Look Both Ways

I was awakened to an email alert the other day. Usually, I don't activate alert chimes on my email. I find them incredibly annoying, but I was waiting to breathe a sigh of relief upon the arrival of this particular post. So, I rubbed sleep from my eyes and blinked to read:

 

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And then I saw that someone had already responded.

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The first email is from our "boy." The "boy" is 23. He went to college, survived, graduated, got a great job at a major newspaper, and is engaged to be married. Said newspaper put him in the sports department, made him Senior Social Media Editor, and sent him to London to cover the Olympics.

His dad, of the second email, has a pretty cool sports journalism job, too. He could have offered him all kinds of advice. Instead, he reminds him to look both ways. I love that boy.  I love that dad.

Sometimes, my heart is so full I think it could burst.

needle & thREAD

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I finally finished those dresses! Details, details:

The fabric is Zoe Pearn's Sweet Nothings. It appears to be very sold out. I bought a whole bunch of it for curtains and then decided otherwise. Happy thing, that.

The pattern is Oliver + S Seashore Sundress in a 3, 5, and 12. 

I'm reading Stratford Caldecott's Beauty in the World: Rethinking the Foundations of Education. It's my inspiration before heading into mega planning mode for the coming year. It's an awesome summer read whether you educate your children at home or not. We all need this book.

I'll be back within the week with a review and a giveaway.

What about you? Sewing? Reading? A little of both? What's on your summer reading list? Do you have a summer sewing list?  Or are you embroidering? Pulling a needle with thread through lovely fabric to make life more beautiful somehow? Would you share with us just a single photo (or more) and a brief description of what you're up to? Will you tell us about what you're reading, also? Would you talk sewing and books with us? I'd love that so much.

Make sure the link you submit is to the URL of your blog post or your specific Flickr photo and not your main blog URL or Flickr Photostream. Please be sure and link to your current needle and thREAD post below in the comments, and not a needle and thREAD post from a previous week. If you don't have a blog, please post a photo to the needle & thREAD group at Flickr
       Include a link back to this post in your blog post or on your flickr photo page so that others who may want to join the needle and thREAD fun can find us! Feel free to grab a button here (in one of several colors) so that you can use the button to link:-).

 

NFP: Open to the Possibility of Life

This my third installation of NFP Throwback in honor of NFP Awareness Week. For the full introduction, please read here. For the second installation, read here.

One quick note: I'm mostly offline this week. I so appreciate your comments and I've been praying for commenters on the last two posts. I promise I'm not ignoring you! I'll be back to reflect and to talk a bit in the comment box towards the end of the week.

Without further ado, here's a column from Summer 1993. My current editorializing is in pink:

With my husband's blessing, I would like to share our personal story of what embracing the Church's teaching on human life has meant in our lives. When Mike and I were married six years ago, we understood Humanae Vitae to mean an openness to the possiblity of life. That was what we wanted and we neither sought to prevent conception or pursue it. A year later, our first son was born. When I held Michael, I was awed by him as most mothers are by their newborns, but I didn't yet grasp how precious life is. It had all been too easy.

For the next eighteen months, we struggled in our roles as newlyweds and new parents. Then we discovered I had cancer. Suddenly, the child we had taken for granted took on a whole new dimension. He was joy on dark days and diversion on painful ones. Some days, he was my soul reason for living. I had nutured and comforted him for the first year of his life and he returned the comfort a hundredfold during the next. It became very apparent that God had had a plan when He blessed us with this child so early in our marriage and I was grateful we'd been open to his creation.

Since my disease had a good prognosis, it was not my life I feared [that actually came later as I learned what it is to live forever in the shadow of cancer], but my ablity to bear life. In horror and disbelief, a few days after diagnosis, Mike and I sat across from an oncologist who told us I would never again carry a baby to term because of chemotherapy. Then, we found another doctor. We chose someone who understood that I not only wanted to survive, but that I desperately wanted to have more babies. He was much more optimistic and considered my fertility when prescribing treatment. 

After undergoing chemotherapy and radiation, it was imperative that I give my body sufficient time to recover before becoming pregnant again. I also needed to know that the cancer would not recur [realistically, we never have that guarantee]. The medical community encouraged us to use artificial birth control, but my husband and I were being called in another direction.

We talked with the Couple to Couple League in Cincinnati, Ohio and they referred us to an oncologist in Massachusetts who was on the CCL advisory board. Together, Mike and I learned how to properly practice NFP. Both my doctor and the oncologist from CCL warned that it could be some time before we saw any signs of fertility returning after treatment. The benefit of NFP was that I would know as my body returned to normal.

The next seven months were the most anxious of my entire life [in hindsight, 21 years later, I can safely say that period still ranks in the Top 5 Most Anxious Times]. I watched and waited for signs that the cancer had recurred. I watched and waited for signs of fertility. I prayed for life: mine and that of our future children. And I prayed for peace.

As soon as I knew it was possible to conceive, I asked my doctor if it were advisable. He gave me cautious approval, warning me that he thought it might take a while to conceive. Because of NFP, I knew the signs of fertility and I knew I could get pregnant. [This still makes me giggle. My oncologist was as close to the perfect doctor I've ever met. He was impeccably educated and utterly brilliant. But on that day, I was sure I knew better than he did.

There was a lot I didn't know though. I didn't know if the cancer would recur. I didn't know if I could carry to term. And I didn't know what God wanted. I was terrified. I agonized over the wisdom of bringing another life into my world where there were so few guarantees. Ultimately, I trusted Mike with the decision. And his reasoning was simple: All God asks is that we are open to the possiblity. He cannot work if we don't let Him. Two weeks later, I called my doctor to let him know I was expecting a baby. 

Despite the ease with which this baby was conceived, I was still not at peace. Everything we had learned about discernment said that if we were truly doing God's will, we would feel His peace. I suppose if I had been genuinely faith-filled, I would have simply been patient and trusted the Lord. But I asked for big signs. At one point, I begged God to send an angel to tell me everything was going to be okay.

Our second son, Matthew Christian, was born nearly three weeks after my due date (so much for not carrying to term). The hospital was unusually quiet that night and his birth was remarkably quick. Indescribable peace settled upon us. As I marvelled at his newborn sweetness, I found myself praying aloud. "He's beautiful, Lord. Not an angel but a real, live boy to live with us and remind us always of the infinite wisdom of Your plan in our lives. When I look at him I can't believe he's anything but Your perfect will for us. You didn't send an angel, but You did send a sign--a priceless gift--didn't You?"

And the baby smiled. 

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That was just the beginning. We learned well to trust. We learned that God's grace and strength had no bounds. He would offer a refresher course through the years. I shared a bit of the miracle of Patrick here. And Sarah's story--in addition to being a refresher course in grace for Mike and me--granted my older children a phenomenal view of how boundless God's good plan can be. There are more stories, not yet told here. I assure you, with every single baby, I was sure I couldn't do it. From the first (so soon and we were so young), to the last (they were so many and we were so old), each time I was sure I was not sufficient. And each time, I am certain, we could have made a good case for having a grave or serious reason not to have another.  Each time, God knew better.

Prayerful Sex

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This my second installation of NFP Throwback in honor of NFP Awareness Week. For the full introduction, please read here.

Without further ado, here's a column from Summer 1993. My current editorializing is in pink:

I recently asked a young man who is about to be married what advice he had received concerning marriage. He looked me straight in the eye and said, "The only advice my mother has given me is that no marriage can have too much of two things: sex and prayer." As I  recall, I turned very red and quickly inquired about china patterns. But the words have stuck with me. Now I wish I could sit with his mother and discover what other pearls of wisdom she has to offer. 

Because I know this young man, I know his mother was referring to unselfish marital sex. It is wholly appropriate to discuss lovemaking and prayer in the same context. That is how God intended it. Married love should embrace the Lord, creator of life. The unitive nature of making love and the procreative nature are inextricably intertwined. To deny either one is to deny God, who invested sex with that quality. In order to know God's will regarding the conception of children, the couple must pray together. It is that constant communication, with each other and with God that makes Natural Family Planning (NFP) so good for marriages.

In my last post, I shared the myriad of options the medical community makes available to couples who are planning their families. And we discovered what a euphemism "options" is. Rather than arbitrary, heavy-handed rules, the Church's stand on birth control is a protective measure, which shields couples from the evil inherent in all forms of artificial birth control and encourages them to consider God's will in every aspect of their lives.

NFP is not the rhythm method. It does not solely rely on a "safe time of the month." Instead, it is a scientific method in which married and engaged couples note, chart, and interpret the woman's fertility signs. The couple considers the time of the month, basal body temperature, cervical mucous, and physical attributes of the cervix itself. When used properly,it is every bit as effective as the pill.

It is not my intention to tell couples how to use NFP, but to tell them why NFP makes so much more sense than artificial birth control. Many couples decide on a form of contraception and then rarely discuss sex in terms of children. I wonder how many women, before they take their pills every morning, consider what God's plan is for their families. I wonder how many men ever think about the pill at all, even when their wives take it daily. Contraception becomes a routine part of day-today life-- a mechanization requiring little thought and no communication.

NFP enhances communciation between spouses. It is a shared responsibility. Most importantly, this cooperative effort embraces God. An NFP couple must not only discuss sex, but to use NFP properly, they must pray about it. It is a blessing to a marriage when God is included in the  sacred act He created. NFP requires prayerful consideration. It does seem that couples using NFP have more children than other couples. None of those children are "accidents." These couples have prayerfully considered life more often and are more open to divine intervention in the family planning. Above all, marriage partners who are open to God's plan know the peace of cooperation with the love of the Creator.

Marriage is hard work. I won't deny that NFP is work, too. I don't know of anything of value in interpersonal relationships that doesn't require some effort. NFP requires faithfulness. It requires some sacrifice, a dying to self. But that is what love is all about--giving for the good of another. That is not a bad thing. When they are choosing abstinence, couples experience a time of "courtship." They are challenged to find alternate expressions of love and they experiences the joys inherent to those expressions.

Finally, NFP is wonderful witness to children. When my children are adolescents and I want to impress upon them the merits of chastity, I will speak from a personal perspective, telling them about the sanctity of sex within a marriage, about sacrifice, and fidelity. I'll urge them to prayerfully consider God's will and His plan for their lives. Iwill be able to empathize with how difficult it is to deny the urgings of the flesh because I will be living a chaste life. [Note: Now that my children are of this age, I recognize the huge role a community of faith plays. When you are surrounded by supportive friends, this lifestyle is more readily embraced than when you are all alone in the culture. Whether married or single, living sexuality as God intended requires open communication and a shared of philosophy within the couple and, ideally, surrounding the couple. Cultivating that community is infinitely valuable.] I will tell them that I know what it feels like to be in love and to gratefully accept God's blessings upon a union. And when they are about to be married, I will tell them that a good marriage can never have too much of two things: sex and prayer.