Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Must you look at every person who is eating in the restaurant? Just look at your family and your food, god!
Does each of you wear a pair of Sensory Deprivator 5000? How do you not glance around the room? There are lots of things to be done in the world, many of them not suitable for a shared space for public eating. Like clipping your fingernails. Nursing a four year old. Suctioning out a tracheotomy hole (at least nursing is eating. I very nearly threw up when someone started doing this to their son, especially since he didn't seem distressed and they were five feet from a restroom.).
Excellent .gif, by the way, PP.
Seriously? Your enough of a medical expert to be able to tell when a child with a trach needs to be suctioned, and yet you're suggesting someone use a dirty public restroom for that purpose?
Suctioning is the equivalent of swallowing. I assume you go into the bathroom whenever you need to do that right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Must you look at every person who is eating in the restaurant? Just look at your family and your food, god!
Does each of you wear a pair of Sensory Deprivator 5000? How do you not glance around the room? There are lots of things to be done in the world, many of them not suitable for a shared space for public eating. Like clipping your fingernails. Nursing a four year old. Suctioning out a tracheotomy hole (at least nursing is eating. I very nearly threw up when someone started doing this to their son, especially since he didn't seem distressed and they were five feet from a restroom.).
Excellent .gif, by the way, PP.
Seriously? Your enough of a medical expert to be able to tell when a child with a trach needs to be suctioned, and yet you're suggesting someone use a dirty public restroom for that purpose?
Suctioning is the equivalent of swallowing. I assume you go into the bathroom whenever you need to do that right?
Anonymous wrote:I think I'm going to keep nursing until 2nd grade just so I can whip out my boob at back-to-school night and see how many of you judgmental bitches I can shock into aneurisms in one fell swoop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I nurse my 2.5 yo, but taught him early on that we don't do this outside the home, unless I tell him otherwise (plane rides and napping not at home, so not too often).
I don't see the point of doing it in public?
Just curious, what is the point at all at 2 1/2?
Anonymous wrote:I nurse my 2.5 yo, but taught him early on that we don't do this outside the home, unless I tell him otherwise (plane rides and napping not at home, so not too often).
I don't see the point of doing it in public?
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Must you look at every person who is eating in the restaurant? Just look at your family and your food, god!
Does each of you wear a pair of Sensory Deprivator 5000? How do you not glance around the room? There are lots of things to be done in the world, many of them not suitable for a shared space for public eating. Like clipping your fingernails. Nursing a four year old. Suctioning out a tracheotomy hole (at least nursing is eating. I very nearly threw up when someone started doing this to their son, especially since he didn't seem distressed and they were five feet from a restroom.).
Excellent .gif, by the way, PP.
Anonymous wrote:I nurse my 2.5 yo, but taught him early on that we don't do this outside the home, unless I tell him otherwise (plane rides and napping not at home, so not too often).
I don't see the point of doing it in public?
Anonymous wrote:So you know the kid was 4? My dd is very tall and has always been mistaken for being much older that her actual age.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares? Are you the same sort of b*tch who judges women for formula feeding? Why do you care?
Scientists think the natural age for weaning is between 2-7 years, btw. So 4 may not be common in the U.S., but it's within the realm of normal. Don't be so small-minded.