thread: Why do people feel to tell you how long you should breastfeed for???? Grrrrrrr....

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  1. #1
    Registered User

    Jun 2009
    in the Capital
    1,478

    Arcadia - I didn't actually bring it up: she did! which makes it even more "aaaaargh". I'm going to adopt that as my new mantra: MY boobs, MY baby, MY life. Ok, DH might argue the point that they're actually his boobs .... but that being said, he's still happy with me to continue breastfeeding.

    I'll have to look up the WHO thing so I can quote it.

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Mar 2009
    2,269

    Yeah, be careful using the 2yr recommendation because then on their 2nd Birthday it will all start up even more forcefully

    It is frustrating, hey? You're doing a brilliant job!

  3. #3

    Feb 2008
    With my awesome cherubs
    2,975

    urgh! some people think it is there god given right to tell us how to parent our children, i was told the other day to refuse all nappies even at night time for my 2 year old :O

  4. #4
    Registered User
    Add Catherine on Facebook Follow Catherine On Twitter

    Jan 2011
    Canberra Region
    266

    Very frustrating...this is one of those areas where I would just "smile and wave"...LOL! You sound like you are doing an awesome job Cass. The WHO guidelines definately helped me to reassure ILs as we approached 1 year of breastfeeding. Then when I fed through pregnancy and tandem fed my kids, i used the ABA website to print off articles that backed up my instinct. My DH also 'had words' with his family, quietly, to basically warn them if they had nothing suportive to say, bite your tongue. BIt like your attitude Cass - Your Boobs, Your Baby, Your Choice. THe more I learn about breastfeeding, the more releived I am that I have continued. Also helps knowing that the natural age of weaning could be 7, though I suspect that most mums breastfeeding beyond 3 go 'underground'. The immunological benefits of breastfeeding alone have me think "one more winter"...I don't know what i'll do when they wean and I don't have this in my parenting tool box! I just guess that if they wean by choice, it probably coincides with the maturing of their immune system.


    Aba also has a a booklet: "especially for grandparents", but there is also lots of info on the website that helps reassure their 'concerns'.

    personally - i got sick of justifying what is a biologically normal process and would ask them to tell me why it was a problem - make them justify their concerns!

    otherwise my matra have been "smile and wave" and "just keep swimming"



    Keep up the good work Cass!

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Nov 2005
    Where the heart is
    4,360

    You know what I found shut my mum up, until such a time as she could see I was doing the right thing by DS? Every time she said "are you going to be feeding him at school?", or "are you going to be feeding him when he's 12" kind of comments, I'd shoot back "what if I do?". She backed off and the next time she mentioned anything when I breastfed, it was only support!
    In fact, after the negativity and when the positivity came from her, she extended it to look at us and sigh "I wish I'd fed you for longer, I don't think I tried enough". I was fed for 6 months, and by 'tried enough', she means to go against the prevailing custom in the 70s to use formula, in the mistaken belief that Western ways must be better. My sister, who is younger, was fed for 3 months, before being fed formula and developing eczema that she still has.
    You'll never be called into question by a mother who breastfed her children full term, or has reconciled her breastfeeding experiences with herself! It's the ones who see your breastfeeding practices as a criticism of what they did, who just need to be shown that you're only doing what you believe to be right for your child, who take your continued breastfeeding as an affront to their expectations.
    Weird, coming from my mum, given my grandmother was a full term breastfeeder - but I suppose my grandmother represented to my mum all that she wanted to leave behind when she left for Australia, thinking everything Australian was better (she acknowledges now that it's not true - she is glad I've reclaimed the kind of birthing my grandmother did and ignored 'doctors orders'!).
    So, I took some time to examine what was going on for my mum when she took exception to how I was parenting, and approached her more sensitively, knowing she wouldn't even realise where her own reactions were coming from.
    You could give her a smart arse response to get her to back off, or you could tread lightly, patiently and gain her respect I would never have thought it possible in my own situation with my mother, but whaddya know?? I did it!

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Jun 2009
    in the Capital
    1,478

    urgh! some people think it is there god given right to tell us how to parent our children, i was told the other day to refuse all nappies even at night time for my 2 year old :O
    Are they going to come round to do your washing????? We really need to learn to follow our children on things like this. My DS1 told me when he didn't want to wear a nappy at night - I think he was close to 3yrs. And, you know what, he was right. He didn't need to anymore!!

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Sep 2005
    In the middle of nowhere
    9,362

    Yes I know those comments well....
    When I started to ask them if they would give up their coffee/chocolate/wine/maccas (insert their vice here) because someone else didn't agree with it, they'd snort, but not ask again.
    I also couldn't agree more with Mayaness on both the "yes what if I do" comments and the issues with themselves bit.