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Boob Bashing Hits Fleet Street Again |
Well here we go again, the annual Have a Pop at Breastfeeding Week
begins again next week but the Daily Mail has got in there extra early
with a corker of an article slating the Breastfeeding Gestapo - a new
angle on the Nipple Nazi tag of yesteryear. In any other profession but
journalism you would be honour bound to at least debrief your own
previous experience so that it didn't impair your professional
judgement but Fleet Street seems to attract women with such bitter
personal experiences of birth and breastfeeding that they are no longer
able to differentiate between fact and their own painful memories.
Worse, having been let down so horrendously by the medical profession
they turn their anger on the charities and volunteers who support women
to breastfeed.
I'm tempted begin each breastfeeding class now
with "My name is Jenny and I am not a nipple nazi! I promise to
continue to show you non judgmental, empathetic support with
unconditional positive regard as demanded by the body which has
provided me with more training than most midwives, health visitors or
doctor you will meet in your parenting career. I will continue to give
up my unpaid family time through evenings, weekends and bank holidays
when every health professional has shut their surgery to offer you an
opportunity to talk to someone who will listen without giving advice
and to suggest practical ways to enable you to breasteed if that is
what you want to do.
I am not and have never been in the
business of telling people how they should parent their children. I
have never felt compelled to strut about clicking my heels and ordering
women to breastfeed nor have I ever tried to make mothers feel guilty
for not breastfeeding. I don't actually believe women who formula feed
should EVER feel guilty about not breastfeeding because all too often
they have been given woefully inadequate support and information by
their health service and have been brought up in a culture that neither
values nor supports breastfeeding. Worse still, should they succeed,
against the odds, in breastfeeding and wish to go on to support other
women they get labelled in national newspapers as The Breastfeeding
Gestapo or Nipple Nazis or Lactivists (actually I quite like that one).
I am not however going to lie to you and say that breastfeeding doesn't matter. It
does and there is extensive research to prove that not breastfeeding
makes a big difference to mother and baby health but because we are so
terrified of 'hurting mothers feelings' and 'making women feel guilty'
we misrepresent this routinely as The Benefits of Breastfeeding. So
most women think they are being nagged at and pushed to do something
that feels alien, that their mother probably didn't do and which
doesn't feel normal, never mind natural and whose value they do not
clearly understand.
I do know what it feels like to give up
breastfeeding, to feel like a Bad Mother, a failure for turning to
formula feeding but the blame for that lays squarely with the health
professionals who didn't give me accurate information or the skills to
do the job, with society for destroying our breastfeeding culture in
order to make money out of formula milk and yes, with myself for not
informing myself of where to get accurate information support.
As a first time mother, I spent more time looking at buggies than I did
finding out about how breastfeeding works and how to get good quality
support locally if I was struggling. I have let myself off the guilt
hook as I was terribly naive then about how the NHS works and I thought
that if they were prepared to spend thousands of pounds on producing
posters and pens telling me how MARVELLOUS breastfeeding is, they'd
have spent a couple of quid on training their staff and putting enough
of them in a town near me so that I'd have an evens chance of success.
And when on New Year's Eve I sat sobbing with bleeding nipples and no
midwife due to come for 3 days and no idea at all how anyone could help
me it was no wonder that the lure of the 24 hour Tesco with its formula
solution proved all too much.
It wasn't until 3 years later,
expecting my second child sat in an NCT class - I hadn't done them
first time around - that I discovered several things that all potential
lactactors should know:
1- Your health service almost certainly
doesn't have enough qualified personnel to support you through the
early days of breastfeeding if all is not going well and you should not
rely solely on this.
2 - You probably have a network of trained,
expert volunteers near you which you can access free of charge. This is
more difficult in London and may partly explan why most journalists on
national newspapers do not seem to breastfeed but it helps if you do
your research while pregnant so you are not trying to find good quality
support when you are frantic with a screaming baby.
3 -
Breastfeeding works very well for a lot of women BUT if you experience
some of the problems there is no substitute for a qualified and
experienced pair of eyes to have a look at positioning which causes
about 90% of the problems in the early weeks.
4 - Breastfeeding
should not hurt. Sore, cracked and bleeding nipples are not normal but
if someone can help you correct baby's position then they can get
better very quickly. Do not believe anyone who tells you the baby's
position is right if it is hurting you, get another opinion.
5
-The vast majority of women can produce enough milk for their baby but
they may have to adjust their expectations of how they will parent to
accommodate the normal behaviour of a breastfeeding baby. We no longer
understand what normal behaviour is because we have grown up in a
bottlefeeding culture - so the breastfeeding baby who feeds hourly or
cluster feeds for four hours of an evening or who wants to be carried
all day or who prefers to co-sleep is seen as abnormal, a problem to be
fixed.
6- It's OK to ask for help. In an ideal world we would
have wise women all around us, mothers, aunts, grandmothers and friends
who would all have breastfed or still be breastfeeding their own
babies. We would have grown up watching other women sort out the common
niggles and would not be surrounded by well meaning people who
bottlefed and are managing their own feelings about it and who may not
be entirely unbiased when they say "Oh just give him a bottle, it never
did you any harm." Organisations like the NCT, La Leche League, the
Breastfeeding Network are there trying to stick a nipple in the gaping
hole caused by 30 years of relentless marketing of formula and the
resultant loss of societal knowledge and shared experience of
breastfeeding.
6- Not all health professionals are well trained
about breastfeeding and not all counsellors or supporters have the same
training. Midwifery and health visitor training about breastfeeding is
improving, particularly if your local NHS hospital or trust is involved
in the BabyFriendly Initiative but knowledge and skills and resources
may be limited so do a bit of research beforehand to discover who is in
your area. GP's have widely varying knowledge about breastfeeding.
Almost without exception health professionals are not offered an
opportunity to debrief their own experience and their own baggage can
impact on the advice they profer. Peer supporters or breast mates or
breast buddies or whatever they are called are local mums who have
breastfed and who have had 2-3 hours of training. This is not the same
as a qualified breastfeeding counsellor who will have trained for 2- 3
years and an accredited qualification. That is not to say that a peer
supporter can't do a fantastic job of listening and supporting but you
may need more in-depth knowledge than that.
7. Breastfeeding
does matter. Sometimes your circumstances make it extraordinarily
difficult or your choices become extremely limited through absolutely
no fault of yours. Women mother these days under all sorts of pressures
and with very little suport. But the reason that we have Unicef working
in this country to increase our breastfeeding rates, the reason that
government gives its mealy mouthed support to Breastfeeding Awareness
Week, the reason that the World Health Organisation, the NHS, La Leche
League, the NCT promote breastfeeding is NOT because of some nostalgic,
rosy tinted longing for the return of some mystic ideal but because as
a society we would be so much healthier if babies were breastfed. Fact.
And if you didn't manage to breastfeeding it most probably isn't your
fault but it isn't breastfeeding's fault either and it most definitely
isn't the fault of your local breastfeeding supporter.
All of
which is why I'll still plug on, offering my support to women both
locally and on the national line run by the NCT because I'm trying to
make a difference to the few I can help not because I'm some superior
being trying to live out some superior race fantasy but because I was
once that mum crying on the sofa who did get warm, non judgmental,
mother to mother support from a volunteer when she most needed it.
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