Nurse-in at Hirshhorn on 2/12 from 10-12

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

Your husband has to say these thing but you shouldn't trust him because you have been confrontational, rude and insulting, not to mention boring, and that may be the most offensive. When I take my 15 yr. old son and my 10 yr. old son out, not to mention my69 yr. old father to a restaurant, movie, church, or anywhere in public, they do need, nor do they want, to see women baring their breasts and nursing. Maybe your are discreet but you are one of the very few. My father could not believe his eyes. Your rights end where mine begin. The rights of breast feeding mothers end where the public's rights begin. It is disgusting to watch women Bf on Metro, on a park bench, in a museum. One of you zealots, in another thread, said she would plop out her boob in front of the President and nurse, None of you has a sense of public decorum. I saw a woman hike up her sweater (she was wearng no bra, and plop baby on breast. I was furuous with her. My children and my father were beyond embarrased. What makes you think that your rights supercede those of my children? They do not.

I do hope that sanity will prevail and these laws allowing women to breast feed anywhere they wish in public will be repealed and another law enacted that they may breast feed in public but must cover breast and cannot breast feed in museums, restaurants, movies, or park benches.


This is exactly why this subject attracts so much debate and why some people get so "obnoxious" about it (and let me be clear that the nurse-in, as proposed, is far from obnoxious). You talk about your rights to NOT be exposed to something, as if that's the basis of how rights are granted and protected in this country. It isn't. Laws protecting freedoms and rights aren't usually put in place to protect the majority. We wouldn't have civil rights laws if that were the case. Does a racist have a right to be offended by black people? Absolutely. Do they have a right to force a black person to sit at the back of the bus, or use a separate entrance so that they don't have to expose their children to their presence? Absolutely not. At least, not anymore. You do not have the right to decide that a woman may not breastfeed in public because it offends you. You do, however, have the right to turn away and even to cover the eyes of your 15 year old son. I ask you to consider what kind of message that is passing on, however.

My mother did not breastfeed me because, as she tells me, she was too embarrassed. I come from a very conservative family and was never exposed to breastfeeding growing up. When my wife began breastfeeding and was unable to be discrete (partially due to the fact that our son would not nurse while covered up and partially due to the size of my wife's breasts, which are pretty hard not to expose, at least partially), I was embarrassed at first. I got over it. Then when my parents came to visit, I was really embarrassed around my very conservative father, but then he got over it. As my wife told me, breastfeeding is hard enough to keep up with without the additional complication of worrying about what others think.

And yet, go to just about any other country on the planet and you will find not only a much higher rate of breastfeeding, but also a society that doesn't get offended by it. Breastfeeding in restaurants, movies, park benches, etc. is just normal. There is absolutely a correlation between the amount of women willing to breastfeed and the level of acceptance granted by society. Yes, breastfeeding is difficult enough without mothers having to worry about what your father and 15-year old son think about it.

This is why people are passionate about the issue. It isn't just about the law. As long as there are people in society who are offended by breastfeeding (and I think they are a minority at this point, based on the amount of positive feedback my wife gets when she is breastfeeding in public), then incidents like what happened at the Hirshhorn will continue, despite laws to the contrary. And so long as there are people who make women feel ashamed about it, there will be women who won't breastfeed at all. I support every woman's choice whether or not to breastfeed, but I don't want that choice to be made because she feels too embarrassed to do it in public.


It is REALLY nice to see a husband acting as such a strong advocate for his wife, and other bf'ing women (and no, I'm not his wife, and yes I agree with every point he makes).

Honestly, I can kind of understand when men are uncomfortable by bf'ing, since they have spent most of their lives thinking of breasts as super-sexualized objects (although that doesn't supersede a woman's right to bf in public), but it absolutely boggles my mind when WOMEN are uncomfortable and unsupportive. Why??? It seems like we women are often our own worst enemies.
Anonymous
TheWife wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Shelli, that is a far more sane & sensible approach IMHO. I hate to say it but Jennifer, on the other hand, despite her efforts to sound otherwise, sounds somewhat, well, unhinged.


*sniff, sniff* Now my widdle feewings are hurt.

Jennifer (aka "The Wife")


An unhinged exhibitionist. I truly cannot imagine any woman in the presence of any public person, President, governors, whatever, even Queen of England, pulling out their breast and nurse their chld. No wonder there is so much against you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The majority of the public isn't breastfeeding so we, the majority, should rule. We want women to use discretion, cover your breast, is that so difficult?


You can have my nursing cover if you want and cover your face if don't want to look away.
My baby won't eat under that thing, he'll pull it and struggle to breathe. The poor kid feels claustrophobic.

But most for your happiness I usually BF using a carrier or sling so you don't need to look inside the Ergo if you don't want to.

TheWife
Member Offline
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I can kind of understand when men are uncomfortable by bf'ing, since they have spent most of their lives thinking of breasts as super-sexualized objects (although that doesn't supersede a woman's right to bf in public), but it absolutely boggles my mind when WOMEN are uncomfortable and unsupportive. Why??? It seems like we women are often our own worst enemies.


You're exactly right -- women are their own worst enemies. Think of what has been said: Someone who vocally supports breastfeeding without cow-towing to random, anonymous people on the internet, must be "unhinged." After all, disagreement is the worst possible crime. Well, that and feeding your child. (And yes, I see the irony in the fact that the name of my blog is "If You Disagree With Me, You're Wrong." lol) Someone who is comfortable feeding their baby must be an "exhibitionist." Why? Because they're not ashamed of their body, or what it's supposed to be used for? Someone who is not deferential enough to artificial notions of respect must have something wrong with them! After all, he's *whisper* The President! Not just a man, a father, who claims to support breastfeeding as natural and acceptable. There would never be a circumstance where breastfeeding would be necessary in a public situation that the president might attend! If you're at a march on capitol hill and the president is there? Better bring a bottle!

Jennifer (aka "The Wife")
Anonymous
A breast feeding advocate PP here. However,  I am reminded of a lady sitting next to me at the national building museum last summer as we watched our kids playing with the lego pieces and making small talk. At a certain point sheneeded to nurse the baby she was carrying, which was fine, and proceeded to do so. A  little later i looked up to find the baby asleep on her lap but she simply did not bother to cover up. She just sat there, with one breast exposed for all the world and his wife ( not to mention the busloads of children milling around) to see. She had this determined look on her face as if daring anyone to question her actions. It was just unnecessary! 
 I completely understand that some babies do not like to be covered and nor do they need to be IMO and that the baby comes off the breast now and then and some women don't bother to cover (nor should they have to) every time baby slips off. This was very different. Baby was asleep for several minutes and the breast was just out there. It's women like that who give us bfers a bad name.
TheWife
Member Offline
Anonymous wrote:The majority of the public isn't breastfeeding so we, the majority, should rule. We want women to use discretion, cover your breast, is that so difficult?


The majority of people are white Europeans. Therefor a white European does not need to care about the rights of someone who is a racial minority? The majority of people are not handicapped. Why should the rest of us have to give up perfectly acceptable parking spots just so that someone in a wheel chair can park closer? And those ramps take up so much space!

What rule of "discretion" should be used? My breast was never exposed, yet when I was nursing I was asked on several separate occasions to leave an area simply because I was in the process of feeding my child. The level of exposure was irrelevant. As it was for Nori, as are most incidences of breastfeeding discrimination. Asking moms to be "discreet," under these particular set of circumstances, is merely another way of trying to justify the illegal and improper behavior that took place. The level of "discretion" wasn't the issue that the guards took exception to, it was the act of breastfeeding itself.

Jennifer (aka "The Wife")
TheWife
Member Offline
Anonymous wrote:A breast feeding advocate PP here. However,  I am reminded of a lady sitting next to me at the national building museum last summer as we watched our kids playing with the lego pieces and making small talk. At a certain point sheneeded to nurse the baby she was carrying, which was fine, and proceeded to do so. A  little later i looked up to find the baby asleep on her lap but she simply did not bother to cover up. She just sat there, with one breast exposed for all the world and his wife ( not to mention the busloads of children milling around) to see. She had this determined look on her face as if daring anyone to question her actions. It was just unnecessary! 
 I completely understand that some babies do not like to be covered and nor do they need to be IMO and that the baby comes off the breast now and then and some women don't bother to cover (nor should they have to) every time baby slips off. This was very different. Baby was asleep for several minutes and the breast was just out there. It's women like that who give us bfers a bad name.


You're absolutely right. I don't know what she was thinking, and I've never encountered someone like that. If I had? I would have confronted her about it -- I don't need a woman like that being seen to represent me. Her behavior was inappropriate. Not to mention the fact that, at that point, it was no longer about breastfeeding -- she wasn't breastfeeding, was she? The baby was asleep on her lap, with no nursing involved.

I do hope that you know, of course, that this is not (in any way shape or form) what happened in this case, and is not the reason that Nori was approached.

Jennifer (aka "The Wife")
Anonymous
TheWife wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've been following this entire situation closely, and please let me make a few suggestions. First, let me introduce myself so that you may have a bit more understanding of my history and experience that gets me to these conclusions; my name is Shelli Zink, I'm a board member of the national non-profit FirstRight which was formed through the efforts of the Applebee's Incident in support of families discriminated against while breastfeeding in public.

I understand and empathize with the desire to Do Something. That's how FR was born. But a "nurse-in" at this point is not the best idea. It's simply a language issue. Those of you still in support of it are saying it's not a protest, it's a chance to educate and inform, but there's a key point here: the etymology of the word nurse-in is derived from a sit-in, ie. a peaceful protest (two different dictionaries define sit-in as:
a method of protesting the policy of a government, business, etc., in which demonstrators sit in, and refuse to leave, a public place, thus blocking traffic, disrupting operations, etc.; An organized protest demonstration in which participants seat themselves in an appropriate place and refuse to move). It inherently evokes feelings of negativity and protest and has traditionally been used that way. We have had in the past events called nurse-outs which helped negate that emotion some, but I would suggest an effort to organize a "Breastfeeding Awareness Day" that focuses on the aspects of normalizing breastfeeding and why women feeling safe and protected in public breastfeeding is so important to the health and well-being of children and removing all mention of the word "nurse-in". The Hirshhorn has stated they are looking forward to participating in an event, so use that. It's a great venue with all the nude art (and are there any breastfeeding pieces in the museum?), make that work for you, contact the press with releases to get some awareness, but don't use that word, and also make sure you have the original mother's permission and endorsement if you plan to use her name at all. Anyway, I hope that this has been helpful, and I'm glad that there are still so many passionate people out there, if we work together we can change the world.

-Shelli Zink
Advisory Board, FirstRight


Your suggestions are well thought out and very useful -- and your suggestions are already being implemented (appropriate contact with the press, having the original mother's permission, focusing on "normalizing" breastfeeding and that they should feel safe and protected in public -- the intent of the cards is just that). A "Breastfeeding Awareness Day" is a great idea and there is absolutely no reason that should not be implemented. Whether that should take the place of a specific organized event in response to a specific occurrence is incidental, though, as the two may share a common purpose but they have a different impact. The only thing I can't really do is take your suggestion to change the name. Because, while it may evoke images of a protest, it is also a commonly recognized term at this point, one that people understand, and one that has entered into the common lexicon. As I'm sure you've found, calling them "nurse-outs" hasn't effected the usage of the term, and we've got to work with what we have. So, while it's not ideal, we work within the bounds of what the average person understands. And let's be very honest here -- no matter what we call it, there are people (as evidenced here), who will still believe that no response is warranted simply because an apology has been made. Any steps taken beyond that point are "too much" to someone with that mindset.

Jennifer (aka "The Wife")


And again you are dismissive of someone who presents an eloquent, well thought-out opposing view. I had never heard the term nurse-in before this thread and it's quite clearly protest-related. Are you really denying that?

Also, I was personally uncomfortable being around someone breastfeeding before I started doing it myself, and my husband still is. Does this mean we aren't ardent supporters of breastfeeding, or would tell someone to breastfeed elsewhere? No way. But having women descend on the museum as you describe will only serve to make people uncomfortable, and not unreasonably so, as well as making breastfeeding moms looks nuts. You need to balance the reaction people will almost certainly have with the reaction you are hoping they will have, and consider carefully whether your goals are realistic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The majority of the public isn't breastfeeding so we, the majority, should rule. We want women to use discretion, cover your breast, is that so difficult?


You can have my nursing cover if you want and cover your face if don't want to look away.
My baby won't eat under that thing, he'll pull it and struggle to breathe. The poor kid feels claustrophobic.

But most for your happiness I usually BF using a carrier or sling so you don't need to look inside the Ergo if you don't want to.



I did exactly the same thing when nursing, even walking down the street. You seem to have found a good way to be discreet without asking others to throw a blanket over their faces for your sake. So what is the beef with being discreet?
Anonymous
As an ardent supporter of both breastfeeding and a woman’s right to do it in public venue when her child needs to be fed, I have been following this thread with great interest. I applaud and welcome the efforts of those like “the wife” who hope to educate the populace about the need to protect the federally sanctioned rights of women.

But I fundamentally disagree with the tactics behind the scheduled nurse-in, simply because in my mind, they won’t achieve the desired outcomes of education and recognition of the law. I happen to think that the sight of many nursing moms would be inviting and wonderful. But I have to be okay with the fact that it isn’t for others. We can change laws, and ensure that breastfeeding in public is a protected right, but we can’t change the minds of people who are uncomfortable with it. How wonderful it would be if we could, but we can’t.

Having multiple nursing moms descend upon the Hirrshorn and attempt to feed their children all at the same time is an artificial scenario. It doesn’t represent real life. And that is what we want right? For people to understand the “real life” of a breastfeeding mom? We are going to freak people out unnecessarily, to the point where they won’t read the literature, but simply walk out.

When I walk through the Hirrshorn, there are pieces I love, and others that I know would offend people. But they are not all in the same room. I see this as a parallel to the purported efforts of breastfeeding education. A consistent trickle works better than a fire hose.
Anonymous


A nurse-in is aggressive. It is 'in your face.' The 'education' aspect is an excuse. There are much better ways to 'educate' people that there are laws on the books that allow breastfeeding in public that do not involve alienating people. WHY is that alienating? WHY does it make people uncomfortable? Who knows -- and who cares. It would be a lot easier to take the time and effort for a few people to learn to be discreet than it would take to change the attitudes and feelings of the majority of society.


Seriously? I am one of those made uncomfortable by public nursing, but I wish I wasn't and I hope more people learn not to be. This strikes me as an incredibly peaceful way to educate people. And what better way to help people get over their fears, than exposure in a safe setting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:As an ardent supporter of both breastfeeding and a woman’s right to do it in public venue when her child needs to be fed, I have been following this thread with great interest. I applaud and welcome the efforts of those like “the wife” who hope to educate the populace about the need to protect the federally sanctioned rights of women.

But I fundamentally disagree with the tactics behind the scheduled nurse-in, simply because in my mind, they won’t achieve the desired outcomes of education and recognition of the law. I happen to think that the sight of many nursing moms would be inviting and wonderful. But I have to be okay with the fact that it isn’t for others. We can change laws, and ensure that breastfeeding in public is a protected right, but we can’t change the minds of people who are uncomfortable with it. How wonderful it would be if we could, but we can’t.

Having multiple nursing moms descend upon the Hirrshorn and attempt to feed their children all at the same time is an artificial scenario. It doesn’t represent real life. And that is what we want right? For people to understand the “real life” of a breastfeeding mom? We are going to freak people out unnecessarily, to the point where they won’t read the literature, but simply walk out.

When I walk through the Hirrshorn, there are pieces I love, and others that I know would offend people. But they are not all in the same room. I see this as a parallel to the purported efforts of breastfeeding education. A consistent trickle works better than a fire hose.


Exactly.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:As an ardent supporter of both breastfeeding and a woman’s right to do it in public venue when her child needs to be fed, I have been following this thread with great interest. I applaud and welcome the efforts of those like “the wife” who hope to educate the populace about the need to protect the federally sanctioned rights of women.

But I fundamentally disagree with the tactics behind the scheduled nurse-in, simply because in my mind, they won’t achieve the desired outcomes of education and recognition of the law. I happen to think that the sight of many nursing moms would be inviting and wonderful. But I have to be okay with the fact that it isn’t for others. We can change laws, and ensure that breastfeeding in public is a protected right, but we can’t change the minds of people who are uncomfortable with it. How wonderful it would be if we could, but we can’t.

Having multiple nursing moms descend upon the Hirrshorn and attempt to feed their children all at the same time is an artificial scenario. It doesn’t represent real life. And that is what we want right? For people to understand the “real life” of a breastfeeding mom? We are going to freak people out unnecessarily, to the point where they won’t read the literature, but simply walk out.

When I walk through the Hirrshorn, there are pieces I love, and others that I know would offend people. But they are not all in the same room. I see this as a parallel to the purported efforts of breastfeeding education. A consistent trickle works better than a fire hose.


I think a lot of people feel as you do, and they certainly aren't expected to take part in the nurse-in. Frankly, I'm disappointed by Jennifer's description of what the nurse-in actually is. I, like many people on this thread, thought it would be hundreds of women descending on the museum with breasts bared and babies attached. I was excited by the idea until I learned that the museum apologized and then, like others here, felt there was no longer any need to protest. The actual event, however, is pretty "tame." Most women won't even be breastfeeding and those that do won't even be doing it in protest (it just happens that if you are BFing and you happen to be at the nurse-in, at some point, each mother will have to nurse, but not all at the same time).

But I disagree with the statement that we can't change people's minds. We absolutely can. Not overnight, but over time it can be done. There have been many who compare the cause to civil rights. There were many black people who felt that protesting and marching was the wrong thing to do. That it wouldn't change people's minds and, quite the opposite, may actually set back progress that had been made. There are always people, in any group, who feel that protesting is the wrong way forward and will harm the group. Thankfully, there are the brave few who do stand up with "in your face" tactics that get attention and, as a result, we now have civil rights, women's suffrage, ADA and a number of other positive changes that would not have come about if people weren't willing to stand up.

But changing the law is only the first step. Changing attitudes is what really must be done. And it CAN be done. I believe that the more exposure society has to breastfeeding, the more "normal" it will become. People need to be desensitized to it. We've become desensitized to violence on television, but not to mothers feeding their babies. Something it wrong here. This isn't about how much exposure there is or isn't. The fact that people demand a woman cover-up at all means they find it offensive. Believe me, no woman WANTS to bare her breast for everyone to see while breastfeeding, but if it happens, it happens, and everyone else needs to be okay with it (and what were you doing staring anyway?).

For me, and I know I'm probably on the extreme end of this, I want the "protest" version of the nurse-in, though not at the HH where they have apologized. I want the full-on, in your face, hundreds of women breastfeeding so no one can get away from it and are forced to deal with the reality of it kind of nurse-in. And there are plenty of places that deserve such a "protest." Extreme? Yes. But I believe that once everyone has been fully exposed to it enough, attitudes will change, for the better. But alas, this is not what Jennifer is organizing, so, as much as I might want such a thing, it is unfair to accuse her of such tactics.

Along the lines of putting it "in your face" to desensitize people, I like this idea:

http://www.nbcbayarea.com/around-town/archive/Lactating-Women-Getting-Second-Looks-in-Marin.html
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The majority of the public isn't breastfeeding so we, the majority, should rule. We want women to use discretion, cover your breast, is that so difficult?


Who the hell are you to speak for the majority? Have you done a study? I did not BF (I chose not to, it was not right for my family) but I never understand womens fear of boobs.

I think the majority is pro BF - the freaks are the anti boobies.
Anonymous
"When breasfedding is accepted, it won't be noticed."

This is the ostensible goal, yes? So the question is the best way to reach this goal.

What I find so interesting is that this is a non-issue in so many countries/cultures/communities. Probably because the issue hasn't been politicized. Didn't need to be.
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