Anonymous wrote:Women who do this just want to be the center of attention. They know others can see them as their kids are big enough and even you are minding your business, what's going on is pretty obvious.
Extended feeders IMO have some issues they need help resolving.
Anonymous wrote:Women who do this just want to be the center of attention. They know others can see them as their kids are big enough and even you are minding your business, what's going on is pretty obvious.
Extended feeders IMO have some issues they need help resolving.
Anonymous wrote:For me the issue is not whether it's normal but whether it's appropriate to do it in public in a restaurant. By the age of four, a kid can certainly learn to wait till later. Nothing wrong with deferred gratification by that 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.
But I suppose if a lot of people did it, we'd get used to it. Just like we are used to bikinis on the beach whereas in other cultures that would seem scandalous.
For me the issue is not whether it's normal but whether it's appropriate to do it in public in a restaurant. By the age of four, a kid can certainly learn to wait till later. Nothing wrong with deferred gratification by that 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.
Anonymous wrote:I love it when Western women trot out the "but they nurse for 7 years in many other countries." Asked to produce the countries, they are inevitably primitive or impoverished (we've heard Bangladesh and Nepal so far in this thread), so any extended nursing has more to do with meeting basic food needs (i.e., prevent the kid from starving) more than any specific magical virtue. Why do these women hold up primitive ways of doing things as a model? It's sort of like the whole "women gave birth at home for thousands of years" argument. Yeah? So? Ever hear of "progress?"
Anonymous wrote:Right now I am breastfeeding my one year old. She nursed yesterday at a restaurant (both of us fully covered). I think nursing a kid that old (4) is wierd. Mom must have nothing better in her life than to be an uber boober. She needs to get a hobby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Comfort, health, bonding.
Hate to tell you, momma, but at 2.5, he should be getting his "comfort, health and bonding" from you in a different way. You need to give it up. Why don't you at least admit that it's for you at this point, and not him?
exactly. pretending like this is anything but emotionally harmful to a child (physically probably doesn't matter one way or another) is just naive. mom needs a therapist.
and to the pp who said it's possible the kid was like, 6 months and looked 4 - come on. what are the chances?
Anonymous wrote:I have a serious question, not meant to throw flames, I promise. Why is it that the only people I know of or have witnessed nursing beyond two only do this with boys. Is that just my own random experience? Has anyone seen this with girls?
Anonymous wrote:I know plenty of women who have nursed their 2 plus girls. PP you might not agree with extended breastfeeding but don't you think turning it into something sexual is trolling a bit?
FWIW I nursed my DD until 20 months, but past 13 months only at home.