This passionate breast-feeding mum found her son needed more than a little distraction to wean – in the shape of an iPhone.
I used to feel guilty talking about how easy breastfeeding was for me. I have friends who really wanted to breastfeed, and tried, and had awful, painful experiences, and had no choice but to turn to the bottle. But recently I read a study that looked at families where one child was breastfed and another was not. It found most of the purported long-term benefits of breastfeeding, like higher intelligence and lower chance of obesity, are a load of bollocks. Basically, whether your children are going to be smart and slim or whatever depends on how you bring them up generally, not whether you breastfeed them.
Of course breastfeeding is good for babies. There’s no doubt that it boosts their immunity. They will almost definitely get sick less often in their first year if they are breastfed (my daughter didn’t even catch a cold till she was two and a half). But it won’t turn them into superhumans. (Which is a pity, because I used to think having breastfed my kids for years made up for all my other parental failings.)
When my daughter was born, I hoped to breastfeed, but fully expected to fail. I mean, I’d hoped for a natural birth, but ended up having an emergency caesarean under general anaesthetic. When I brought my daughter home from hospital, I was lucky enough to have my older sister – a doctor and breastfeeding champion – staying with me. She encouraged me to feed my baby whenever she wanted to be fed, for however long she wanted. So I did. It was a little painful at first, but not very. Soon it didn’t hurt at all. I breastfed pretty much trouble-free for the next two-and-a-half years. The biting phase was not fun (for me, anyway – she obviously thought it was hilarious), but I got through it.