Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Regarding "Mother Shaming"

To Whom it Does Not Concern,


There is a widespread view in our society that breastfeeding in public is something that should not be done. There are varying degrees to which people buy into this garbage, but the reality remains that there will always be someone who feels uncomfortable in the same room as a breastfeeding mother. To this I say, “My heart bleeds for you. Let me get you a tissue.”

Today I was in a place of business, sitting directly across the desk from a woman who was helping me. My 8 month old daughter was fussy, and becoming increasingly so by the second. I knew she was tired and hungry, and I did all in my power to soothe her. I made faces and funny noises. I dangled toys in her face. I clapped. I rocked her carseat on the floor. Finally, I knew it was time to bite the bullet and take her out of her carseat. She needed to eat.


Allow me a moment to describe how hot it is. Remember those mentions in The Bible of hellfire and brimstone? Conditions around here more or less align with those descriptions.


More often than not, it is too hot to feed my baby with a cover, so I rarely do so. In the event that I do not use a cover, you better believe that I’m still as decent as a girl in church. Should any skin show, the sliver of visible flesh is hardly worth mentioning. I show more bosom skin just holding my baby when she is climbing me and using the top of my shirt as a handhold.


In any case, an office with another woman, also a mother, seemed like a safe place for me to quickly, and modestly, feed my baby while she did what she needed to do.


She looked up from her computer. “You don’t pump before you go out?”
I looked up from my baby’s beautiful face. “I’m sorry, what?”
“You don’t pump before you go out so you can feed her?”
“Oh, no. I’m a terrible pumper, and it just isn’t worth it.”

End of discussion.


Unfortunately, it isn’t the end of the story.


In the moment she asked what she may have thought was a well-meaning and curious question, she slammed her opinion square against my confidence. She made her opinion matter to me, when before, I didn’t care. I was simply feeding my baby. I began blushing. I fumbled my answer and gave her an EXCUSE, as though I agreed with her, that pumping would be preferable to me. It's none of her business whether or not I give my baby milk straight from the tap. I didn’t say, “No, I don’t pump because I would rather feed from my breasts and avoid the hassles of pumps and bottles.”  I rationalized my method of feeding my daughter because I became afraid. I felt sorry for making the woman uncomfortable.

Let me make it clear that though I think her question to be out of place and rude, my greatest source of irritation is that I was not able to answer her the way I should have. I could not confidently declare my position, thereby possibly creating an atmosphere for real discussion, or at the very least letter her know that I AM confident in my decision. She is not at fault for my reaction.

However, in the moment she asked her question I became ashamed of something of which I am very proud. I wasn’t ashamed to breastfeed, but I was ashamed to breastfeed in her presence. As though her opinion of the situation was the validation I needed to take care of my daughter. 

I can only imagine the thoughts she had running through her head throughout the rest of our meeting, and unfortunately, I can’t help but imagine the worst. I imagine her talking to her coworkers after I left, telling them that I was just “whipping it out” right there in front of her, and don’t I have any decency?!

Mother Shaming is powerful. It is toxic. It can eat away at the sometimes shaky foundation upon which we stand. In the case of public breastfeeding, it makes something beautiful, natural, and healthy appear to be shameful, ugly, and undesirable. Who would want to choose to breastfeed when society tell them that they have to stay home for the next year or so, because it would be so unsightly to feed your baby in public? Or they know that by feeding their baby in public, they are exposing themselves to potential ridicule?


The peanut gallery is constantly hollering to the masses about the benefits of breastfeeding. So many who scream “Breast is best!” can mutter, with the same breath, “Nobody wants to see that.” 

To a breastfeeding mother, that message comes across as, “You are amazing! You are disgusting!”. Mixed signals, anyone?!

Some mothers lack proper support from either their spouse, their family, their doctors, their friends, and/or coworkers. For these mothers especially, I feel that it is essential that the culture of Mother Shaming be done away with. In my personal experience, I am happy to say that I have a great support system, notwithstanding my meeting the occasional negative reaction. Even so, the confidence to feed my baby in public was something I had to work for. I had to really understand what I was doing, and why it was okay. I cannot imagine doing the same with less support, and oftentimes lacking confidence plays a huge role in a mother deciding to not breastfeed. 

Doubt. 

Doubt that she has the same right to feed her baby when, where, and how she chooses as any other mother. 

Doubt that she is doing the right thing. (Welcome to motherhood, right?)

Doubt that she can confidently withstand any negative reaction. 

Doubt can change her mind.
No mother-- nursing, pumping, or formula-feeding--should EVER have to justify her decision to ANYONE, and we should never have to feel sorry for our choice.


Every situation is different. Every baby. Every birth. Every day. Mothers everywhere do the best they can, and the best they know how. I am grateful for public and private campaigns to teach the benefits of breastfeeding. I am grateful that we have formula available for when it is needed. I am grateful that even when I don’t think it is the needed, formula still does the job and babies are fed, healthy, growing, and loved. I am most grateful that it isn’t my responsibility to raise and care for other babies. 

That’s what their mothers are for.

Sincerely, Me

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Milk meme


My sister "memed" this for me, and it makes me giggle a lot. Emma faces are the best.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Sorry for the lack of posts

It's been a while since I've posted. Boo on that! Things have been super busy around here. Wonder Baby is growing and changing at a rate that catches me completely off guard! She is now mobile (army scoot, anyone?) and comprehends so much more of what goes on around her, and the discovery in her eyes in magical. It also means she smiles and laughs a lot more! She's so cool.

On the flip side, the strict bedtime routine I instituted and enforced for three weeks only worked for two weeks. And what a glorious two weeks that was. After a week of straight failure I have given up...back to the drawing board. Her sleeping habits change all the time, and she is waking up at least once a night most of the week--something she hasn't done consistently since she was less than two months old. Needless to say (but I am going to say it anyway), I am one tired momma!

Some recent snapshots of the little princess:




Saturday, September 14, 2013

Bedtime Super Powers

I just want to take a moment and praise bedtimes.

I detested bedtimes growing up, and perhaps I still do. But only for myself.

For kids? BRING IT.

Emma has had a loosely structured bedtime since she started sleeping through the night. It has become necessary to establish a strict bedtime, and the results have been soooooooooo amazing. I love having the evenings to spend with Darren.

Tonight I babysat a family for the second time ever, and for the second time, I was able to witness the fruits of that effort. These kids have a strict bedtime, and even though they still try to push the limits (albeit not as hard with me as I'm sure they do with their mother), they go to bed more or less when they are supposed to. Emma also slept, just like she is supposed to.

Even though I can't take credit for these obedient kiddos, I feel like I have super powers because they were ALL in bed by 8 o'clock.

It is my sincerest wish that this kind of evening order will be something that I can establish and maintain for my children the entire time they are growing up (within reason). It is so darn peaceful. I love it.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Enlightening article about the feeding habits of newborns

I love to talk about breastfeeding.

I did not know before I gave birth that I would become such a passionate advocate for breastfeeding education and knowledge, but WOW....have I ever...

I am a member of a local peer support group with a Facebook page. It is a private forum in which mothers can ask questions, share information, share knowledge, share support, vent their frustrations, etc.  The group is "run" by a board of breastfeeding counselors with a wide variety of experience, qualification, and know-how. It is through this particular group that I have been exposed to situations and questions about breastfeeding that I couldn't have dreamed up if I tried! THERE ARE INNUMERABLE POSSIBILITIES...good and bad.

A common concern I have read posted time and time and time and time again is about newborn feeding behavior. Are they getting enough? Am I even doing this right? Why does this baby want to eat all the time?

Today, somebody shared a link to a blog post that I loved. It is written from the perspective of the newborn, and addresses the above-mentioned concerns, among many others. It dispels several myths about breastfeeding that unfortunately circulate around society, perpetuating the distribution of available misinformation.

I love it because it educates, and does so in a clever and comforting way. Moms who choose to breastfeed ought to find it useful!

Read the article here: Baby Explains- Normal Newborn Behavior

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The Anti-bedtime and Momly Tip #2

I am fortunate enough to be able to spend my days at home with our little munchkin.  Darren brings home the proverbial bacon (though I am usually the one who brings home the real bacon...), so I get to be there for every. single. second. of Emma's life. Don't get me wrong, now. Most of the time, I am more than pleased--nay--I NEED to participate in even the tiniest activities. She is my world, and I don't want to miss a thing...um, most things.

Some days (take today, for example), she experiences one or more aspect of infant growing pains, and despite my best guesses, and I cannot say for certain whether or not her gums are bothering her, her muscles are bothering her, she's hungry due to a growth spurt, or if she is just being cantankerous. Regardless of the root of the issue, the manifestations are the same: lots of eating, lots of whining, and very little sleeping!

Do I sound frazzled? Maybe I am.  It is rough to handle all that from before sunrise to 11 at night. We have had a loooong day.

Thankfully, Emma handles even the most frustrating problems, like teething, fairly well. She could scream and cry for hours, but she is thankfully just really clingy and whiny.  Tylenol doesn't hurt, either.

I generally get her to sleep by about 8 or 8:30 on a typical evening, but some evenings I can juuust tell that that she isn't going to cooperate.

Momly Mantra: Mind over matter!

If I can recognize early enough in the evening that she is going to be awake forever, despite my best efforts, I resign myself to my lot as quickly as possible, and trick myself into enjoying it by planning what shows she and I are going to watch irresponsibly late into the night. I have to mentally check myself out of our routines and be okay with it.  It usually means tucking Daddy into our bed so he can get some sleep and then setting up camp on the couch with the baby, Netflix, and a bowl of ice cream (or something else bad for me). Since I typically don't have anything pressing to tighten up my morning routine for the following day, I remind myself that I can afford to stay up late.

Seriously, how did mother's survive before Netflix/TV/internet? I would be a nutcase if I didn't have a way to occupy myself during nursing sessions.  And no, reading doesn't cut it.

Anyway, Momly Tip #2 is this: Try to make yourself try enjoy the sucker punch. I feel like nothing makes a stressful day worse than freaking out about her missing her bedtime (though I have done that a few times... "Go to sleep already, child! I need a break!"

So I attempt to simply give in.

Have I always been super thrilled about the late night/middle of the night times with my daughter? HECK NO. In fact, ever since she began sleeping through the night, I tend to resent her whenever she deviates from the schedule she so kindly allowed me to become spoiled with. But I can say this: I don't feel aggravation whenever I remember those hours, those occasions when it was just her, me, the TV, and the moon outside. I feel love and feelings of pure bliss.

That's what helps me survive the late nights: the memories of every late night previous.  I can't exchange that for anything.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Full Coverage Burp Cloth

Sometimes my neck hurts in a way that almost feels as though I am wearing Emma around it like a necklace.  Hazards of the job, I suppose.

(Anyone up for providing the funds for yours truly to purchase herself a massage? Anyone?? Sigh...)

Anyway, have you heard of Bambino Burpers? I discovered them at a baby/family expo recently, and they look pretty dang awesome.  I haven't used one, but I am convinced that I need a couple of them for my next kiddo.

Full coverage. Genius.