Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Breastfeeding: a father's perspective

In response to http://www.phdinparenting.com/2010/03/01/a-different-kind-of-baby-led-weaning/

There is a lot of talk about attachment parenting with what seems to me little common ground other than nurturing the parent-child bond. Within the small community of people I know and love, many preach attachment parenting. Alicia and I are among them. But we all seem to do it differently. Sometimes it depends on what books you read, what course you've attended, who your friends are, etc. Most often, it seems, the parenting decisions you make are most influenced by the needs of your individual family.

For example, single parents may have to make some sacrifices in order to stay afloat, or the addition of a second child can change the dynamic considerably. I don't claim to be the expert on attachment theory, either.

One thing that has been eating away at me for, well, years is breastfeeding. Of course I am a loud advocate for breastfeeding, and for doing it as long as possible. But the question is, what does "as long as possible" mean? Attachment pundits argue for letting the child decide when to stop, rather than weaning being imposed upon them. And, in theory, I agree with this. But in practice I find it way more challenging. And they're not even my breasts!

Among our peers, our child has been breastfeeding the longest - at 3.5 years. I know this is no world record and some kids will go for much longer. In most cases, the moms made a decision to wean their children despite being adherents to attachment parenting. It just didn't work for their lifestyle/sanity anymore. Sometimes the children chose on their own to stop. While most of these kids are now sleeping independently, giving the parents (read:mother) more liberty and a better sleep schedule, this isn't always the case. Every child is different, and some may need the bedtime cuddling well past the age of 5 or 6 or even 10.

Our daughter loves breastfeeding. She talks about it all the time. If she could, she would do it all day and all night, as long as my wife is around. When my wife is absent, Hadley doesn't seem to miss breastfeeding at all. She'll sleep through the night and doesn't show any insecurity, as far as I can tell. We have tried having numerous conversations about stopping breastfeeding and she agrees to the notion but can't stop herself when the urge comes on. In addiction terms, she's in the pre-contemplative stage.

Now, it's unfair to call breastfeeding an addiction, just as it's unfair for the father (me) to try and place limits on the mother-child bond. So I find myself in a tricky position. I feel like it's nearing the time for breastfeeding to end. My reasons are these: it wrecks my wife's sleep, it saps my wife's health and it sticks a wedge between wife in daughter such that they can't be intimate without breastfeeding. But these are all my reasons about my wife. See where this is going? The issue is prickly and I don't want to come off as judgmental.

Let me be clear: I couldn't care less about social norms and what others think about Hadley breastfeeding at 3. If there no other disadvantages, I wouldn't even go on about it. But the fact it, she is making no signs of wanting to slow down. If we leave it up to her to stop breastfeeding, what if she wants to wait until she is 7? Is that attachment parenting? At what point are we allowed to impose our own agenda?

It seems to me that parents impose their own agendas on other issues ranging from food to clothes to daycare choices to not beating up the cat. So why not breastfeeding? Why is this sacred territory? Again, I am not a mother and I don't claim full knowledge of the experience. But I think mothers ought to be able to place reasonable limits on their relationship with the child, without fear of traumatizing the kid for life.

4 comments:

  1. Hmmmm. I'm very reflective now Cayce. You ask a good question that no one in the 'attachment parenting camp' - so far as I can tell - is talking about. I believe mothers can impose their own agendas on this issue since there are so many personal circumstances in which sustaining the nursing relationship is a true hardship for a woman.

    I was lucky that Eleanor's interest in nursing slowly began to dwindle at around 15 months. I say lucky because after 12 months I was ready to let it go and was continuing mostly for her sake (though the extra 15 minutes in bed every morning were nice). Now with Annabel it has only been 6 months, but something is different with my second baby. I am almost resentful of the 'obligation'. I just want my body back. Sadly it feels more like a spiritual drain than an intimate bonding experience. Don't know if that's a feeling the fathers can truly understand. Probably not something all mothers can understand. I feel terrible admitting to it!

    I can't imagine feeling this way about it and continuing the practice for years.... I shudder to think where my mental health would be! Hopefully Annabel will decide she's all done at the convenient 1 year mark. And if she wants to continue? I just don't know. Hard to imagine denying her that....but hard to sacrifice myself. I'd like to believe my health and happiness will make me a better mom anyway, so weaning her will be better in the long run.

    And since it can sometimes be hard to have these 'conversations' on-line without misunderstandings occurring I want to be clear that I was only expressing my view as it applies to my experience. No judgment on you, Alicia, or Hadley for goodness sake!

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  2. I agree with you all - I do know it affects my sleep, health, etc, but I still love breastfeeding too. I know that for me it is the thing I am most proud of as a mother. I also think I am attached to it because we had a traumatic birth experience. I have heard of other moms having that feeling too. In other words, the birth was very negative, but the breastfeeding is a success. It can take years to get over a traumatic birth, and breastfeeding is part of the healing process (for me). I also do get resentful about Cayce wishing us to stop, because I feel like that is my choice to make, not his; while at the same time understanding where he is coming from.
    Being a sexual abuse survivor, I also have an enormous gratitude for being able to have such an amazing attachment to another human being that is intimate but not sexual. Negative feelings about my body melt away when I am breastfeeding. It is healing for me on that level too.
    While I wished that Hadley would stop on her own - I doubt that will happen. I know it will probably be up to me, and that it won't be easy.
    However, I am working towards it, in my own way....

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  3. It is a difficult balance for a father to observe this process as part outsider, part insider. It has been a challenge all along to be on the sidelines while the bond between mother and child is strongest. I completely understand your resentment, or that of any mother whose partner interferes, even with the best of intentions.

    I guess my point with all of this is to explore the other parent's views on such intimate (and controversial) aspects of parenting like breastfeeding. Ultimately, it is the mother's decision to make with the child, just as something equally difficult like abortion is ultimately the mother's decision. It is her body and her relationship to the child that is in question.

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  4. yes, all perspectives are interesting and valid.

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