-time mother.  However, I feel like the information on eco-breastfeeding gave me some bearings in the direction of God’s plan for mothering and child spacing.  And that’s the best thing I could ask for!  I love breastfeeding, have had great success with it, and the only person who loves it more than me is my ten-month-old son.
       I suspect that without the guidelines, I would have likely done pumping and bottlefeeding–since I was a student full-time, near graduating, the first six months of his life!  I would have pumped, left him with a sitter, and picked him up later.  Because of what you wrote, I only used ONE bottle that entire six months!  I took him to the university WITH me, spaced my classes with an hour break between each hour-long class, and had the sitter keep him in the foyer outside.  If he cried, I left class to nurse him, and I nursed him to sleep between each class.  It was hard, Mrs. kippley, but because of the challenge you set for me, I never had to leave him, and our nursing relationship made our bond even stronger.  The mutual need and love for each other…I don’t know how to describe it; it was very beautiful.  I will treasure those memories forever.”

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

The Seven Standards for Spacing Babies

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding informs women about a form of baby spacing that:

       • is unknown to most women and their husbands

       • provides extended natural infertility

       • is as “green” as it gets

       • is healthiest for both mother and baby

       • appeals to women of faith and secularity

       • spaces babies about two years apart, on the average.

For more information on the baby spacing effect of breastfeeding, read The Seven standards of Ecological Breastfeeding: The Frequency Factor.
 
       • This book explains the maternal behaviors associated with breastfeeding infertility.

       • This book addresses those who say “It doesn’t work as a baby spacer.”