Breastfeeding
The pressure to breastfeed and its impact on mo...
Come, take a journey with me. Two years postpartum after my second child, my best friend Jo and I compare breasts (as one does) in the bathroom at a good friend’s wedding back home in Mauritius. She, like me, has had all the meat sucked out of her once perky bosom. Mine are similarly deflated, though still determined to point forwards. “You know I only managed about eight months between them,” I remark. “So much pain and stress for so little. If I had to do it again, I’m not sure I would breastfeed.” Her eyes widen – larger than I have ever seen them. Glancing around us at the empty bathroom, she presses a fearful finger against my lip. “Shh, Liz!” she hisses. “Don’t say that!” “Why not?” I whisper, confused, “Who’s listening?” This is one of my funnier memories of my experience, though there are plenty I could...
The pressure to breastfeed and its impact on mothers
Come, take a journey with me. Two years postpartum after my second child, my best friend Jo and I compare breasts (as one does) in the bathroom at a good...
Six mums share their experiences of breastfeedi...
I first began my MILK project in 2020, when my eldest daughter was just about to turn 5, as a way to connect with other mothers who were also breastfeeding beyond infancy. It just so happens that the UK has some of the lowest breastfeeding/chestfeeding rates in the world, which made this project feel even more important to me. I’ve been breastfeeding for the past 8 years. My daughter decided to stop just before her 6th birthday, and now I can feel my breastfeeding journey slowly coming to an end with my son, who’s 4 and a half. It feels bittersweet. He is my last, and when our journey ends, it will mark a shift in my journey as a mother. I will still be needed but no longer through my body, which has been shared and not completely my own for over eight years. Breastfeeding has become such a...
Six mums share their experiences of breastfeeding beyond babyhood
I first began my MILK project in 2020, when my eldest daughter was just about to turn 5, as a way to connect with other mothers who were also breastfeeding...
Milk: an interview with Professor Amy Brown
Amy Brown is professor of maternal and child public health at Swansea University and director of the research centre LIFT (Lactation, Infant Feeding and Translation). She talks to Alice Ellerby about breastfeeding... Amy Brown is a force of nature when it comes to advocating for maternal and infant health. Through her research and writing, she is working towards a future in which women and families feel respected, valued and supported in growing, birthing and caring for their babies. Breastfeeding is her particular field of interest. Though she describes breastfeeding her own babies as “fairly straightforward”, it was during this time that she became interested in infant feeding as an area of research. “I often met women who had experienced challenges that led them to stop before they were ready,” she says. “I wanted to make a difference. I wanted to understand all the subtle (and not so subtle) barriers that...
Milk: an interview with Professor Amy Brown
Amy Brown is professor of maternal and child public health at Swansea University and director of the research centre LIFT (Lactation, Infant Feeding and Translation). She talks to Alice Ellerby...
Sharing real stories about breastfeeding throug...
Jade Langton Evans is inspired to share real stories about breastfeeding through photographs, to support mothers and educate young people In 2014 I became a mother. It changed my concept of the world in every way. I questioned everything. I hadn’t thought about breastfeeding very much at all prior to that, yet when I had my baby it was a completely natural instinct. However, when I got home from the hospital for my first night I had a screaming baby and engorged and painful breasts. My nipples felt like they were on fire. Another thing that bothered me was not being able to get up quickly enough to calm and feed my baby, because I had had a c-section. I also realised that I didn’t know anything about breastfeeding. My husband suggested that perhaps we should use a bottle if it was too difficult. Well, I won’t write the words...
Sharing real stories about breastfeeding through photographs
Jade Langton Evans is inspired to share real stories about breastfeeding through photographs, to support mothers and educate young people In 2014 I became a mother. It changed my concept...
Homeopathy to help with common breastfeeding ch...
We are so lucky here in the UK to have free access to fantastic support in the form of breastfeeding counsellors who belong to amazing charities such as La Leche League GB (LLLGB) and the Association of Breastfeeding Mothers, offering mother-to-mother support. It is easy to reach for the doctor, midwife, health visitor or homeopath when first encountering breastfeeding problems, but in many cases an effective course of action may be to speak to a breastfeeding counsellor first. A breastfeeding counsellor’s extensive training means she will tell you immediately if you need to speak to your health professional. Unfortunately, breastfeeding education isn’t extensive amongst health professionals, and conversations can sometimes be difficult, so speaking to a breastfeeding counsellor first will really help you. Being supported by someone belonging to LLLGB, for example, means being supported by someone belonging to the international authority on breastfeeding. Here are a few of the...
Homeopathy to help with common breastfeeding challenges
We are so lucky here in the UK to have free access to fantastic support in the form of breastfeeding counsellors who belong to amazing charities such as La Leche...
Why we might experience breastfeeding aversion
“When she latches, I just feel overwhelmed with anger and I get this rush that makes me want to take her off and leave the room. I just hate it all. I don’t really know why it happens – we had such a good breastfeeding journey. It was a total shock when I first felt like that, and the guilt afterwards makes me feel I’ve failed as a mother.” Anabelle, Nottingham We don’t often hear about mothering with such negative emotions, especially when we think of breastfeeding and all the images of love that we see. Yet, many authors, like Jacqueline Rose in Mothers: An Essay On Love and Cruelty, and Naomi Stadlen in What Mothers Do: Especially When It Looks Like Nothing,write not only about a mother’s love, but hate as well, and how they are inseparable. Many of us don’t know that in the 15th century, motherhood didn’t carry expectations of feelings, nor the notion...
Why we might experience breastfeeding aversion
“When she latches, I just feel overwhelmed with anger and I get this rush that makes me want to take her off and leave the room. I just hate it all. I...
Breastfeeding: the power and complexities of br...
Human milk. Not words we often hear or say. We’re not really used to thinking of ourselves as mammals, let alone talking about our own milk. It’s… Well, it’s not something we’re often called upon to ponder. It can feel strange or even uncomfortable thinking of ourselves as part of our planet’s ecosystem, rather than in charge of it. The thing is, there is a heavy price being paid for this disconnect. One of these prices is breastfeeding. In the UK, a majority of around 85% of new mothers starts out breastfeeding. By six weeks, this figure has almost halved. The distressing figures continue: the vast majority of these mothers say they did not want to stop, and in many cases, stopping lead to a profound distress which Professor Amy Brown goes into in heartbreaking detail in her book Why Breastfeeding Grief and Trauma Matter. And when breastfeeding doesn’t work for...
Breastfeeding: the power and complexities of breast milk
Human milk. Not words we often hear or say. We’re not really used to thinking of ourselves as mammals, let alone talking about our own milk. It’s… Well, it’s not...
How one mother overcame her breastfeeding preju...
I have a confession: I used to think breastfeeding women were a bit weird. For years I simply couldn’t understand why women would choose to expose in a public place a part of their body usually kept under wraps, and create a whole world of awkward for the people around them. After all, don’t we have bottles for that sort of thing now? Before you decide I’m a horrible human being, please let me explain how my views on breastfeeding were formed – and how I eventually managed to move past them. I first encountered a woman breastfeeding when I was around 4 years old. A friend of my mum’s – let’s call her Sally – was at our house for a children’s party when she suddenly whipped up her top, produced a boob and began to feed her newborn. I remember being hurriedly ushered out of the room and...
How one mother overcame her breastfeeding prejudice
I have a confession: I used to think breastfeeding women were a bit weird. For years I simply couldn’t understand why women would choose to expose in a public place...
Why Breastfeeding Matters: it's more than just ...
If you ask women why they want to breastfeed, the response many will automatically give is often based around how human milk helps protect babies’ health and development. I mean, that’s what we’re told is important, isn’t it? Most health promotion campaigns tell us that breastfeeding is a good idea because it helps reduce the number of colds and stomach bugs babies get, and so on. And yes, that’s very important. When women can’t breastfeed, one of their main concerns can be that their baby will be harmed by not being breastfed. They want to increase their baby’s protection against illness, particularly if their baby was born too soon or had a difficult start. As mothers, parents, human beings, we worry about our babies and we want the best for them. But. This is not the only reason why breastfeeding matters. Many women who cannot breastfeed find that their baby...
Why Breastfeeding Matters: it's more than just milk
If you ask women why they want to breastfeed, the response many will automatically give is often based around how human milk helps protect babies’ health and development. I mean,...
A fresh approach to normalising breastfeeding b...
There’s been a big push in the right direction to help and support mums to breastfeed, but is it enough? Prior to giving birth to my daughter, I was surprised to receive a CD on breastfeeding positioning and attachment, as well as leaflets outlining the benefits. It was a good start to my novice education on the subject – but it lacked something. Reflecting back on my expectations and goals for breastfeeding, I was clear on the benefits, and had in mind making it to a year. I never imagined I’d continue for longer – simply because the idea had never occurred to me. Perhaps that was the education I was lacking. The information I received focused more on the minimum term for optimum health of my baby, rather than normal terms such as breastfeeding for the duration my child wanted to – until she self-weaned, or until the day...
A fresh approach to normalising breastfeeding beyond infancy
There’s been a big push in the right direction to help and support mums to breastfeed, but is it enough? Prior to giving birth to my daughter, I was surprised...