Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vegan mother here that has successful EBF two children. Your child can be vegan and also breastfeed. It's compatible. You all are ridiculous.
Your children AREN'T vegan if they breastfeed.
Anonymous wrote:Somebody here is convinced breast milk is vegan? Now I heard everything LOL Ah, the mental gymnastics some have to go through...
Anonymous wrote:Vegan mother here that has successful EBF two children. Your child can be vegan and also breastfeed. It's compatible. You all are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What did you do about vitamin B for your child?
He ate lots of sweet potato baked fries, bananas, nutritional yeast on pasta. I didn't worry about it that much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son was vegan for the first 2 years of his life. He was allergic to dairy and eggs, and we are vegetarian, so no meat.
He did very well. He was breastfed (which mean vegan for me--how I missed my cheese!), and when he started solids, he was not picky at all. Avocado, beans, oatmeal. Calcium fortified foods. Everything covered in olive oil, and coconut milk as a drink--tons of fat in there. He did great.
By 2, the allergy to dairy passed, though he is still sensitive to eggs, so we added dairy in. But he was fine without it.
My point is children, babies especially, can be vegan and absolutely thrive, in spite of the strange straw man above trying to insist breastmilk isn't vegan. What is the point there, anyway?
What would you have done if he HAD been picky? I'm just curious. One of mine has always been picky, and he eats a lot of things I'd rather him not, because they're the only things he WILL eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son was vegan for the first 2 years of his life. He was allergic to dairy and eggs, and we are vegetarian, so no meat.
He did very well. He was breastfed (which mean vegan for me--how I missed my cheese!), and when he started solids, he was not picky at all. Avocado, beans, oatmeal. Calcium fortified foods. Everything covered in olive oil, and coconut milk as a drink--tons of fat in there. He did great.
By 2, the allergy to dairy passed, though he is still sensitive to eggs, so we added dairy in. But he was fine without it.
My point is children, babies especially, can be vegan and absolutely thrive, in spite of the strange straw man above trying to insist breastmilk isn't vegan. What is the point there, anyway?
What did you do about vitamin B for your child?
Anonymous wrote:My son was vegan for the first 2 years of his life. He was allergic to dairy and eggs, and we are vegetarian, so no meat.
He did very well. He was breastfed (which mean vegan for me--how I missed my cheese!), and when he started solids, he was not picky at all. Avocado, beans, oatmeal. Calcium fortified foods. Everything covered in olive oil, and coconut milk as a drink--tons of fat in there. He did great.
By 2, the allergy to dairy passed, though he is still sensitive to eggs, so we added dairy in. But he was fine without it.
My point is children, babies especially, can be vegan and absolutely thrive, in spite of the strange straw man above trying to insist breastmilk isn't vegan. What is the point there, anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so ridiculous. I'm the OP. I was not asking this question to flame or incite the boards. Yes I plan on breast feeding, and no I do not believe that breast milk is non-vegan. Veganism is a philosophy that you avoid encouraging animal suffering by not eating animals or wearing animal products. Once this baby is born and is able to eat solid foods, I do not plan on feeding him meat, eggs, or milk. I don' t think that is so unreasonable, and I absolutely plan on making sure he has a healthy, well-rounded diet, hence my question about pediatricians in the area that can give me information and support.
OP, you really need to make a plan for what to do if breastfeeding doesn't work.
I'm OP. I know, and I would love a doctor with experience in this area to talk to about it. Seems like no one has recommendations here, and a google search wasn't helpful. I'll just call around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so ridiculous. I'm the OP. I was not asking this question to flame or incite the boards. Yes I plan on breast feeding, and no I do not believe that breast milk is non-vegan. Veganism is a philosophy that you avoid encouraging animal suffering by not eating animals or wearing animal products. Once this baby is born and is able to eat solid foods, I do not plan on feeding him meat, eggs, or milk. I don' t think that is so unreasonable, and I absolutely plan on making sure he has a healthy, well-rounded diet, hence my question about pediatricians in the area that can give me information and support.
OP, you really need to make a plan for what to do if breastfeeding doesn't work.
Anonymous wrote:This is so ridiculous. I'm the OP. I was not asking this question to flame or incite the boards. Yes I plan on breast feeding, and no I do not believe that breast milk is non-vegan. Veganism is a philosophy that you avoid encouraging animal suffering by not eating animals or wearing animal products. Once this baby is born and is able to eat solid foods, I do not plan on feeding him meat, eggs, or milk. I don' t think that is so unreasonable, and I absolutely plan on making sure he has a healthy, well-rounded diet, hence my question about pediatricians in the area that can give me information and support.
Anonymous wrote:This is so ridiculous. I'm the OP. I was not asking this question to flame or incite the boards. Yes I plan on breast feeding, and no I do not believe that breast milk is non-vegan. Veganism is a philosophy that you avoid encouraging animal suffering by not eating animals or wearing animal products. Once this baby is born and is able to eat solid foods, I do not plan on feeding him meat, eggs, or milk. I don' t think that is so unreasonable, and I absolutely plan on making sure he has a healthy, well-rounded diet, hence my question about pediatricians in the area that can give me information and support.