In fact, it runs in my family.
When my sister and I jokingly offered to breastfeed each other’s babies a few years back, we weren’t really joking.
We had babies within weeks of each other and regularly looked after them while one of us worked. If I became stuck in traffic or she did, it was an option. A last-resort-sort-of-option, but still something we had in our pockets during those first delicate few weeks and months of motherhood.
We didn’t consider ourselves progressive in any way. It just made sense.
Had we shared our intentions with anyone else, I think we would have been in for a rude shock, judging from a debate that is raging today after a mum posted a photo of herself breastfeeding her child, and her friend’s child, at the same time.
Jessica Colletti shared this posy on the Mama Bean Unconditional Attachment Facebook page for World Breastfeeding Week, along with the caption:
“My son on the right is 16 months and my friend’s son is 18 months. I watch her son while she works and have been feeding them both for a year! So much love between these milk siblings, it’s a special bond between us all. #MilkSiblings.”
A storm erupted, not over her decision to post a breastfeeding pic, not over her decision to breastfeed older children, but over the fact she was breastfeeding a friend’s baby. She received a lot of support. However some of the worst of the comments can’t be repeated here. They are just too horrible. Some of the less offensive comments included “Weirdo”, “Disgusting” and “So WRONG in so many ways”.
Top Comments
A friend of mine breast fed her dying sisters baby at the request of her sister. She was dying of melanoma and desperately wanted her baby breast fed, my friend happily agreed and fed both her own baby and her sisters for several months.
If somebody breastfed my kids without my permission first.....lookout. Those kids are toddlers, it's not like they are being exclusively breastfed. Sorry it's strange. Just wondering why the working mum doesn't express? Just had another look at the picture.....it's definitely strange!!!!
It is only strange because it is not the usual behaviour in our society. As many have said, wet nurses were very common in the past. Given that we experience so many allergies in this day and age, breasting feeding is really a wonderful way to help immune systems. I say, we need to have a cultural shift so that we just think of it as just another option. My husband was wet nursed by a Gypsy in Italy in the 60s. It was perfectly normal at that time for mothers who did not have breast milk as his mother didn't.