[Continued from Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3]
NFP and the Contraceptive Mentality
In concluding this series, I'd like to address the question which originally set me on on this overly extended journey: Is it possible for users of Natural Family Planning to have a "contraceptive mentality" and if so what does that mean in the context of NFP?
I've described the contraceptive mentality as: The idea that having sex and reproducing are two activities with no necessary connection, that having sex in no way suggests a desire or willingness to have children with the person you are having sex with.
At root, I think that NFP is formulated in such a way as to be in direct opposition to the contraceptive mentality. According to an understanding of sexuality rooted in human instinct and biological reality, the way to avoid conceiving children is to not have sex. This is also the means of avoiding conception which is considered acceptable by the Church in the context of its understanding of the moral nature of sexuality. NFP is considered morally acceptable by the Church for the reason that it consists of avoiding pregnancy by not having sex, with the modern refinement of allowing the married couple to understand with a certain degree of confidence when it is that they need to avoid having sex in order to avoid conception. Rather than abstaining all the time in order to avoid pregnancy, the couple can abstain for between a quarter and half out of the woman's cycle, and achieve the same result with relative certainty.
For us as human persons, this requires a degree of self mastery over our natural instincts. The modern NFP-using married couple finds itself in a situation (well housed and fed by historical standards, healthy, and lying in bed with a member of the opposite sex with whom one would certainly not object to having conjugal relations) which would seem to scream: Have sex! Reproduce! But for various prudent reasons arrived at by human reason, they may well consider it important at a given time to overcome that instinct and abstain for a portion out of each month in order to avoid having children for a time.
However, while this use of periodic abstinence to avoid pregnancy does not necessarily involve the contraceptive mentality, indeed emphasizes quite the opposite, I think that as NFP-using couples we do find ourselves subject to the temptations of the wider culture in this regard.
The assumption which has, over the last 80+ years since the use of artificial birth control became widespread, become so basic to our culture as to be completely unspoken and unconscious, even among those of us who see ourselves as standing in opposition to it, is that a happily married husband and wife will have a "good sex life" consisting of regular marital relations, sometimes passionate or creative, sometimes comfortable and familiar, which expresses the couples love and affection for one another. Even for those of us who see fertility as a part of our marriage equal to and related to conjugal bliss, it's nearly impossible to shake the feeling of, "We're married; we should be able to do this."
Some NFP guides try to soften and direct this frustration: During the fertile part of the cycle, if you are delaying pregnancy, is a great time for date nights and cuddling and other non-sexual expressions of affection.
The message seems to be that one should somehow be able to channel all of one's desire for sex into the non-fertile periods of the cycle. You, as an NFP user can have sex whenever you want, if only you can first have the first have the self control to only want it when you can have it! And you should be able to do this, because marriage isn't just about sex. Just be organized enough to schedule the non-sexual parts of your marital relationship for the fertile parts of the wife's cycle.
I think this overly optimistic view of NFP misses a basic understanding of human nature which we ignore to our own confusion and frustration: We are as creatures designed to "want" to reproduce a good deal more than we as thinking human beings desire to, and going against our instincts in this realm requires a degree of self denial which is often experienced as frustration or unhappiness. We are unlikely to feel entirely satisfied while practicing NFP because practicing it means denying our instincts.
This is particularly hard for us in the modern world because the understanding of sex which existed before the 20th century is remote and nearly irrecoverable for us -- the understanding which saw it as something of a double-edged sword, intensely pleasurable but at the same time as potentially high in cost. If the relationships of prior centuries often seem to our modern eyes a bit distant or dour, it is in part because it is impossible for us to recover the real sense of potential cost which applied to sexual intercourse -- both because pregnancy is less risky now and because even for those who have never in their lives used contraception the idea that "we should be able to have sex" is inescapable.
I don't think that this is in any way a strike against NFP. Certainly, it makes the spacing of children easier upon a couple than not having the ability to read the signs of fertility, and I think that the reduced sense of risk or fear surrounding sex is indeed a good thing for marital relationships. However, we must at the same time understand that in seeking to apply prudence to our reproduction, and do so without use of artificial means which separate sex and reproduction, we necessarily will have to exert a degree of self control which will result in some degree of difficulty and frustration. If we deceive ourselves that such things can be achieved without difficulty, we set ourselves up for nothing but frustration and disappointment.
For those of us who reject artificial contraception, not getting pregnant requires not having sex, and not having sex means denying one's natural desires, which, as any dieter can tell you, requires self denial which is not always pleasant.
It was my father that counseled me that the best way of thinking about NFP when trying to avoid conception is not "if I weren't stuck doing NFP I could be having more sex" but rather, "if it weren't for the blessing of NFP, I wouldn't be able to have sex at all".
ReplyDeleteHe's right of course, and you're right too. The modern disconnection between sex and babies leads to the strange idea that a married couple should be able to have sex whenever they feel like it. But in years past, when there were no consistently effective means of contraception, a couple who wished to avoid having another child would need to abstain completely. Compared to that, a few weeks is nothing!
Your last sentence is a point I've brought up sometimes in discussions with women who find NFP weird or even abhorrent. The idea of denying in any way one's sexual desires is assumed to be a killer argument against NFP; yet these same women deny their natural desires for sweet or fat-laden foods in satisfying quantities as a matter of course, and view with some contempt those who indulge those appetites.
ReplyDeleteIt's like we're a culture of sexual bulimics.
-o.h.
One reads lots and lots about NFP and the frustrations it brings on Catholic blogs, but I guess I have a minority perspective. Being in the position where NFP is necessary is a blessing. I'd rather have children than all the non-contracepting sex in the world, but it's not up to me. :-(
ReplyDeleteOn the plus side...
ReplyDeleteFor me, at least, the need to abstain often re-creates the tension and energy and desire usually associate with early courtship.
It helps me not take my spouse for granted, and sometimes I wonder if contraception is to blame for the many married men and especially women who report dissatisfaction with their sex lives.
I guess it's that whole fasting and feasting idea..
Thank you, Darwin Catholic, for this treatise. Although happy users of NFP, we have always found the NFP organization to be misleading (slightly) in its advertising of the method, in nearly exactly the way you analyze it at the end of your PART 4: not having sex when all my heart and body say GO! is hard and unpleasant. Replacing sex with "coupling" is in fact dangerous (in our experience) because it leads to conjugal "temptation." For the sake of my husband, especially, for whom it is harder to abstain, even small acts of physical affection make it more difficult for him to abstain when we need to. We have to behave towards each other as if we were brother and sister, really!
ReplyDeleteLastly: especially after a birth, it is even hard to re-schedule the fertility cycle, and ovulation returns sooner and sooner after each successive birth. Getting pregnant within a year after the birth of a second or third child is much more likely (unless one is very careful -- almost obsessive -- about the charting).
All's to stay: explaning NFP in contemporary secular terms is misleading. An NFP-er MUST (as I believe) be open and ready for God's surprises ("accidental baby" is a phrase I dislike very much) regardless of how "effective" the *theory* of NFP is.
I wish you'd write more about this topic.
I've come to actually enjoy the cycle of NFP. When we are abstaining, I feel so wanted and cherished, and we have the best conversations, and my husband is really affectionate. And since we both know it can't lead anywhere I know he just loves me for me, and that he's not just "wanting some." All this makes sex better later! During the times when we don't have to abstain monthly due to pregnancy or post-partum infertility, sex isn't as exciting and it becomes routine. So when we are abstaining, I don't focus on "I can't have sex right now." I think about how we are making our marriage stronger. Or how much better sex will be when we are in our "honeymoon phase."
ReplyDeleteI am one of those people that reject the contraception mentality. I grew up in Australia in a middle class family, where pretty much everyone uses contraception and delays having kids till their 30's. But this was never what my instinct told me to do. My instinct was screaming at me to have a baby, virtually since i was 12 or 13. So it was just a matter for me to find the right person and then have a baby. My bf is always the one that initiates contraception, I wouldn't mind having a baby now. I cannot bring myself to initiate any contraception, it feel unnatural.
ReplyDelete