Tags
attachment parenting, babies, breastfeeding, natural parenting, parenting, responsive parenting, trapped
With this blog having been running for eighteen months now, I think it’s high time some of our most popular posts are re-posted occasionally for new readers to see more easily. So, by a very long way, here is the most popular post on The Awakened Parent (then Free Your Parenting) to date:
This post is partly inspired by Sarkozy’s ill-considered words last week, and also by a thread I read on Mumsnet by a mother who is sick of breastfeeding her five month old baby who is refusing to take a bottle.
I think the mother is incredibly brave to come out and say what she did. It’s kind of taboo to say ‘I hate breastfeeding’ in a culture where the whole issue is so sensitive and when we’re told repeatedly that ‘breast is best’.
How do we admit that we resent how breastfeeding ties us to our babies when everyone else seems to be loving it?
I have a hunch that most of the issues we have with parenting in our culture, particularly things like post-natal depression, are born from the huge mismatch between our nature and our culture. I first had this situation explained clearly and logically to me in the book I reviewed a couple of weeks ago (which you can also win a copy of) Breastfeeding, Takes Two by Stephanie Casemore.
Breastfeeding is natural. Mothers and babies are biologically programmed to have a breastfeeding relationship. It is not breastfeeding that ties us to our babies but nature, because staying close to our babies is also natural.
Human babies are born far too early compared to other mammals. In order to squeeze their large heads through pelvises that allow us to walk upright, they need to be born at least three months earlier than they should be.
Many people talk nowadays about a ‘fourth trimester’. Consider that our newborns have been held inside us, constantly nourished, never too full, never too hungry, never alone, never in silence for over nine months. And now consider the shock of being born into a world where you are sometimes desperately hungry, sometimes uncomfortably full, sometimes left alone with no human contact, and, for some babies, occasionally left alone in a room that is silent.
Newborn human babies need time to adjust to being outside the womb, and it’s usually at least the first three months (hence the phrase ‘the fourth trimester’). Many parents will recognise that this is the time their babies start to ‘wake up’ and become more interested in the outside world. Before that point, their whole world is Mummy, and that’s how they’re set up biologically to live.
Babies don’t become clingy and tied to their Mum because their Mums keep them close, they are biologically programmed to be clingy and tied to their Mum. It is normal human baby behaviour.
It is not normal in our culture, however, to allow this to happen. For over a century we have been told by baby ‘experts’ to train our babies to be independent from us as early as possible. To train them to be able to fall asleep, and stay asleep, apart from us. To be with other adults without being distressed – or even to just be alone without being distressed.
We are told we need to send our children to nursery in order to learn how to socialise, and to school in order to learn how to live. It’s as if the ‘experts’ believe that eighteen year olds will still need to be breastfed and sleep with their parents if they’re not forced to learn how to be self-sufficient by the age of eighteen weeks!
But this simply isn’t the case. You can trust your baby to become an independent adult one day, but that’s easier said than done when we parent in a culture that doesn’t trust in that process at all.
And that is the crux of the painful feelings that many mothers experience – the mismatch between what our bodies and our babies bodies are telling us, and what our culture is telling us. In addition, we live in a culture that doesn’t respect or value children, mothers or families.
Children are expected to be separate from every day life, and so are mothers. Consider the media bashing Louise Mensch got when she dared to let her work as a mother come into her work as an MP recently. Our culture says that children should not impact on the rest of our lives…or on anyone else’s lives.
This is incredibly isolating for mothers, particularly those who choose to stay close to their babies. Those mothers who take this approach in our culture risk not only their careers, but also their sanity. We are few and far between – I remember vividly the weeks when most of my Mummy friends started to go back to work, and I felt more and more alone and isolated – and that is not very conducive to happy, contented parenting.
And worse, even if we are lucky enough to find a support network of mothers who also have chosen to stay close to their babies and allow them to grow up in their own time, some of us are weighed down by the terrible feelings of entrapment. Once we’ve made this decision, for many of us that is it – the choice is made and we cannot go back.
Like the Mumsnet mother who said that she has no choice about breastfeeding now that her baby won’t take bottles, the feeling of having no option can be incredibly stifling. Even if we know deep down that we would choose this approach had we the opportunity to make a choice, for some of us, the knowledge that we are now effectively trapped in this role can make it unbearable.
It’s easy to blame breastfeeding for this feeling of enslavement, but it’s not that at all. If this is you, I can categorically say that you haven’t ‘made a rod for your own back’. It is likely that your babies will grow up secure and happy and all this hard work will pay off in the end. It is nothing you’ve done that has created this situation – your baby is simply behaving normally. It is our culture that behaves abnormally, and our culture that has created this situation for you.
Imagine living in a culture where children were not segregated but were, instead, welcomed as full members of society. Imagine working in jobs where babies can come with you, and toddlers can play around your feet while you work. Imagine mothers being valued and celebrated. Imagine a society that did what it could to make life easier for mothers – sharing child-caring duties, large groups of children of different ages who play with and learn from each other, children who are enabled to learn about the adult world by living in it.
Can you see that if you lived in a more natural culture like this, breastfeeding wouldn’t be a tie at all? You would simply keep your baby in a sling, get on with your life, and feed your baby whenever she needed it with very little disruption to you. And when you needed a break from your baby (which you probably wouldn’t), your baby would have been brought up spending so much time around other adults and children that it is likely he’d be more than happy to be held by someone else for short periods of time…so long as that separation is managed by him, not you.
Can you see that if you lived in this culture, it wouldn’t be unacceptable to say ‘sorry, I can’t do this job just this moment because my children need me’? Instead, if you said that, everyone else would say ‘of course! We adults can wait because we have learnt that, and children can’t – see to your child and then we can talk’.
So breastfeeding and responsive parenting isn’t a tie – our culture makes it isolating and solitary, hard work. But how on earth do we do it, then, if we feel it’s the right thing for us and our babies but we live in this bizarre culture?
The best thing I can suggest if you are one of the mums who is feeling this way, is that you seek out other parents who are parenting in the same way you are, and talk to them honestly. When this woman posted on Mumsnet, she expected a bashing, instead, however, she got a rush of other mothers telling her they could totally relate. The next day the original poster said she was feeling much better and it had just been a bad patch. Bad patches are normal, but they’re scary when we have to live through them on our own, so tell people, and let them hold you through it.
Having a support network around you can also help with things like sharing parenting – visiting places together takes the pressure off you, and someone else can help your toddler do up her coat while you breastfeed your baby so you don’t have to get flustered trying to decide which thing to do first.
It’s not helpful to choose support that consists of people who will tell you just to put your baby in nursery, or to wean them off the breast if that is what is important to you, so be prepared with what to say to people who suggest that. Tell them exactly what help you need – a listening ear? an acknowledgement of how hard you’re finding it? practical help like doing your laundry for a couple of weeks?
I’m not going to suggest that you all home educate, but I’d like to share my experience of the home education community, because it’s so interesting. What I’ve found is that a lot of home educators (not all) practice what they call ‘attachment parenting’, but even if they don’t, they are very sympathetic to the very particular demands of being on hand for your babies or children all day every day.
Having my later babies, having already become friends by that point with many other home educators, was much easier than having my first two. I would go along to busy home ed groups, and I would see one of my older children being helped by another adult or an even older child – she didn’t feel such a need to come to me because she was comfortable with these other people.
Someone would always step in to hold my baby while I went to the loo or changed a toddler’s nappy, but if my baby screamed, instead of saying ‘oh, she’ll be fine’, they’d hand her back and say ‘I’ll do the nappy for you’. These whole aftern0on-long home ed groups became a real refuge for me – relaxing, fun, and like what parenting in a community should be like. I would drive home with a heart that felt heavier with each mile, knowing I had two more hours alone with my children before my husband came home.
So you’re not alone if you find breastfeeding, or any aspect of close, responsive parenting stifling and frightening. You’re normal and not struggling with mothering but with mothering in our culture. And your baby isn’t being clingy because of anything you’ve done, but because he’s normal, and you’re expecting him to behave in the way our culture tells us babies behave…which isn’t normal. (Also, check out the bottom of this post, where I talk about the cycle of insecurity)
So find a support network, and be honest about your feelings is my suggestion for how to survive if you choose to breastfeed and/or to parent in this close, responsive way.
I’d love to hear your experiences of feeling trapped by breastfeeding or close, responsive parenting and how you dealt with it.
Images: Pinot & Dita, JMaz Photo & Brighton Sling Babies, Flickr
Edited: I’ve just changed a few sentences to make it clearer that not all mothers feel so oppressed like this. I had tried to be careful with that anyway, as I always am, but I have just adjusted a handful of sentences to make it even more clear :)
What an interesting post. Isn’t it terrible that women don’t feel they can admit these problems for fear of criticism ?
I wouldn’t read too much into what Sarkozy says. I have read the original French version of his comments and it sounded like he was saying it in a very light-hearted way. Sometimes comments like this need to be taken with a large pinch of salt. The positive from his comments were that the First Lady of France is feeding, and having the same worries as everyone else. Surely the journalists could have focused on that instead of turning a flippant remark into an issue?
Oh yes, I agree that his heart was in the right place, but his words were badly chosen as the media, unsurprisingly, picked up on those that linked it to an abominable, shocking practice! The point was, though, that women do find breastfeeding trapping and enslavement.
Well if there is one politician who will put his foot in it it’s that one ! it’s sad that women feel that way. What are your thoughts on expressing so that someone else can feed from time to time? I know it’s extra work but surely one feed every ew days could help? Or shouldn’t I ask that question? :)
I say sad, but I am fairly sure if I had kept it up I would have felt the same. I am not judging at all.
LOL. Yes, you can ask :)
I think expressing so a partner can give an extra feed can, in some cases, cause more stress rather than less. If it works for you and your family then go for it, but don’t feel that you have to because everyone says that Dad will bond with your baby better if he feeds the odd bottle of expressed milk. I can’t believe I haven’t written about this issue on the blog yet! Will aim to rectify this asap!
Agree with this comment! Pumping is hard work and for many people does cause more problems than it solves. I have had lots of people say to me over the years things like “just pump, let dad take over for a bit”. Oh, ok, I’ll just pump. I’ll just find an hour out of my day when my children don’t need me to clean, sterilise, pump & store, then I’ll battle to get my baby to take a bottle (1st baby would, 2nd baby wouldn’t), then I’ll pay the price of my bid for freedom with a week of bad latch and breast refusal. LOL.
Of course, pumping works great for some people and HUGE props to those who pump exclusively – it’s a LOT of work that, frankly, I don’t think I could do myself.
Also, a lot of women think they HAVE to pump. You’d be shocked at the amount of women who come to our antenatal sessions at BF group and ask about pumping. I ask them if they are planning on going back to work or otherwise leaving the babe when they are little, they say no…. So i ask them “why pump?” Nearly all of them can’t answer the question, it’s just something they think they have to do!
Looking forward to your post on pumping :D apologies for rambling lol
Looking forward to it. Thanks.
I agree that pumping is hard work. I did it a lot at the beginning when there were all kinds of issues, and while we were still supplmenting with formula (in those first few weeks before breastfeeding was no longer an option) I was told to pump 20 minutes each side every three hours or so even though the night! It was a pain. Literally. What is helpful over here though is that the local pharmacy will loan you, for free, for one year, a top quality electric pump. Other than the noise bringing back memories of the milking parlour on our local farm I found it easy to use and meant my daughter did get more milk from me than she would have otherwise had.
Can I butt into this conversation thread, I have to say whilst I know my DS got plenty of breastmilk when feeding from me when I tried to pump I got NOTHING. In the end if I needed a break I just used formula, as we all know it’s not the devils juice and if you are breastfeeding 90% of the time then then 10% formula is not going to undo all the good work the breastmilk is doing. In the end mix feeding enabled me to b/f to 10 (or 11 it’s a bit of a fog) months with DD instead of the 6 weeks I told my DH I was going to do.
Absolutely! Sounds like you did a wonderful job :)
I didn’t find it trapping or enslaving. I think comments like that should be clarified by stating “some women” find it that way.
I apologise. I’m usually careful to make sure I do that. You’re absolutely right.
Love this! I’ve blogged about this subject a couple of times now as its something that’s really affected me during my parenting journey (if you want to read them they are http://www.alternative-mama.com/on-postnatal-depression and http://www.alternative-mama.com/I-dont-like-breastfeeding )
Thank you for yet another informative, non judgemental and honest post. We need to talk about this stuff more often! Breastfeeding really sucks sometimes, in the same way that pregnancy does. Both are natural and beautiful but also can be really rubbish at times.
Thanks for those links, Imogen. Will go and read them now :)
wow, thats a fab system, lending out pumps for free!
I have felt all of the things related to breastfeeding you have posted. I tried breast feeding my first baby and ended up expressing for 5 months. Neither of us seemed to ‘get it’ and I didn’t find the right people to help me through this journey. I hated expressing and thats why I gave it up, the whole process just became too draining. I approached my second child hoping that I would be able to breast feed when she was born she was rushed to the nicu and I wasn’t in great shape myself after an emergency csection so here I was trying to express again. When my second child came back to me at 4 days old she had been solely feed through a naso-gastric tube and to my dismay had no interest in breastfeeding and wouldn’t even open her mouth to try and latch. I decided to give her a little ebm in a bottle so she could taste something for the first time and with the help of my wonderful nurses and midwives this time my baby was solely breastfeeding within 24hrs of her return. We have had our ups and downs and I have felt trapped myself at times, but I can say this she is now 21months and we are still feeding even against some peoples concerns. Its the happiest part of our day!
What a lovely happy ending! Well done you! Thank you for commenting and sharing your story :) x
That’s a fantastic story. Well done you! What a brilliant mother :)
Oh my word! Thank you for writing that!
I think you highlight a good point here about the misconception that attachment parenting leads to clingy children that never learn to be independent.
It’s good to remember that in fact attachment theory shows the exact opposite. Well attached babies that have all their needs met grow up to be confident and secure and able to cope with independence when the right time comes.
I think it’s difficult when attachment parented children seem to be clingier for longer, but once they’ve filled up their reserves of security, that’s when you see the real difference.
I wish you could tell a couple of people in my life. One even went so far as to say that my son would be happier, if I left him more often!
He’s 13 months old and the longest I’ve been away from him was about 3.5 hours, which is long enough as far as I’m concerned.
My youngest is five, but because I choose to do the socially unpopular thing of keeping all four kids at home, not making use of the government’s babysitting facilities between nine and three on week days in term time, I’m still incredibly isolated actually, there’s masses and masses of stuff not open to me that I could be doing, a lot of which we could actually cope with pretty well if I could just bring them along. Plus, and this is the worst bit, more isolating than the facts themselves and also parallels the issues breastfeeding mothers have – I can’t complain or even explain, because I get back ‘Well send them to school then!’ (I used to get ‘Give her a bottle then!’)
Totally with you, Hazel. So frustrating. We made our beds, and we must lie in them uncomplaingingly, regardless of the fact that schooling and formula feeding and everything else can *also* be stressful!
Amazing! I wish you’d written that four years ago for me to read!!
I also wish the home educating community weren’t so suspicious. I’m desperate to join a group, but they won’t let us until my oldest (3.11) is at least 5 years old so that I can ‘prove’ we’re going to home educate by not sending him to school (despite the fact that none of my children attend nursery and we have already spent a truck load on curriculum and creating a ‘school room’ in our home)!
That sounds very odd, KJ, and not my experience at all! Is it just a very formal group? There are bound to be heaps of home educators local to you who aren’t involved in that group. I know in our area there are all sorts of different HEors who dip in and out of different meets and events. Where do you live? Maybe I can dig some info out for you x
Wow, this article had me near to tears. I’ve definitely felt confined by breastfeeding, and even though I’d rather bf than not, what you wrote is so true! (“Even if we know deep down that we would choose this approach had we the opportunity to make a choice, the knowledge that we are now effectively trapped in this role can make it unbearable.”) Neither of my children, (2.9 yrs & 4.6 mo) took bottles, and while I would have liked the “freedom” that a bottle allows mothers, I also felt a rubber nipple was unnatural. So I never really tried. It’s an interesting combination/dilemma I’ve put myself in. Yet as tired as I get nursing both of them, sometimes at the same time, I try to remember these moments are fleeting, never to be recaptured. I could go on and on. Perhaps I should at my own blog! Thanks for the encouragement and support to share these sentiments publicly.
Thank you for your comment, Kaitlin. Let me know when you write your post so I can come and read it. :)
Clare, this is the first time I’ve talked about this and it is coming from a bit of a different angle, but due to having had an emergency caesarean and my son needing to be fully intubated, oxygen, heart massage – the full whammy – I couldn’t get him to breast feed. The nurses at the hospital where I had him were adament that we try – and we did, for four days, by which time my son had lost 10% of his body weight. He was starving! I gave him a bottle. Once he wasn’t as hungry, I managed to get him to breast feed for some of his feeds, bottles for others and for us, this worked, and we did this for three months. It meant at least that he was getting some breast milk. The pressure put on me to breast feed by nurses at the hospital, and me failing to do this adequately, following a very un-natural birth, made me feel a complete failure as a mother. I only wish I’d had someone around like you to help me through it.
I’m sorry to hear you had such a tough time, Abi. It might be worth you talking or writing about it more if it’s still feeling really big for you now. I think you may well find Stephanie Casemore’s book helpful too if you are struggling still. It sounds terrifying, the period immediately after birth – you’re amazing for managing it and to manage to breastfeed at all! Thank you for commenting x
Ah, thank you Clare. It was a tough time. I may incorporate some of the experiences into a book at some point. The good news is that he’s a little smasher (12 years old now), and despite our difficult start, we are really close. Thanks for the book suggestion too!
Lovely :) Let me know when you write that book – will definitely buy it! :)
I completely relate to this article! Very nice to see all of these thoughts put into words in such a positive way. I exclusively breast fed (no bottles) my first two sons for two years each. I totally experienced the struggle with feeling trapped (and tapped) but on the whole it was very positive. Nursing at night and the ensuing sleep deprivation would get me so confused sometimes that I didn’t even realize that I was just sleep deprived and nothing more. I’m also a homeschool parent and love it. I can bring everybody to the workshops for my 5 year old and its nothing unusual at all.
Another thing that helps me when I’m feeling trapped and tapped, is contemplating the different challenges my fellow mothers face when they do it the other way. It looks difficult also. I attempted going back to work (I lasted maybe four shifts)as a paramedic after the birth of my first child and it was comical. Picture pumping while speeding down the freeway with lights and sirens, underneath a uniform shirt, with a biohazard sign posted right behind you! “Can you get that radio for me, i neglected to purchase the hands free pump, $#^%$^# !” Talk about biology clashing with culture! My cousin described pumping in her car in the middle of winter in Buffalo, NY!
Breast feeding, pumping, bottle feeding all seem to have challenges. Isolation in motherhood is such an important topic to be touched on and I could see a whole discussion on that alone. Thanks all for such an honest and realistic discourse on a very real issue.
Thank you for your lovely comment! And I agree totally – every way of parenting is tough, whichever path you choose. It’s just that it’s so easy to blame the non-mainstream stuff if that is your path.
I’ve never met a mother who wasn’t close or responsive. Just because she doesn’t b/feed/sling/co-sleep or has to go back to work and put her child in a nursery in order to provide the basics doesn’t mean she’s not responsive. There’s too many navel-gazing mothers out there – just get on with mothering the way that’s right for you and your baby.
I couldn’t agree more about mothering the way that’s right for you and your baby, YellRedder. That’s easier said than done for many mothers, though.
And, while not breastfeeding or baby-wearing quite rightly doesn’t mean you’re not close with or responsive to your baby, there are many, many mothers who aren’t close or responsive with their babies at all. It’s a bit of a surprise to hear you say you’ve never met one.
What a great post Clare.
A few years ago I posted as my facebook status
“I appear no longer to need this rod I have made for my own back, one careful owner. All offers considered.”
and it attracted so many comments! I was just saying, “I am here I have been doing this for 5 years and it is turning out okay!”
Just on Saturday I was talking to a local home ed Dad about how I had found it hard to make local Mummy friends until I found La Leche League and Home Ed when a lady walked over to me in the park and said “Are you still home schooling? You’re mad!”
I would say to join La Leche League and attend meetings as the other mothers are so supportive and understanding, at a time when the back to work fall out from ante natal classes can leave you feeling very stranded it is great to have a suportive place where you can moan and grumble without being judged or offered inappropriate suggestions. I always say we don’t mother the mother in our culture, many people will offer to care for your baby but few to care for you as a mother.
and also with home ed the earlier you can be involved in the local community the more benefitial it will be.
Attachment parenting is a brilliant thing but it is a big repsonsibilty for one person alone.
Just pick where and who you moan would be my top tips – LLL meets are a great place to do that.
Finding friends you feel really comfortable with is really important when you are doing anything that is counter cultural and all the statistics show that breastfeeding, sling wearing, c0-sleeping and home educating are certaintly the exception rather than the norm.
The Little Conference covered this area well and how it impacts brain growth – there is a summary on my blog
A great comment! Thank you Katie :) I forget about LLL meetings because there never were any near me when I was in a position to benefit from them. I tried, but no luck.
Excellent post. As someone who is right this second wrestling with a breastfeeding 13 month old doing calenetics on my lap I can sympathise. I wouldn’t be unhappy if dd2 decided to self wean, but I am not ready to force her to wean (yet!). Fortunately I have a network of friends who have similar parenting values, so when I complain they know I don’t want to give up, I just need sympathy.
You’re lucky, Dilly, with your friends :) Thanks for your comment x
Realistically choosing to parent in the way you describe in your post will change your life more so that someone who returns to work early and leads a double life / dual life – I always get the terms wrong here – I know many find SAHM offensive because they don’t stay home and working Mum implies Mums who stay home are lazy but the point I make is that our society and culture accepts adults without children in tow – as you say in your post and once you make clear you are out of that game (at least for a while) people will take that personally. Whether it is the family member whose wedding you can’t attend or whatever.
For me personally it has been very straight forward as I had a career (that I was ready to stop) before and an incredible supportive partner but without those things if parenting happened to you before you were ready it can be very hard to get yourself into the place you need to be.
How lovely to read this post. Well-written and convincing. Very much in tune with my own views. Thanks. Lisa
Thank you, Lisa. I’ll have a read of your blog today :)
By the way I wrote about nearly the same topic on my blog on Saturday! http://Www.lisahassanscott.co.uk
Thanks again.
The world you describe sounds wonderful, and it’s one that Germaine Greer describes in The Female Eunuch. If you can find/create that support, then marvellous, but the reality is that mothers are generally too busy just being mothers to build and co-ordinate such an environment from scratch. Then, once our children stop being all-engrossing time-zappers, the idea goes out of our heads.
My biggest guilt is that I don’t feel that in my case it’s a societal pressure. I *want* to do other things sometimes. I adore this little boy, but I want to go running with the dog; I want to do a bit of work; I want to faff around reading blogs; I want to volunteer – all as well as being with him. I don’t feel tied to him because I’m lucky enough to achieve that balance with one day a week at nursery (during which I miss him like a lost limb – no-win situation!) and an incredibly supportive husband, but the fear of judgement for these feelings – and the *self-judgement* for not wanting to gaze into his eyes 24/7 is a lot to deal with.
Yes, you’re absolutely right. What I was trying to say was that it’s not the fact we’re mothers that feels restrictive, but that we have to be mothers in a culture that doesn’t make it so we can go running with the dog or do a bit of work and be mothers at the same time. Thanks for your comment :)
So nice to read something ive been beginning to realize after three kids. After being incredibly strict with my first then slowly more AP with my second and now third baby, I realized on my own a few months ago, before reading ur post, that it was my society not allowing me to mother with my gut through the mountains of unsolicited advice mostly along the line of “she will have to learn to..” gosh, its ridiculous what the previous generations and still most media expects of the under age one crowd! Sorry for the run-on sentence…overall, i hear ya! I hope every mother reads this, not just the new ones ;)
Thank you, Lj – I’m so glad you enjoyed reading it :)
I never felt trapped by breastfeeding. I saw it as an awesome opportunity to bond and give my babies the best start on life both nutritionally and emotionally. Only one of my four refused a bottle even of my milk. I wouldn’t have believed that was possible if I hadn’t experienced it.
How long does the average mother breast feed? A year maybe? I’m seeing this from the big picture. What’s a year or even two out of their whole life. I remember rocking and holding my son thinking I could put him down and do some work around the house. But I choose to hold him for the whole nap. He’s 26 now and I am grateful for the choice. I didn’t do that every nap but I realized in the course of life what were those two hours? What are those two years? I can’t go back and once the nursing years are over for me I can’t get them back.
I also realized I am the one who birthed this child. Now it is my responsibility to nurture her or him as they develop. Nursing is only part of this. There will be constant re-adjustments of my life now.
If my paradigm is that the child is the blame for my lack of freedom, they will feel that as they grow up. But if my mindset is one of choice, “I choose to put my child and its needs first” that frees up any negative feelings. I might have to repeat this to myself until it gets deep in my emotions so that I actually feel this way. It may feel like putting on a dress you really don’t like at first but wearing it anyway. However, the feelings change when the thoughts change.
I think you’re really lucky that you’ve been able to make that a reality for you, Sallie :) For too many mothers, being in the position you’ve created for yourself feels like an impossibility. The first step is to realise the true cause of mothering being difficult for those who find it that way. I feel that it’s really important to be empathic to women’s different experiences and feelings about mothering. Thank you for commenting :)
Although there were days when my children were younger when I felt exhausted and drained by breast feeding and wondered if my baby would ever break their vice like latch on my breast, those days were few and far between. For me the bond between me and my children is so strong I never wanted to be apart. I struggled with the views of others that I shouldn’t carry them in a sling, I should leave them with others so that they get used to being apart from you. I detested visits from in laws as my husband would encourage the passing around of my new born. For me, motherhood is the most amazing journey a woman can experience and while society is unsupportive, I strive everyday to make the juggling of full time work a little less stressful on the lives of my little ones. It is the extreme guilt of a working mother that I find most difficult to bear.
Thanks for your comment, Diane :)
I love breastfeeding and have been breastfeeding (two kids) for nearly four years straight – breastfeeding my first right through my second pregnancy and tandem feeding till my first child self-weaned. I really love breastfeeding…. but there are times that I felt trapped, repulsed and angry when I was feeding – very confusing feelings that made feel very guilty at the time. I think this stuff is all a little taboo at the moment and the more we talk about it, the lighter the burden will become :)
I really agree, Vanessa. Just because we want to do something doesn’t necessarily make it easy, and society should be supporting us, not telling us we’re doing it wrong if we’re finding it tough.
I think that if a mother chooses to breastfeed that is great, however, if a mother chooses not to breastfeed that choice should also be respected. Not all people are physically capable of breastfeeding (underlying health issues amongst other reasons) and our dominant culture should be sensitive to this. There are many ways to bond with your baby and breastdfeeding is only one way. I am also concerned that in Australia it is considered a womans choice to have an abortion, smoke and/or drink alcohol while pregnant and these all seem readily accepted, but when a woman chooses not to breastfeed, it is automatically implied by the dominant culture that she is a bad mother for not breastfeeding. Surely this is not the worst choice a mother can make? Why, if all the other afore mentioned options are choices a woman can legally make about her unborn child are accepted, that the issue of breastfeeding causes so much controversy? I appreciate the associated health benefits of breastfeeding, but many children have lived long healthy lives without being breastfed. In conclusion, I would suggest that where possible, it is a choice for parents to make and this should be respected without the interference of ‘well-meaning’ people.
I couldn’t agree more, Bec. Thank you for commenting.
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What a fab article clare, thanks. I certainly recognise the feelings of being trapped by children, not just confined to breastfeeding. I’m not sure if I do ‘attachment parenting’ all i know is that it is incredibly difficult to be able to be there all the time for my two very emotionally-needy children. It is my duty and pleasure to be there 24/7 when they feel upset/hurt/angry/lonely/scared but I wish the rest of the world was more supportive. Mum’s need more support (both emotional and practical) to do what I think is the hardest job in the world – to nurture their children into being healthy and happy adults who are in tune with their emotions and who can take life’s knockbacks and carry on. Sometimes it feels overwhelming to have these two little people who are so totally reliant on me when I feel I have no-one to share the emotional burden (partner around but too stressed at work to be able to help more).
I get so easily downhearted when i get comments like ‘He’s 9 now, he should be able to do …….. on his own’ or ‘He needs to learn to ……..’ I don’t suppose he will still be calling for his mum when he’s 18 so we should be allowed to cherish these times and stop feeling the pressure for our kids to grow up too soon.
Out of interest, my experience of school has been exactly the opposite of teaching independence – they both are more clingy and insecure during termtime! If you have an academically and emotionally solid child then perhaps school is not a problem, but in our case school seems to increase their clingyness to me as they find it hard to be separated from family each day. Society tells me it’s my fault for making them like this, I just try to take it as a complement that I must be doing something right if there favourite place to be is with me at home!
Not sure if any of my witterings make sense – seem to still have baby brain fog 6 years later……..
Hi Bex. Thanks for your lovely comment, which makes total sense. Society tends to blame mothers for most things, I find!
great post, I’m not a mother yet (ttc) but a close friend of my husband and mine has a 4 month old with issues of not settling. i went down after babysitting boys yesterday to babysit the 4 months old to give them a break. the relief on their faces to have someone their to take care of the baby spoke volumes to me and made the long day worth it. I loved the constant time with the baby, but i can understand a bit more how parents can get so tired and fustrated having to give this constant attention to a child, especially if the kid/s are grisly all the time. I’m glad i can help them and other parents.
You sound like a great friend, Liarna :)
Brilliant article Clare, I was so glad to read it and I think all parents of young babies should read it! My baby (first) is 6.5 months and although I’d rather saw off my breasts than stop breastfeeding any time soon, I can’t say I’ve ever really enjoyed it. Other mothers talk about this amazing rush of oxytocin and the feeling of love etc when they feed, how much they love breastfeeding, but for me it’s been just ho hum, gotta feed, whatever. Not to say I’ve really had any problems, things have gone really well and the little guy is thriving. I’ve felt particularly trapped in the last month or two as I really want to have a few hours to myself, maybe go to the movies (ha!) but have never expressed or given him a bottle and suspect he wouldn’t be a fan. He refuses all dummies, and we did give him a little water in a bottle the other day but he just chewed on the teat and played, there was no interest in sucking. Anyway, I wonder if there has ever been a mother (in this society/culture) who DIDN’T express and has managed to exclusively breastfeed until the WHO recommended 2 years? Not that I plan to enforce that; if my guy decides he wants to give up at 22 months, so be it, and if he wants to keep going longer, we’ll give it a go and see what happens… but I’m just wondering, is it possible to breastfeed exclusively for years without expressing and/or bottle feeding?
Hello Curioskat
Thank you for your comment :) The WHO recommendations are six months exclusive breastfeeding, and then alongside solid and other foods until your baby is 2 years and/or beyond. This post: How long should you breastfeed for? explains why. So it is perfectly possible (I did it with three of mine) but it’s not exclusive once past six months because you add in other foods, which also means it’s not as frequent as for young babies.
Hope that helps :)
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What a wonderful article. Thanks. We so need to discuss this issue as a society. How it’s possible for a society to function without integrally involving it’s children is just beyond me – and then people wonder why some children grow up to behave in ways contrary to societal norms…
Thank you for your comment, Naomi :)
General society’s response to both babies and mothers seems to be the same: cry it out alone. Let’s find a new respect for Moms too.
Great comment! Thank you, Rea!
Excellent article. Spot on.I totally agree, Our society reflects capitalist and individualistic values on so many levels. Mothering is at odds with so many of these ideas and the way our lives and families are constructed (by time and financial presures) make motherhood a more difficult task. I often wonder if i would have been happier raising our daughter in a different culture. How do we get back to a more natural style of mothering in the west? I agree about attending like minded groups, but wish there was something more?….
Yes, me too, Jenny. I wonder how, though?
oh and love the comment about the rod!!! x
Thanks! Am having a tough time deciding if I should actually go back work after my maternity leave ends… By then my youngest would be 3mths plus… All my colleages have been saying that I should put all my kids in childcare and infant care but am not too comfortable with that. seeing that my live in help has left us. My older kids are 3+ and 2+. the live in help used to see to the 2 older ones while I worked in my current company- as a nurse. Sigh
What a fabulous article, thank you and bless you!! I was very blessed to have a daughter that was just more strong willed than me, I was 22 when she was born and knew NOtHING about anything to do with raising a child but following her cues, albeit reluctantly at times and bearing the brunt of some serious family pressure that was anti-breastfeeding etc it all worked out for the best, she is now a very happy extremely confident 13 year old, which I view as the greatest blessing as this is such a complicated age when all their hormones are making them separate from their parents. We practiced co-sleeping on her insistance until she was 4, I breastfed day and night until she was 18 months old and she decided to stop then. I am pregnant again, now much older and hopefully a little wiser and this time I can consciously choose attachment parenting, just the way my little girl taught me just with way more conviction this time!! Again thank you for a brilliant article.
I’m glad you found it so helpful, Carol, and very good luck with this pregnancy :) x
Thankyou for writing this! I am surrounded by people asking when I’m going go back to work, etc, and I’m constantly having to remind myself that my choice to dedicate this time to my (still very young) child is ok. Sometimes I do feel stuck, or isolated, and long for a real community. Those are the times when it’s really hard. It helps to read something like this, and remember that those feelings are normal.
Thanks for visiting, Owlissa – glad you found it helpful. x
This article was a great reminder for me! I often judge myself severely. My baby “should” be doing this, and “should” be doing that. In fact, my baby is doing exactly what she “should” be doing every day! It is very difficult to raise children in a culture that has so little respect for the importance of mothering and the amazing things that babies are capable of! Not to mention the complete and total lack of concern about the importance of a mother being able to nurture her baby after he/she is born. The United States is simply awful in offering quality maternity/paternity care and it makes me so sad. And how many mothers are forced to go back to work and leave their 8week old in the arms of another caregiver, perhaps a complete stranger. :( Breastfeeding is challenging enough, without having a culture that is minimally supportive of it.
Thanks for your comment, Jenni. I couldn’t agree more!
I have a girl 2,5 months old and I am breastfeeding her. I am so tired of breastfeeding, listening crying, changing daipers … And I know I need help from my husband and mother in low but I want to do everything alone and I feel her when she cry she needs me only . Thats how I made her used to be in hands and dificult to put her to sleep in bed. I just need more time for myself, or litle time for myself :). To wash my hair, take shower, read magazine it is so dificult to make now.
Hi Zoka
Sorry for the delay in replying. Have been having a winter holiday from the writing. I can really relate to your experience, but you know it’s not you who made her like that – babies just are like that, and some parents choose to do things that make babies not be so like that, and those things aren’t always kind, respectful things. Sometimes they even make the time when a child needs to be close to his mother last longer and be more intense. If your baby is happy to be with others, then go with it. She may well be fine – just listen to your instincts and your child’s instincts :)
I did feel trapped and I hated breastfeeding ( to my doulas suprise), experiencing pain every 2-3 hours over five-six months made me resent my gorgeous child; but I persisted and then it became easier 3 months in. By that time I was pretty depressed. I have my 2nd baby due in 3 months and I’m really looking forward to breastfeeding (as I was with my son), however I have decided this time round not to pressurise myself if it becomes too much, I’m not going to beat myself up about combined feeding or formula feeding if it means that I am a more emotionally well balanced mummy to both of my children. I agree in an ideal world women would be surrounded by support ( and I had lots, this time I don’t as I am in New Zealand), however the pressure I applied to myself was unrealistic and left me close to breaking point.
Hi Emma
Sounds like a good way to approach it. Very best of luck. You might find Stephanie Casemore’s book, Breastfeeding Take Two, a very helpful read.
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“we are biologically programmed to have a breastfeeding relationship.”
I do not like the word “program”. Sounds like there is an intention here…Nature?? just like you meant “god”, there…
By the way nature is violent, nature is hazardous, nature is blind, nature kills people, nature kills little babies, nature create monsters, natures is flawed, nature create diseases. Do I have to go on? If we lived according to dear mother nature, we would live a painfully thirtyish years, and loose our loved ones…still think nature is great? I do not think praising nature and live a totally artificial life makes sense…
Darwin said that what fits in is what is “better adapted for immediate, local environment”. In other words, breastfeeding is the gross way nature adapted in order to enable us to survive. And as everything nature does, breastfeeding is approximative, sometimes failing, and…painful.
And never just repeat silly jingles…”breast is best”…yeah right. Breastfeeding is not for everybody, it can enhance or cause deep post-partum depressions, especially in the current context…and the only slight benefit you can expect from human milk is a little protection against diarrhea…that is ALL. Yes, all that pressure, sleep deprivation, pain…to avoid one or two episodes or diarrhea.
Do not believe what LLL says. You think Nestlé is lobbying? Right…just inquire about LLL…not about money, but ideology..
http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2006/03/tales_from_the_nursery.html
Hi Cecilia
Thanks for your reply. I wonder why your comment is so vehement – do you think we should not try to breastfeed our babies? Or just that women should have a choice? If the latter, then I wholeheartedly agree with you, but you must know that already if you’ve ready any of this blog.
If the former, then I’m afraid I have to respectfully disagree with your viewpoint. Of course some things in nature are not so wonderful, but it is irrefutable that babies’ bodies are made to live off breastmilk and that they struggle to live so healthily off modified cows-milk.
And, as I have said in several posts on this blog, breastfeeding is only painful if it’s not quite right. If it is not important enough for you to continue finding an answer to breastfeeding pain and you decided to give up, then that is fine. I’m not sure how it’s helpful to imply that women who are trying to support mothers who do want to carry on are doing something wrong or harmful.
Last of all, I never, ever say ‘breast is best’. If you hadn’t written this paragraph I would have been able to take your comment more seriously, but it appears that you haven’t read my post properly at all so it’s difficult to respond in a fair way to your comment. And I am in no way connected with LLL so I can’t comment at all on your last sentence.
Thankyou so much for this wonderful piece. I never feel trapped by any aspect of parenting until i think of it in context of society and what people think. i loved every word that is written here and it made me feel better but also a little heartbroken because i hate how being the type of parent i want to be seems such a battle! thankyou. X
Oh and so nice to hear this honesty as often if things are tough i want to complain/ whinge or just get a bit of sympathy (!) i never feel i can as then people would tell me its my own fault ,’ rod for your own back’ etc. Or suggest i parent differently e. g. Give him a bottle, leave him for a few hours ….So i have to keep it all inside and wonder if im the only person who feels this way! so again , a huge Thankyou.
You’re welcome :)
I can really relate to the idea of parenting the way we feel is best being a battle. Thank you for taking the time to let me know you appreciated my post :)