Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next time you get the chance, begin interviewing her on the topic. Act super interested in her answers and follow up with questions that put her on the spot Such as:
"Did you bf Dh?"
"No, why not? Did your pediatrician back then advise against it?" "Why do you think doctors back then encouraged formula?"
"Have you seen any of the modern studies on bf?"
"Dh wants me to bf. Do you think he's wrong?"
"So do you think bf means a baby isnt getting enough to eat? Do you think it is that way for all babies or just some?"
My natural instinct is not to let pushy people off the hook. If she's going to be so insistent I'm going to get right back in her face. Acting sweet and sincerely curious in her answers and all, but still driving home the point that at the end of the day, (1) she's clueless and (2) she should Myob. Answer every question with a question - "is that what you would do?" And if you get a one word reply, "Why do you think that's important?"
Terrible advice. The implication is that you need to prove to your MIL that whatever parenting decision you make is correct. This would invite even more meddling on her side and strain your relationship with your MIL even more as you will constantly be arguing.
The strategy is totally going over your head. The strategy doesn't include arguing. At all. It includes lots of smiling, lots of ACTING interested, like she's the Einstein of Breastfeeding, and lots of sweetness. It also doesn't imply anything, that you are trying to prove anything. Just that you CARE SO VERY DEEPLY about her VERY WISE ADVICE. And then you sit there and smile and say, "Wow, that gives me a lot to think about" while you keep doing it your way.
Anonymous wrote:This new DCUM troll is ridiculous. Reporting.
Anonymous wrote:I'm less convinced it's generational. I'm in my late 40's and was born in the mid 1960's. I was fed formula. My youngest sister, however, was born in the late 1970's and my mom nursed her for several years. She was very supportive of my nursing as well as my SIL's nursing.
It's probably safe to say that if you are having a baby now, you were born in the 1970's when there was a lot more support for breastfeeding. It wasn't seen as unusual. Yes, babies still had formula, but there was definitely a swing away from a "overly medicalized" birth where the mother was put under (like my mom was) towards the other end where there were planned home births.
If you're hearing comments like that, my guess is that it's also because MIL is insecure in her role. She probably didn't nurse and wants to step in and control. I imagine that in the next 5 years, there will be fewer posts like this where breastfeeding is an issue between a MIL and DIL.
Of course, there will still be issues between MILs and DILs!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all of the replies. It's interesting to read about other experiences with similar and opposite situations. To answer PP's question, she's 67. I do think there has to be something generational about it, but that's definitely not all of it. I agree that there is some kind of control thing going on. It's very obvious that she's obsessing over it -- it's literally the first thing she asks about every time we talk, and she asks dozens of questions every time, and she will come back to the topic repeatedly in the course of a conversation. It's just such a strange thing to obsess over in the course of dozens of other parenting and other decisions DH and I've made, why this one particular thing? I've always offered to let her feed the baby a bottle when she visits and I stay in the same room if I'm nursing DS, so it's clear I'm not taking him away from her. I've sometimes wondered if she thinks it's disgusting. Not just a generational or class thing, but that it's just a disgusting practice in her eyes. If I were ever to call her out or question her on it, she'd never speak to me again, and otherwise she's a good grandmother to our kids and we have a decent enough relationship so it's not worth it to me to say anything. I would just like to know what it is that bothers her so much about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother and aunts are very much against breastfeeding and it is generational - they were brought up with many body taboos and no scientific knowledge of any kind, plus they were influenced with silly feminist ideas such as that breastfeeding keeps women in gender roles.
My mother would start each phone conversation with: "so when are you going to wean?"
I weaned when DD was 2.5.
My MIL asked me this question constantly until one day I responded, "that depends on whether he goes away to college, or lives at home."
I weaned when DS was 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next time you get the chance, begin interviewing her on the topic. Act super interested in her answers and follow up with questions that put her on the spot Such as:
"Did you bf Dh?"
"No, why not? Did your pediatrician back then advise against it?" "Why do you think doctors back then encouraged formula?"
"Have you seen any of the modern studies on bf?"
"Dh wants me to bf. Do you think he's wrong?"
"So do you think bf means a baby isnt getting enough to eat? Do you think it is that way for all babies or just some?"
My natural instinct is not to let pushy people off the hook. If she's going to be so insistent I'm going to get right back in her face. Acting sweet and sincerely curious in her answers and all, but still driving home the point that at the end of the day, (1) she's clueless and (2) she should Myob. Answer every question with a question - "is that what you would do?" And if you get a one word reply, "Why do you think that's important?"
Terrible advice. The implication is that you need to prove to your MIL that whatever parenting decision you make is correct. This would invite even more meddling on her side and strain your relationship with your MIL even more as you will constantly be arguing.
Anonymous wrote:Next time you get the chance, begin interviewing her on the topic. Act super interested in her answers and follow up with questions that put her on the spot Such as:
"Did you bf Dh?"
"No, why not? Did your pediatrician back then advise against it?" "Why do you think doctors back then encouraged formula?"
"Have you seen any of the modern studies on bf?"
"Dh wants me to bf. Do you think he's wrong?"
"So do you think bf means a baby isnt getting enough to eat? Do you think it is that way for all babies or just some?"
My natural instinct is not to let pushy people off the hook. If she's going to be so insistent I'm going to get right back in her face. Acting sweet and sincerely curious in her answers and all, but still driving home the point that at the end of the day, (1) she's clueless and (2) she should Myob. Answer every question with a question - "is that what you would do?" And if you get a one word reply, "Why do you think that's important?"
Anonymous wrote:Next time you get the chance, begin interviewing her on the topic. Act super interested in her answers and follow up with questions that put her on the spot Such as:
"Did you bf Dh?"
"No, why not? Did your pediatrician back then advise against it?" "Why do you think doctors back then encouraged formula?"
"Have you seen any of the modern studies on bf?"
"Dh wants me to bf. Do you think he's wrong?"
"So do you think bf means a baby isnt getting enough to eat? Do you think it is that way for all babies or just some?"
My natural instinct is not to let pushy people off the hook. If she's going to be so insistent I'm going to get right back in her face. Acting sweet and sincerely curious in her answers and all, but still driving home the point that at the end of the day, (1) she's clueless and (2) she should Myob. Answer every question with a question - "is that what you would do?" And if you get a one word reply, "Why do you think that's important?"