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Take Cover! We re seeing way too many breasts.
National Review Online | May 14, 2002 | Betsy Hart

Posted on 05/14/2002 9:07:47 AM PDT by LavaDog

We've all heard that "breast is best" when it comes to feeding infants. But does the entire village have to share in the process?

Recently I was doing what I usually do with four young kids: Trying to keep from drinking until at least 4:00 in the afternoon. Part of that routine included getting the five-year-old to gymnastics class — with the three-year-old and the ten-month old in tow. Usually it's quite the mob scene. Moms and kids everywhere in a huge portion of the gymnastics floor loosely called the "entryway."

That day I had to do a double take.

Sitting right in the middle of all the kiddy and other traffic was an attractive thirty-something mom — with her shirt just about up to her neck and with no discernable undergarments, meaning, yes, she was bare-breasted, feeding her not-so-young child, probably about 14-months old. Let's be clear. She was leaning back on both hands, essentially thrusting out her chest, while the little guy held her completely exposed breast and sucked away, while she casually held a conversation with another mom. (I've probably already been a little too graphic for some my male readers. Chill out.)

I decided I had to say something. Now I've read there's a chemical in the brain that controls inhibition and that it sort of dissolves as one gets older. If that's the case then I expect to be truly dangerous by the time I'm 40. In any event, with my baby on my hip, holding another by the hand and the five-year-old following, I said "Is it too much to ask for you to cover up just a bit? If my eight-year-old son were here right now (never mind my hubby) I would be very uncomfortable." She looked at me as if I had not spoken English. I said, "I guess it would be too much to ask. " Major sigh.

This breastfeeding mom may have been one of the most blatant I've observed, but the fact remains that I've seen more breasts in my adult life thanks to mothers feeding babies than I ever did in a high-school locker room.

But breastfeeding in public does not have to mean publicly exposing one's breast. I've breastfed my four children, and on occasion when they were newborns and eating every hour or two I've even done so in certain public places where I knew I could be so discreet that no one would/could know. Very soon, of course, babies are — or should be — going hours between feedings. So, why can't a mother either arrange her outings around the feeding schedule of her little one, or at least take the simplest measures to be discreet when she doesn't?

But I've found that to even suggest that breastfeeding moms practice such thoughtfulness or self-restraint is considered scandalous in activist circles. (Never mind that I schedule around my four children all the time. For instance I might avoid adult-oriented restaurants or too many errands because it wouldn't be fair to the either kids or the other folks around them.)

Common courtesy, R.I.P.

I know this because having written a lengthier syndicated column on this very subject recently, I was bombarded by "hate mail" in response. But the biggest complaint by far was that I seemed to be a representative of some ancient civilization that viewed breasts as — gasp — sexual.

Well yeah, duh.

In some cultures, it may be that an enormous brass plate placed in a woman's stretched out lower lip is considered sexual, but in the West, it's breasts. (Whew.)

I asked several readers who wrote foaming, gasping e-mails to me, if they really don't view breasts as sexual then would they mind if I paraded half-naked in front of their husbands and sons? Okay, maybe the better idea would be somebody slightly better endowed parading in front of their husbands and sons, though I'm not sure that in the end it makes much difference and that just sort of reinforces the point.

Anyway, it does seem as if women who are adamant about public breastfeeding have another agenda in mind besides nourishing their infants. I mean why all the fuss over something that if done discreetly isn't even noticeable?

Because a woman's breasts are no longer just a part of her body, they are the ultimate political hot zone.

Breastfeeding advocates are actively pushing legislation in about 30 states that would enforce "breastfeeding anywhere anytime" laws. Many states, like California — no surprise — already have such legislation. And throughout the country, lawsuits over the public breast-feeding issue are rife. Guess who almost always wins?

In one case, the AP reported, a Hooters waitress had the gall to suggest she was "humiliated" to be told not to pump her breast milk by her superiors. (They didn't report it quite that way.) Don't get me started, except to point out that the idea that a Hooters waitress could be humiliated by anything is the definition of absurd.

But, it turns out she was on the cutting edge. Breastfeeding rights aren't good enough anymore. Today the golden ring is the right to PUMP anytime anywhere, though for now the emphasis is on the workplace with proposed federal legislation that, if its advocates have their way, will promise just that. Activists "claim" that women prefer to do this activity in private, but as they well know the reality is that that's hardly always possible. And nourishing for baby or not, you haven't seen unattractive until you have seen a woman "pumping." Been there, done that. In fact widespread viewing of this activity might be the one thing that really could desexualize breasts in our culture. (Hmmm. Could that be what the activists really want?)

In any event, I wouldn't be at all surprised to find that many a "pumping mom" is just trying to make up for her guilt over letting someone else take care of her baby for most of the day.

Still, the ongoing, informal survey I've conducted over the years suggests that while there may be a growing tendency toward "I am woman watch me breastfeed," there are a whole lot of hairdressers, cab drivers, "housewives," professional women, husbands (enlightened or otherwise) — you-name-it — who remain quite emphatic that it's not something for the neighborhood or the office to share.

But, just try explaining that in a culture where it has somehow become "Women's breasts uber alles."


TOPICS: Society
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To: LavaDog

81 posted on 05/14/2002 10:59:31 AM PDT by Boner1
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To: Darlin'
Schedules can be arranged to accomodate feeding newborns and more appropriate methods are available for older infants. Breastfeeding a baby is a personal decision but one's personal decisions are often offensive to others.

So you are equating feeding a newborn to urinating in someone's sink? That FEEDING my hungry child could be offensive to you? Unbelievable.

82 posted on 05/14/2002 11:01:45 AM PDT by Aggie Mama
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To: MEGoody
The article was all over the place, but what I got out of it was that she really felt negatively towards nursing in public.
83 posted on 05/14/2002 11:03:07 AM PDT by Aggie Mama
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To: ken5050
That's exactly how I fed my children. =) Those slings are wonderful for nursing and they save your back too.
84 posted on 05/14/2002 11:04:44 AM PDT by Aggie Mama
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To: Aggie Mama
What are they called?..I can't keep saying "slingy thingy.....".....
85 posted on 05/14/2002 11:06:36 AM PDT by ken5050
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To: ken5050
I can't keep saying "slingy thingy....."

Real men don't use the word "thingy". ;)

86 posted on 05/14/2002 11:15:53 AM PDT by Steve0113
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To: Happygal
((sigh)) I miss childhood...
87 posted on 05/14/2002 11:17:31 AM PDT by Tall_Texan
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To: joathome
Nice try but excuses notwithstanding that's baloney. Of course, babies need to eat when they're hungry and they certainly aren't able to schedule where or when that will happen. That is where responsible parenting takes over. My Mother breastfed my 3 sisters and me. My sisters breastfed their babies but I can assure you that none of them imposed that private time on others. They arranged their schedules to accomodate their babies until the babies were old enough to be placed on a schedule. Someone needs a therapist alright but it isn't me.
88 posted on 05/14/2002 11:21:23 AM PDT by Darlin'
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To: ken5050
Actually, they are called a sling. =) The name brand of the one I have is the Over The Shoulder Baby Holder.
89 posted on 05/14/2002 11:26:00 AM PDT by Aggie Mama
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To: Aggie Mama
This is silly. I've nursed both of my children in public. I am an incredibly modest woman, but I see no reason to deprive my baby of food simply because some people might be squeamish. Pam Anderson in a tube top has much more acceptance in our society than me feeding my baby at the mall.

The woman exposing herself in public is obviously an exhibitionist. That is what she should be taking issue with, not the breastfeeding.

I agree 100%. I was breastfeeding my infant in a restaurant recently when an Amish woman approached me, made some smalltalk, and then asked me if the baby was mine! Either she couldn't tell I was nursing, or she knows a heck of a lot more wet nurses than I do!

90 posted on 05/14/2002 11:26:37 AM PDT by Dixie Mom
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To: Aggie Mama
Why am I not surprised that you're selectively reading again. Yes. When, where or how you choose to feed your hungry child just might be offensive to me. If you were better at planning or organizing your day you would have fed that hungry child at home or at the very least in the privacy of your car or in some discreet manner out of public view. So, please don't try to justify your behavior by dredging up a politically correct excuse. Instead why not exercise a little respect for yourself, your baby and for those around you.
91 posted on 05/14/2002 11:35:20 AM PDT by Darlin'
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To: Darlin'
Breastfeeding a baby is a personal decision but one's personal decisions are often offensive to others.

Feeding a baby is offensive?!

92 posted on 05/14/2002 11:38:34 AM PDT by Dixie Mom
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To: LavaDog
Take Cover! We re seeing way too many breasts.


93 posted on 05/14/2002 11:43:15 AM PDT by lowbridge
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To: Darlin'
When, where or how you choose to feed your hungry child just might be offensive to me.

please don't try to justify your behavior by dredging up a politically correct excuse.

LOL! Who is obsessed with PC? Check your logic, darlin'.

94 posted on 05/14/2002 11:55:30 AM PDT by Dixie Mom
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To: Dixie Mom
Everyone has an opinion.
95 posted on 05/14/2002 12:01:35 PM PDT by pubmom
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To: Darlin'
No need to get personal, Darlin'. I am respecting my child by feeding on demand. Yes, often you can predict when the baby is going to be hungry, but oftentimes things don't go according to plan. Babies need to nurse for all kinds of reasons, not just to eat. I respect my children by knowing their needs and meeting them, not by kowtowing to people who get their panties in a wad if I nurse in public.
96 posted on 05/14/2002 12:04:12 PM PDT by Aggie Mama
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To: Darlin'
Hon..

your wastin your time. When you got to convince a woman it aint right to flop their udders around in public like a swayin cow, you done lost aim.

97 posted on 05/14/2002 12:05:40 PM PDT by willide
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To: pubmom
FR would be a boring place if they didn't, but I don't know that I understand your point.
98 posted on 05/14/2002 12:09:23 PM PDT by Dixie Mom
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To: Dixie Mom
Feeding a baby is not a pornographic activity, I do not understand those that think it is unacceptable IF it is handled in a modest way.
99 posted on 05/14/2002 12:19:54 PM PDT by pubmom
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To: Constitution Day
Me too! I Love Holly!
100 posted on 05/14/2002 12:26:06 PM PDT by hobbes1
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