HOW
DOES NFP ENRICH A COUPLE’S RELATIONSHIP? |
This reflection comes from Mary Shivanandan, STD. More
information on NFP can be found at http://www.usccb.org/prolife/issues/nfp/intronfp.shtm1#6.
Cordially yours,
Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB
Couples who adopt NFP to space the births of children find
that it brings about many positive changes in their
relationship and even becomes a way of life. It begins with
acceptance, and even wonder, at the way the human body is
made. As one woman noted, "Knowing and learning about what
goes on inside of my unique body amazed me."* Women
especially find this information empowering. The woman gains
a new respect for herself and often finds that her husband
has a new supportive attitude: "My husband respects me as a
person in my own right. He accepts my fertility as part of
me." This new-found confidence contrasts with what one woman
explained about how she felt using contraceptives: "I was
required to sacrifice my health ... I felt as if I were an
object and not an equal partner in our marriage."
Couples using NFP accept their fertility not as a nuisance
or even a disease, but as a gift. When the physical
pleasures of sexual intercourse are a couple's primary
focus, the woman can feel used. NFP treats the woman not as
a sexual object, but as the unique person she is. NFP does
not downplay the importance of sexual union and sexual
pleasure. Through the practice of periodic abstinence NFP
helps couples to find other ways in which to be attentive to
each other in each cycle. These other ways may be through
cooking a favorite dish, or bringing home flowers. NFP can
reignite the romance of dating for a married couple. As
couples who use NFP often say: "Every cycle we have a
wedding night." When spouses love one another enough to
abstain and be more considerate of each other, both become
more secure in their relationship.
Periodic abstinence is difficult at times. It also brings
its own reward. Men find they can direct sexual urges in the
service of love and not be controlled by it. Only if a man
is in full possession of himself can he love his wife well.
As one husband said, "NFP has challenged me to self-mastery
so that I can freely give of myself." The nature of married
love is total self-giving. If one is controlled by sex or
withholds part of himself or herself (his or her fertility),
that person cannot give totally to another. Self-mastery, on
the other hand, can actually enhance sexual pleasure. Many
couples explain: "Giving our whole selves to each other
intensified the sensations of pleasure and the feeling of
unity in this expression of our love."
When NFP is adopted as a lifestyle, fertility is regarded as
a gift and children are valued and welcomed. A sense of awe
at their power to procreate strikes many couples during the
fertile time. One couple remarked that "NFP opened our
hearts to children ... Children are a gift, a blessing, not
a burden." Others have remarked that the time of fertility
comes to be viewed with "a tremendous reverence" because
fertility "is the time God created us to create." When a
couple knows the most fertile time in the cycle and tries to
achieve pregnancy, it becomes a shared joy.
NFP instruction puts the emphasis on a couple's shared
responsibility not only for having children, but also for
managing their combined fertility. Taking joint
responsibility for fertility means that both spouses accept
the challenge of abstinence during the fertile phase if they
wish to avoid pregnancy. NFP requires couples to
communicate. It helps them to talk about many things that
may have been difficult to talk about before, including
their sexuality. Through charting their fertility, they have
a starting point for discussing the intimate aspects of
their life, such as their sexual feelings and desires and
their hopes or fears about pregnancy. Good, substantive
interpersonal communication strengthens a marriage.
Many couples say that an NFP lifestyle deepens their faith
in God. "(NFP) involved us with the Truth ....We experienced
... the conversion point in our lives." "NFP is putting
ourselves in God's hands, totally allowing Him to work
spiritually in our lives." With so many rewards for those
who persevere with NFP it would be surprising if there were
not also challenges. As one husband says: "The reality is
that NFP is challenging .... (But) it is clear to me that
working together through the tough times strengthens and
enriches our marriage." And as another spouse says: "The
value I experience in NFP is in the long run .... It forces
you to place your immediate choices in the context of
spouse, children, family and Creator."
Mary Shivanandan, STD
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