by Jessica Martin-Weber
Oh the places you go! Families are busy, on the go in their daily life be it at the grocery store, the park, school, the museum, parents’ work, church, community activities, you name it. And then there are special events such as vacations at the beach, mountain top weddings, saying goodbye to a loved one, excursions to historical sites, and theme parks. And along the way, we’re doing what we do, caring for our children, like normal.
It’s about to be World Breastfeeding Week/Month. I confess, for the last several years I’ve really struggled with this month. It seems like it should be my favorite, certainly as an outspoken breastfeeding supporter World Breastfeeding Week/Month has a lot of meaning and significance, yet still, I have been increasingly uncomfortable with it. There are major world wide events bringing breastfeeding moms together, thousands of blog posts sharing personal stories of breastfeeding, mainstream media coverage on the importance of breastfeeding, thousands of brands offering promotions on breastfeeding related products, memes of breastfeeding sayings, giveaways galore, and informative posts as to the virtues of breastfeeding. Overall, this sounds like a good thing, so why was I uncomfortable
Because somehow, I felt the focus was off (at least my own was) and the audience, well, the audience was mostly the choir. World Breastfeeding Week/Month was preaching to the choir. And sometimes the not so thinly veiled, if unintentional message was “breastfeeding moms are better than non-breastfeeding moms.”
I considered not participating, considered taking a position that every single day is World Breastfeeding Day at TLB and just continue on as normal with nothing special for the month. There was conversation about ignoring it completely but that seemed impractical and kind of weird. Since I see the need for awareness and supportive conversation about breastfeeding, I do believe World Breastfeeding Week/Month has a lot of value, we just needed to figure out what that was in our context and how that fit TLB’s mission. As The Leaky Boob team started discussing how we could celebrate World Breastfeeding Week/World Breastfeeding Month, we knew we wanted it to focus on the moms first and then families. Instead of announcing to the world that breastfeeding is awesome (it is awesome, it’s also really just normal) and jumping in on the megaphone that ends up just going back to the moms that are already aware, we wanted to do something a little more intentional. Though it makes me feel a little ridiculous to say, we have lost something when it comes to breastfeeding, we have lost it being normally accepted by society. Plenty of people seem aware of breastfeeding, maybe even too aware, and I know very few people will even debate that breastfeeding is good for babies yet it hardly seems normal. As absurd as it may sounds, breastfeeding still desperately needs to be (re)normalized. Since we’re mammals though, that’s like saying breathing isn’t normal, or walking needs to be normalized.
Ultimately though, regardless of how absurd it sounds, women are harassed for feeding their babies, asked to leave restaurants, fear meeting their child’s needs in public due to public shaming, face judgment for how they feed their children, and feel pressured to feed a certain way but be invisible. Weirdly enough though, women that don’t feed their baby directly at their breast or with breastmilk, face much of the same. And those women experience World Breastfeeding Week/Month too but without the cheering support that breastfeeding moms receive.
Feed your baby way up high,
Or way down low?
In the sun
Or in the snow?
By the water
At the bay?
Feed your baby every day.
Show us the path you take
As your baby eats his steak*
What you see
Or what you do
On your journey
We support you.
*or milk, snack, baby food…
Help us celebrate families and normalize feeding babies without debate or judgment by taking and sharing pictures on social media. Whether you feed at the breast, with a cover or without, with an at the breast supplementer, or using a bottle, your journey is part of normal infant feeding. By posting images of the wide diversity there is in infant and toddler feeding, we can help remind ourselves and the rest of the world that we are people with feelings just trying to do our best in the normal act of feeding our children and we can be trusted to make the best decisions about that according to information, our personal circumstances, and our access to resources. The image can be of you feeding your baby or of what you see as you’re feeding your baby. Share your journey and together we can support each other with #BFingPlaces and #ISupportYou. Post your images on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, or whatever social media platform you love to use and use those hashtags. Be on the look out for some amazing giveaways and remember, every day is a day for support.
This year, World Breastfeeding Week/Month is still going to be celebrated at TLB. There will be giveaways (one huge prize pack every week for five weeks!) and information sharing, personal stories and memes posted, and events gathering together moms that feed their babies with breastmilk. But there will also be support for all families regardless of what their journey looks like when it comes to how they feed their children. We’re celebrating you with the goal to normalize feeding children including breast and bottle feeding. Free of judgment, full of support, we support you where you are. Wherever you go. And Oh! The places you go.