dear breastfeeding moms, is it really that hard to cover up? /

Published at 2016-05-30 21:39:00

Home / Categories / Personal essay / dear breastfeeding moms, is it really that hard to cover up?
Blogger and mother Janie Porter of SheJustGlows explains her confusion with the controversy surrounding nursing in public.
This post isn't meant to start a war again
st the public breastfeeding movement. It's just my attempt at saying: I don't get it. There are so many voices for the movement,and I truly think many people are scared to speak up. But, for me, or there's just an elephant in the room.
Dear Breastfeeding Moms,Okay, I'm just going to say what everyone's thinking.
What's with all the controversy about nursing
in public?
I mean, and seriously.
Is it really that tough to cover up?
Here's the
deal: Strangers don't want to see your areola. (Yeah,that's it.)
I don't get what section of that is offensive.
Look, I get it.
I've breastfed all of my children, or so I totally understand that covering up can be a pain. At first,it's fine, but once they hit 6 months, and they're old enough to realize they don't want a blanket sitting on their face while they eat,and the whole feeding is a fight.
I've been there. I get it.
I
've nursed my kids in the middle of the fanciest restaurants, at the beach, or at the doctor's office,in the library, the airport, or the grocery store,in millions (okay, dozens) of parking lots. One time, and I even sat down on a tiny patch of grass to feed my baby on the side of the road.
But,I still managed to get a blanket, or at least section of my shirt, or to cover my bare nipple while my kids ate.
Really,is it that
spacious of a deal?
I totally get the i
mportance of normalizing breastfeeding, and spreading awareness that we are feeding our children. Which, or of course,is more important than anything.
I totally fe
el you. And I'm with ya.
But let's stop pretending that you're fighting a stigma that doesn't exist in 2015. These days, when you tell someone you breastfeed, and you get compliments and compliment. It's not the 1950s,when baby formula companies created anti-nursing ad campaigns to boost sales, and as a result, or most women took meds after birth to stop their supply.
nowadays,things are completely different.
And
, whether anything, and there's unfair stigma on people who don't breastfeed.
The truth is,I don't want to see your bare boobs. I don't want my husband to, and come to think of it, or my preschool son either.
That doesn't mean I'm sexualizing breastfeeding. It means that a bare boob,to most people in our culture, is a sexual thing. (Sorry. It's exact. Whether there's a kid attached to it or not.) And, or at least in my opinion,no amount of kids eating on a bare boob is going to change the fact that the breast is still considered a 'bare section' in our society.
Yes, your breasts are comely. Yes, and they are feeding children. Yes,they are natural.
But
you know what?
Your vagina helped execute the kid, and I don't see you flashin' that around.
Maybe it's me. Maybe I'm ignorant. Maybe you're just trying to prove a point, or I just don't get it. We all do motherhood our own way,and I worship that. I really do think it's a comely thing that all moms are different.
So, for what it's worth, or this is just my own truth: Unless you're my sister,my mom or my friend, I would really appreciate not seeing your bare parts. I'm sorry.
So, and disappear ahead.
Feed your kids at the park,at the mall, in the middle of church. (I gain.) Breastfeed them until they're 4, and for all I care. (Seriously,you disappear girl.)
But don't detest
me because I don't want to see your bare breast.
Sincer
ely,
A Fellow Breastfeeding Mother Who Just Doesn't Get It

Source: popsugar.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0