Archive for the ‘About Us’ Category

NFP Week – 45th Anniversary of Humanae Vitae

Sunday, July 21st, 2013

Introduction:  The week of July 21-27, 2013 celebrates the 45th anniversary of Humanae Vitae issued by Pope Paul VI on July 25, 1968.  A recent letter to the editor in our local Cincinnati tabloid criticized the bishops for suppressing dissent.  My husband’s letter showing the error of that opinion was, of course, not published.  The reality is that the dissent movement suppressed those who taught orthodoxy.  What follows is our personal experience with that.  Subsequent blogs this week reflect our experiences, most of which are related to the effort to support Humanae Vitae intellectually and to provide practical help to live it.

In the academic year 1967-1968, my husband became known for teaching parish adult education courses that were thoroughly orthodox, including the received teaching against contraception. One morning about the start of my ninth month of a pregnancy, he was summarily fired, no reasons ever given, no defense possible.  A person who had been an insider on the decision a year previous to hire John gave us her opinion: The pastor had hoped that this lay theologian would be promoting the acceptance of contraception, something the pastor didn’t dare to do publicly because he had ambitions to be a bishop some day.  If that is correct, John became the first victim of the dissent movement—even before the encyclical was officially published.

John started a job search which was interesting in many ways and the following excerpt is his experience with a parish in the Greater Minneapolis area.  ( I will be blogging daily during NFP Week taking excerpts from his memoirs, Battle-Scarred.)

The Job Search
I left on June 15th for two meetings. On the 17th I met with the Executive Board and passed with flying colors. On the 18th I met with the whole Board with the same result…..However, I was asked to attend a weekend meeting in early July to meet the other new staff members and get a better feel for the parish. I flew back to Minneapolis on July 4 for an unforgettable experience.

At our first “T-group” session, one of the young men began to tell a sad story about himself and he actually started crying. This was totally strange to me…. Then we had an evaluation of that performance, and the young man with the sad story criticized me very directly for not coming to his aid. This was touchy-feely at its max, my first experience with sensitivity training. I never knew whether the young man was genuine or was playing a part in a prearranged act… We were not given the opportunity to attend one of the regular parish Sunday morning Masses, so I thought we would be having Mass in the afternoon. Not at all. As the pastor was summarizing the weekend on Sunday afternoon, I asked him when we were going to have Mass. “Oh,” he replied, “this whole weekend has been one big Eucharist.”
(Excerpt from Battle-Scarred, pages 21-22)  Battle-Scarred: Justice Can Be Elusive by John F. Kippley is available at a 50% discount at lulu.com during NFP week.
Everyone has the right to know about eco-breastfeeding:  Right to Know: Ecological Breastfeeding blog

12. Breastfeeding and Natural Family Planning

Sunday, June 23rd, 2013

Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood

Beginning in 2004, after we were no longer associated with the Couple to Couple League (CCL), I had the time to do more writing.  For years mothers asked me if I would ever write another book.  I always said “no,” but now I had the time.  I wanted to see more Catholic mothers nurse and thought that if I gave a spiritual emphasis to my topic, there might be more Catholic parents open to breastfeeding their baby.

In the past I spoke mainly to La Leche League and NFP groups, but in the more recent years, I had received invitations to speak at Catholic gatherings.  I began using Scripture and the encyclicals when speaking about breastfeeding.  For example, at a weekend retreat on The Gospel of Life, I talked about breastfeeding using only this encyclical.  Those “spiritual” talks were the basis for my new book, Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood (Sophia Institute Press, 2005).

There are too many Catholics who believe that formula is just as good.  After all, they say, “I bottle-fed all my children and they turned out okay.”  But a Catholic should also ask, “Is there any body of biblical or Church teaching on this subject?”  I found there was breastfeeding support from Church leaders, Scripture, and the encyclicals.

As John and I see it, parents are obliged to make a reasonable effort to do what is best for their children, and there’s no doubt that breastfeeding is certainly best.  There’s more than ample research that shows that formula is a poor choice for babies.  Breastfeeding & Catholic Motherhood provides the strong evidence that all babies should be breastfed both for short-term as well as long-term benefits.

Another concern is that many persons have been too quick to say, “We know that that doesn’t work!”  The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding was written to answer those objections and to show that breastfeeding does space babies.

When the new management of the Couple to Couple League dropped the three key charisms that we brought to the founding of CCL in 1971, we formed a new organization called NFP International.  By doing so, we were able to keep these concepts alive, especially the teaching of ecological breastfeeding which CCL had dropped.

There are several key points about breastfeeding and natural family planning, points that I have stressed repeatedly over the years.

∙  Ecological breastfeeding is the only type of breastfeeding associated with extended breastfeeding infertility or natural child spacing.  It truly is a natural family planning option.  God does have a natural plan for spacing babies.

∙  A nursing mother does not have to wean her baby in order to use systematic NFP once her fertility returns.

∙   Extended breastfeeding and extended amenorrhea are the norms, and by extended I mean at least a year of each.

∙  Breastfeeding brings both physical and emotional benefits to both mother and baby.   Experts emphasize the importance of the presence of the mother during the first three years of life for optimal emotional development of the baby.  Prolonged lactation ensures the presence of the mother.  God’s ways are very good.

∙  The Catholic Church has promoted breastfeeding and there are valid reasons for this. Any priest or mother interested in teaching ecological breastfeeding in their parish can use Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 6 of the NFPI manual.  There is no need to undergo teacher training for this.  Or one can contact Catholic Nursing Mothers League.  This organization promotes ecological breastfeeding and provides resources to aid discussion at breastfeeding meetings.

Sheila Kippley
Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding

11. Breastfeeding and Natural Family Planning

Sunday, June 16th, 2013

Our two studies show that American nursing mothers who followed the Seven Standards averaged 14½ months of amenorrhea.  (J. and S. Kippley, “The Relation between Breastfeeding and Amenorrhea: Report of a Survey,” JOGN Nursing, Nov.-Dec. 1972, 15-21.  Also “The Spacing of Babies with Ecological Breastfeeding,” International Review, Spring/Summer 1989, 107-116.)   These and other studies on breastfeeding infertility are available at our website, www.nfpandmore.org.

Later studies concerning ecological breastfeeding were done by H. William Taylor. His latest research confirmed that ecological breastfeeding certainly spaces babies.  Mothers who nursed in a cultural way had a median time of 8.2 months before their first menses, while  mothers who nursed more in line with ecological breastfeeding had a median time of 12.8 months before their first menses.  (“Continuously Recorded Suckling Behavior and Its Effect on Lactational Amenorrhoea,” Journal of Biosocial Science, 1999, 31: 289-310)

In this study Taylor also established a sub-group of mothers whose practices were close to the Seven Standards.  That is, Taylor eliminated those mothers who returned to work outside the home, who did not sleep with their baby at night, who introduced solids before six months, and who nursed less than a median of 9 times a day in the first three months.  Thus he ended up with a group of mothers who were following a more ecological breastfeeding program; these 55 mothers had a median wait of 15.9 months before their first menses.  (Personal correspondence after previous research was submitted to Cambridge University for publication, May 27, 1998)

From the feedback I have received, there are many nursing mothers using natural child spacing and systematic natural family planning as a result of our books, writings and talks. My husband also promotes the breastfeeding aspect of natural family planning whenever he has a chance to do so.  Both of us continually remind others that breastfeeding is one way to experience natural baby spacing.  In our opinion ecological breastfeeding  should be included in any discussion or teaching on natural family planning.

Worldwide, breastfeeding is used much more than systematic NFP to space children naturally.  Since the beginning of the human race and up to the early 1900s, breastfeeding was the only option in accord with Catholic teaching except total abstinence.   All couples deserve to know this option as well as systematic NFP.  In other words, breastfeeding is an excellent NFP choice.

Sheila Kippley
Breastfeeding and Catholic Motherhood
The Seven Standards of Ecological Breastfeeding