There’s nothing taboo about a growing child suckling at a mother’s breast.
Implying that mothers are sick or “selfish” for wanting to continue nourishing and nurturing their babies past a certain age is not only misinformed, but is demeaning to women, mothers, and children.
Almost every time I read an article about extended breastfeeding — or even breastfeeding past six months — someone comments that at a certain point, breastfeeding is “just for the mother.”
We need to talk about this. Quite frankly, I’m getting tired of it.
More on this: 9 reasons my child is not “too old” to breastfeed.
Implicit in all these comments about extended nursing being “just for the mother” is the idea that there’s something taboo about a growing child suckling at a mother’s breast, and that a mother who chooses to do this is abnormal or possibly deranged.
It’s not just Internet trolls, either. Mothers are told by their paediatricians that their milk has no nutritional value past 12 months. They are told by their grandmothers that they are smothering their babies by continuing to nurse. They are told by their husbands that their breasts are meant for the bedroom and not for their babies.
I come from a very breastfeeding-friendly family—but when my first child was a baby, I was told I should cut out night-time nursing before I felt ready to. I was told that I was restricting my own personal freedom by being tied down to my nursing toddler. No one seemed to understand that I wanted to continue breastfeeding. I felt silenced by the criticism, and ashamed that my own desire to breastfeed ran so deep.
Top Comments
Beautifully written. Perfect sentiments.
Stuff opinions,do what you feel comfortable with.We get so bogged down with so called experts telling us what to do that we forget our instincts on such things