Master and commander wrote: » ...(i actually find quite a repulsive thing)...
ThisRegard wrote: » I think I have to disagree with many posters here. I think breastfeeding it's much more socially acceptable now than say 15/20 years ago. It's promoted heavily in hospitals and by public health nurses and I think anyone involved us aware that it can be very difficult for some mothers and babies. You only have to go to any public place and you'll see it happening, and I've never seen a negative reaction to other people or my wife while she did it in public.
wmpdd3 wrote: » @ Out of step Dad, you are probably praching to the converted, better spend you time normalising breastfeeding to other men. - - - - - - So OP, concentrate on the male view of breast feeding and you may change the world!
OutOfStep Dad wrote: » I see so many problems with formula feeding among people I work with and my own friends. So many have confused growth spurts with the baby "needing solids", without realising that they are not lab mice and cannot be fed X ounces per day. The amount of laxatives, painkillers and God knows what they throw down their children's throats is astonishing, just to get the elusive all-night sleep and to counteract the effects of this feeding by timetables rather than hunger.
ThisRegard wrote: » I don't know Cat, I think you're just getting into semantics now. Maybe it's the circle of people a person socialises in but in my social group it's the norm, out of 6 mothers 5 breastfed up until they returned to work and expressed after that, the 6th stopped for her own personal reasons. No mother had to think twice of breastfeeding, it was something they were always going to do. Regarding any information my family got about the subject, none came from a npo, all came from the public health sector if it was needed. Again,i don't understand the need fit tip toeing around the subject, as I said maybe it's due to a persons circle of friends or their own insecurities surrounding it.
Neyite wrote: » A friend of mine with epilepsy was monitored throughout her pregnancy with her dosage at a minimum, but immediatly after the birth, had to resume her higher dosage. That simply could not be passed on during breastfeeding to a newborn, but the amount of women in her ward who didnt know her medical history berating her about not caring about her child enough to breastfeed was the lowest point for her. It reduced her to tears. I have high prolactin (ironically the hormone that produces breastmilk) and take medication to control it. Its caused by a benign tumor in the pituatury gland near the brain. I stopped all meds the moment I became pregnant, and an endocrinologist will be monitoring me until the birth. I would dearly love to breastfeed, and hope I can, but the meds I might need to resume reduces the prolactin hormone, milk will dry up. If someone (no offence) like you judged me on feeding my child a bottle without knowing why, I would be really annoyed.Why should I have to discuss my medical history with someone I barely know, just to improve some pre-concieved assumption about me? Its not always so black and white.
implausible wrote: » This is probably going to come out wrong, but can I ask about your social group and if they are in general middle-class, educated professionals? I ask because of a statistic someone posted here ages back about class/education and breastfeeding and there seems to be a direct correlation between the two. I teach and of the other 3 colleagues pregnant around the same time, all three started off breastfeeding, a currently pregnant colleague is planning to and the only two friends I could turn to for first-hand advice when I was breastfeeding were a third-level educated friend and another friend whose mother had done it. On the other hand, all but one of the women in my ante-natal class bottle-fed and my husband's friends' partners didn't know which way to look when I fed him when they came to visit me. None of them had even considered breastfeeding and all of them finished education at Leaving Cert level.