Like many aspects of motherhood, breastfeeding was something I had plenty of preconceived ideas about. I thought I knew what was ‘right’, only to completely backflip when I was in the thick of it.
For example, I always thought it was totally weird when I would see a mother breastfeeding a toddler. It gave me the ick. If they can walk and talk, they shouldn’t be breastfeeding. If you’re still offering that kind of contact you must be crazy, you must be a hippie, you must be dealing with some deep-seated ‘mummy’ issues of your own.
And then…I became one of those ‘weird’ mums.
My foray into the world of breastfeeding was a little bumpy, you could say. My daughter was born during the last surge of COVID-19 cases which resulted in major understaffing issues on the birth unit. In the early hours of the morning after I had given birth I was left alone while the midwives were called to assist with a number of other high-risk births. I had to figure out breastfeeding on my own and I had no f**king clue what I was doing.
Watch: Sometimes the simplest things in life are the hardest to explain, like nipples. Post continues after video.
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