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44 Responded To This Post

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11632. MiCo said in September 6th, 2007

Thank you for writing about a topic that is so hotly debated. You did a wonderful job of expressing so many of my own thoughts. When I went from breastfeeding to formula feeding within two weeks I felt like a failure. However, I am happy to report that all three of my children are happy, healthy and intelligent:-)

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11633. ktdelsur said in September 6th, 2007

Great blog, jessanddan.

I plan to try and BF my future second child, but will not beat myself up nearly as much as I did when I had issues BFing my first. You are right. It is a private choice and nobody else’s business. I had a Mom friend of mine have a STRANGER at the grocery store comment on the fact that she was buying formula. Something to the effect of, “You’re going to feed your child that crap?”

I would have told the woman where she could go with her rudeness…

Thanks for posting this. No offense to the strongly pro-BFers but it was quite refreshing to read this after so many anti-formula comments that fly around here on these boards.

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11635. Marisa said in September 6th, 2007

I won’t try to convince you otherwise on most of your points, but I do want to correct some misinformation on the New York formula bag ban.

The only thing that they’ve decided is that they will not hand out the ‘free’ bags from the formula companies. Formula and bottles will most DEFINITELY still be available in hospitals for women who need them or choose to use them.

The only change is that formula bags will not be handed out to the general population at discharge. They are hoping to encourage more moms who do intend to breastfeed to stick to it for a longer period of time, and studies have shown that it’s easier to ‘cave in’ and use formula if it’s in the home.

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11636. Kimberland30 said in September 6th, 2007

I have two children who are teens now, and both were formula fed. Like you, I was on the fence about breast milk vs. formula, and my husband and I decided that we would formula feed, mainly because he would have the bonding experience of feeding our baby, and we would be able to have a sleep schedule.

I’m glad I had my children when I did, before mother’s were “looked down” upon because of their feeding choice - either by breast or bottle. It’s a sad world when judgment is passed so easily and frequently.

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11637. hmbay said in September 6th, 2007

Very well written. I BF’d my two children and will BF my 3rd but I myself was a formula fed preemie and feel formula is a very acceptable choice for all the reasons you mentioned. I think it is a personal choice and it’s sad it has to be such a hot issue among women that should be supporting each other.

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11643. bunny nose said in September 6th, 2007

I totally was looked down upon with my decision to formula feed. There was never any other choice. I just did not want to breastfeed. I have no problem with people who do, it just wasn’t for me. I hated feeling like I was doing something wrong for my child.

But as I read these boards and others, it amazed me how many breastfed babies were always sick. Colds, fevers, ear infections. Not saying breastfeeding is to blame, but they say it makes for a healthier child. My child has been sick once, and that happened after his first birthday. It totally makes me wonder.

Thank you for writing this blog and bringing to light that we all have a choice, and whatever we choose is the right thing for us and us alone.

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11644. lml41981 said in September 6th, 2007

There are some factual issues in your blog post.

First…about New York City hospitals… They’re not banning formula for babies who *need* it. They are simply not giving it away for free anymore. Perfectly reasonable. Breastmilk is the healthier of the two choices and a hospital is a place that should be promoting the most healthful choices. So, why would they give something away for free that is not the healthier option?

Secondly, the issue about formula not harming a child. This is a major debate point. Respectfully, I’m just going to say that there’s a lot that we just don’t know. We know that *not* breastfeeding a child - for any reason - has numerous health disadvantages. Is this the same as formula hurting a child? Also, the trial and error that can come along with finding the proper formula can sometimes hurt a child. (Note: I’m not criticizing mothers who have to formula feed…I’m just saying that I don’t buy the “it isn’t going to harm her” argument. Many moms who have to formula feed even admit that they know it isn’t the ideal method, but it is all they have. It’s better than nothing.)

Why is it bad to call an expert for help with feeding your child? You call an expert for help when your child is sick, right? You refer to a can of formula for mixing instructions, right? I don’t get the difference…

About dads bonding with infants and needing to feel useful. I dunno…My DH gave all of 5 bottles to our DD. They have a wonderful relationship now. Yes, it took them awhile to figure out their own relationship, but that’s life. He knows he’s needed. Without him, there’d be no money coming in the house. No money, no food, no shelter, nothing… He is perfectly fine sacrificing his desire to bond through feeding for the benefit of our kids. Besides that, I really hesitate with the idea that the best way or the only way to bond with our kids is through food and eating. That isn’t the only way we bond with other adults, so why would that be the primary bonding method between adult and child? What about playing and singing and holding and giving a bath and all the other stuff?

And for the breastfeeding in public thing… That’s certainly understandable that you are uncomfortable with that. I’m not going to criticize you for that. I will say, however, that you don’t have to “pull your chest out.” You also don’t have to use a blanket to be discreet, but that’s another topic for another day…

I’m glad you’re happy with your decision, but I do disagree with some of what you wrote. :)

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11646. jess&dan said in September 6th, 2007

In reading back my paragraph about New York, I see that I should have worded it differently. I know they are not giving away free formula to new moms. What I mean in my reference to the moms who supplement is the effect of the general statement this proposition makes. Basically, it appears that New York is saying that formula is wrong, bad, you name it…so yet another reason for moms who tried to BF and could not for any reason to feel like failures. But I do understand why it was thought I had the wrong idea. Just wanted to clarify. :)

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11647. nfowife said in September 6th, 2007

I commend you for being willing to put yourself “out there” on such a controversial topic. I have breastfed both my kids (am still BFing the 2nd one) and neither has had a bottle more than once. That’s just a personal choice. I respect your decision as well.
However, I feel like some of your justifications are just plain wrong. In your family, yes both sides (formula and BFed) are healthy. But the scientific data does not lie- there are clear benefits to breastfeeding that formula cannot claim. That is just fact, that you can’t refute, even if in your particular family it hasn’t been the case. The protections (in terms of disease prevention) that breastmilk provides are clear, and we are learning more everyday about benefits of breastmilk for babies- benefits that can have an effect many years into the future as babies become adults. There are also benefits for the nursing mother, notably a decrease in the risk of breast cancer. And on and on.
As a nursing mom I know how hard it must be when someone tries to nurse and it doesn’t work out for whatever reason (supply, support, or other special situations regarding baby’s or mom’s health). You feel as if your body is “broken”. Most of us are led to believe that it is natural, and it is. But it is still something you have to work at with your baby and learn to do to be successful. Honestly, I don’t understand why someone wouldn’t even attempt to breastfeed given all the health benefits to both mom and baby. Formula cannot compare. It is a substitute and a baby can certainly grow and thrive on it but it is NOT the same as breastmilk, plain and simple. That’s just a fact.
Obviously you can and did do what you wanted to do with your son, but I don’t think your arguments really stand up to the fact that Breastfeeding is BESTfeeding in terms of nutrition for babies. I’m glad that you feel you made the right choice for yourself, though. Maybe in the future you might give breastfeeding a try to see if it will work out for you. At the very least, if it doesn’t, you will get to see what it’s like- and you might really enjoy it!
I’d also like to add that although I’ve not given either of my kids bottles, both are well-bonded to their father. He bathes them, feeds them baby/table food (when they have become old enough to eat), plays, reads, and sings with them, takes them on outings, and is a great and involved Dad. He hasn’t felt like he has missed out on anything just because he hasn’t been able to feed them during the first few months of their lives. I just don’t think that’s a valid argument in favor of formula feeding.

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11648. kerrykate said in September 6th, 2007

Bravo! You made a wonderful post on formula feeding and I think it’s sad that you have breastfeeders making comments regarding your post. Based on my own experiences I believe a childs health has more to do with genetics and it’s living environment than with what it’s fed as a baby. My DD is now almost 4 and she has always been more healthy then her 4 breastfed cousins who were born within 1-2 years of her. They’ve had croup, fifth disease, flu, ear infections/tubes, etc.
Bestfeeding? You’ve got to be kidding me. Formula was not a substitute it was the right choice for my family.

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11649. amwilson615 said in September 6th, 2007

I am the mother of two children, both of whom I breastfed for a period of time before switching to formula. My kids are healthy and happy, and I made the choice that was right for me, and did not face any judgment for doing so. It was only after joining some online communities that I discovered the raging battle over BF’g and FF’g. I am purely aghast and disturbed at all of the judgment that I see going on regarding this very personal choice. Thanks for your point of view.

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11650. lml41981 said in September 6th, 2007

jess&dan,
Your clarification on the New York thing still doesn’t really make a lot of sense. New York City public hospitals is NOT saying formula is wrong, bad, you name it. They’re saying, “We support breastfeeding. If your child *needs* formula, we have it on hand, but we’re not giving it away for free anymore just because it is a choice you have made.” It’d be like if I gave birth in a hospital and said, “Eh…I don’t like what’s on the menu tonight. Get me Chipotle instead, please.” I can have Chipotle, but I have to pay for it.

There is a difference between making a choice and having that choice taken away from you. A mother who had the choice to breastfeed taken away should not feel guilty by New York City’s endorsement of breastfeeding. The choice to formula feed is not being taken away. Formula is still readily available for free - just not from the New York City public hospitals.

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11652. girlygirl_7 said in September 6th, 2007

I am happy to see this blog. I feel that it is important to show all point of views, so I think it is great that one day we had a blog on the choice to breastfeed, and the next day one on the choice to formula feed. I think that this board is often very one sided on the matter (favoring breastfeeding) and I was actually surprised to see this here.

I have 2 children. One was breastfed for quite a while, the other was formula fed from about 2 weeks on. I have mentioned that here before and got some rude feedback on breastfeeding one and not the other. Like I loved one kid more than the other. I loved nursing, and I feel lucky that it came so easy to me. But I was also happy to have the choice to formula feed baby #2 when I realized how difficult it was to nurse all day, with my 12 month old needing equal time from his mom. I made the best decision for my family.

I have said this many times. I don’t get why some people are so against formula. Yes, I have seen the research, I have heard the same arguments over and over. But it doesn’t give anyone the right to judge. Why do some women care so much what others do? Make your choice and be proud that you made the best choice for you. Don’t critize someone else, or think that you are a better mother, because someone made a choice different from your own. I really think that is the point that Jess is trying to make.

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11653. Dally said in September 6th, 2007

I appreciate your perspective!

I did want to comment on a couple of things: the bonding issue with dads and the LCs. I don’t think BFing moms bond more with their babies than FFing moms. But at the same time, I don’t think Dads need to feed to bond–or be relagated to bonding during diaper changes. I BFed (and still do), but we supplemented in the beginning. My DH did help with that, but mostly, I BFed. So, he took on bathtime as his special thing. More than two years later, he has given our DD nearly all of her baths. It’s “their” time. My DH had no trouble with bonding.
Also, regarding LCs and the trouble women have BFing. I think a big reason for that is that most of us grew up seeing only FFing. Most of our mothers and grandmothers FF’d. So, we don’t have the community knowledge that women used to have–and thus, it’s harder now.

Anyway, I want to say again that I appreciate and respect your perspective. Thank you very much for putting it out there. :)

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11656. lawgirl4 said in September 6th, 2007

I’m always curious why people choose not to breastfeed (aside from medical/physiological issues) - not why people choose to formula feed, but why they choose NOT to breastfeed. I don’t necessarily agree with your reasons not to breastfeed, but thanks for taking the time to address that - most people just focus on “why I chose formula” which, IMO, is a very different topic.

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11659. mobox said in September 6th, 2007

Thanks for putting your feelings out there. I too feel exactly like you. I BF for 5 months…well, let me take that back. I PUMPED for 5 months and it was excrutiating in many ways. I’m so happy that my husband has been able to bond so well with our son through (*GASP*) bottle feeding (both BM AND formula). So thanks again for putting yourself up for the crazy and uneccessary critism that surrounds this topic.

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11660. zhannushka said in September 6th, 2007

I strongly believe that breastfeeding vs. formula-feeding is strictly a personal choice and neither one is right or wrong. Before I was even pregnant, I knew that I’d do my best to provide my child with as much breastmilk as I can, but again - that’s just what was right for ME.

Due to some labor complications, followed by his 5-day stay in the NICU, I wasn’t able to nurse my son, but I pumped for him for 8 months, while supplementing with formula. He started out getting about 90% breastmilk and 10% formula, while towards the end it became about 10% breastmilk and 90% formula. Pumping was tough, but I am glad I did it and I wish I could last a year, but my supply had other plans.

With that said - most of my friends did not breastfeed their children, all for different reasons. They are all wonderful mothers, who will do absolutely anything for their babies and would never harm them in any way.

A really good friend of mine had her son around the same time I had mine - whenever we got together, I’d pump while she was making formula bottles - I never once thought that I am a better mother simply because I chose to feed my son breastmilk and she chose formula!

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11661. amwilson615 said in September 6th, 2007

Right on, Zhanna and girlygirl! Women who choose to breastfeed are in no way better, smarter, more loving, more dedicated, or more selfless mothers than women who choose to formula feed.

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11662. dragonfly28602 said in September 6th, 2007

Wow. I felt your post was very well written. I echo many of your sentiments. I applaud you for tackling such a controversial yet personal issue. M husband and I are considering TTC and I am doing so much research. I found this is a huge topic. I am leaning toward formula and your post really made me feel better. Thank you.

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11663. krl626 said in September 6th, 2007

I found your post very interesting and agree with much of what you said. The very fact that you made an informed decision is what I think is important.

That being said I also want to jump in on the NYC hospital formula thing (I live there)and just say that I think that many of mothers (not all, but a lot) who give birth in the city hospitals here are young and not necessarily informed about their choices. They see formula, they use it, plain and simple. Making it something they need to request and giving them information about breastfeeding is more about helping them make that informed decision that you did. For that reason I agree with the new policy in place.

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11666. mamax2 said in September 6th, 2007

Interesting perspective…

I’m finding it really hard to swallow your explanation about fathers and bonding though. Talk about using ’scare tactics’. Your post really belittles all the many non-feeding things a father can do to bond with his child.

If you’re proud of your choice, good for you, but please know that tons of fathers have excellent relationships with their children - regardless of how they’re fed.

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11667. none said in September 6th, 2007

Not being able to breastfeed is one thing. Choosing not to is another. I may be judgmental for posting this, but I think choosing formula without trying breastfeeding (or even pumping) is not just different, it’s disgusting, selfish, and sad.

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11669. sposa06 said in September 6th, 2007

Wow, “none”, thanks for passing judgement on millions of women! I’m sure they appreciate it and will realize the error of their ways once they read your insightful comment.

Sarcasm aside, can’t we just live and let live? Why is it that so many women are so critical of one another’s parenting choices? There’s no good reason for it, other, I suppose, than the feelings of superiority to which some women are apparently addicted and which they can get through belittling others.

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11674. Delta said in September 6th, 2007

I’m all for women making the choice that’s “best for their family” when it comes to feeding their babies. What I am not for are people making weird assumptions about breastfed babies not bonding with fathers (that’s news to me!) or spreading false information about breastfeeding in order to justify their decision.

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11688. lawgirl4 said in September 7th, 2007

“Not being able to breastfeed is one thing. Choosing not to is another.”

ITA with this part of “none’s” comment. That’s what I don’t get. If there is no medical, physiological, or psychological reason why one can’t breastfeed, I don’t understand why someone wouldn’t even try. And I mean try for more than a few days or weeks.

I’m not saying this to be “judgemental” - I just don’t understand it. And “it’s my parenting choice” isn’t an explanation - I can give tons of reasons why I chose to breastfeed my daughter, and none are as simplistic as “it’s my parenting choice.” As I noted above, I’m just curious as to why, if there are no medical reasons, a person wouldn’t give breastfeeding a fair try. (I’m not trying to convert anyone - I’m just genuinely curious!).

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11698. girlygirl_7 said in September 7th, 2007

None ~ Is that your actual username? I love it when people come out with such judgemental and rude comments, yet they don’t have the guts to use their actual username. Way to stand behind what you believe in!

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11699. ldsangel19 said in September 7th, 2007

“I can give tons of reasons why I chose to breastfeed my daughter, and none are as simplistic as “it’s my parenting choice.””

Everyone has reasons for every choice they make, simplistic or otherwise. The thing that I don’t understand is why you feel we (formula feeders) need to give you a reason. I really wish we would all just kind of butt out of eachothers lives a little and like someone else mentioned, live and let live.

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11701. lucy van pelt said in September 7th, 2007

I agree with lawgirl4. All the studies PROVE that breastfeeding is BEST for babies. I don’t understand mothers who choose to formula feed for no other reason than “it works best for me”. Well, when you have a baby, it isn’t about YOU anymore. It’s about what is best for your child and time and time again, breast milk has been proven to be best.

FTR, my baby gets more formula than breast milk. I have severe PCOS and my milk never came in. I nursed and pumped every 2 hours around the clock to increase supply but it never happened. After three weeks of my daughter continually losing weight, I had to start supplementing with formula.

At one point, I was taking 30-40 pills every day to keep up my meager supply which was enough for 1-2 baby satisfying nursing sessions a day. My breast milk was costing me about $4 an ounce to produce. I couldn’t keep up with both the cost of the herbs and other drugs coupled with the cost of formula so I had to quit taking them and just nurse to keep my supply up….and it didn’t work.

I still nurse a couple of times a day, but my daughter won’t stay on the breast for more than a minute or two before she pulls off because there’s just nothing there.

Formula has really helped me but I would NEVER make it my first choice when it comes to feeding my baby. I will never understand women who don’t bother to at least try breastfeeding and give their babies the best start in life.

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11703. Baxter78 said in September 7th, 2007

I also do not understand why we can’t just respect the decisions of mothers regarding feeding. I currently am TTC, and although I am on the fence, I am leaning towards not breastfeeding. There are many reasons (some of which may be selfish), but I think I should have the right to weigh my options and choose the method best for me and my family without being criticized!

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11706. aussie said in September 7th, 2007

Thank you for posting this. Boo to everyone who still argues that bottle-fed babies aren’t as healthy, yadda, yadda, yadda. What happens to babies who cannot breast feed because mom died during childbirth or because the child is adopted? I bottle fed my daughter and, you know what, she’s never been sick, she has slept through the night since she was 2 months, she was an incredibly happy baby and she’s testing above the other kids in her class (third grade). I’m not saying this is because she was bottle fed, rahter I was blessed to have a very good baby (too good, in fact that I was scared to have a second until now). How she was fed has nothing to do with any of this. She is healthy and continues to grow on target and that’s the only thing that matters.

I always felt guilty for telling people that I wasn’t breast feeding because they looked at me like some kind of monster. Now that I’m expecting my second child (and, yes, I will bottle feed), I will not respond when people ask. It’s none of their business. It’s my choice. Isn’t that what all of this women’s liberation is about - making our own choices?

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11707. gardenmommy said in September 7th, 2007

Thank you jess&dan for having the guts to write that blog and start this conversation. I breastfed my DD for 6 weeks and then switched to formula. When baby#2 arrives in about 5 weeks I plan to exclusively formula feed. Breastmilk might have been the most nutritious form of food for my DD, but giving it to her certainly didn’t make me a better mother. The whole process was so difficult, stressful, emotionally taxing etc that I found myself resentful, dispondant and feel like I missed out on loving my DD as much as I possibly could for the first 6 weeks of her life. When I became pregnant again I immeditely began to dread the breastfeeding topic. When DH and i decided that we woudl exclusively formula feed DC#2 I felt like a huge black cloud lifted from my life and have been so much more excited about this baby and experienceing the first weeks of this newborns life with love and joy in my heart.

Do I wish that things were different and I had been able to “successfully” EBF my DD for as long as she needed? Yes. However in hindsight I don’t think the manner in which you feed your child should wholy comprise your worth as a parent.

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11711. lawgirl4 said in September 7th, 2007

“The thing that I don’t understand is why you feel we (formula feeders) need to give you a reason.”

LDSANGEL19, you definitely misinterpreted my post. If you read my post you would understand that I don’t “feel [you] need to give [me] a reason” - I am *curious* as to why people choose not to breastfeed, ergo I am interested in hearing WHY. I never said I *need* to hear why, I said I am *curious*. there’s a big distinction there.

LUCY VAN PELT: great comment - I totally agree with you on this point:
“All the studies PROVE that breastfeeding is BEST for babies. I don’t understand mothers who choose to formula feed for no other reason than “it works best for me”. Well, when you have a baby, it isn’t about YOU anymore. It’s about what is best for your child and time and time again, breast milk has been proven to be best.”

I am so sorry that you have had such a rough time with breastfeeding - and as I implied earlier, I completely understand supplementing or even switching to formula when a mother has a hard time due to production issues, etc… kudos to you for your stance - I am totally with you on this:

“I will never understand women who don’t bother to at least try breastfeeding and give their babies the best start in life.”

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11741. DanaLynn said in September 8th, 2007

Fabulous Blog.
I really enjoyed reading YOUR decision to formula feed and I agree with everything you wrote.
Thank you.

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11745. tray622 said in September 8th, 2007

The problem with the whole “you have to at least try then I won’t judge” philosophy some of you talk about is that there is always the line where one didn’t try hard enough. We all know that statistically speaking most who use the “I couldn’t breastfeed line” could have actually breastfed. The percentage of those actually medically proven to not produce breast milk, aren’t all that high. My point is not to argue breast milk versus formula because that is a mute point… breast milk is best and I am very pro-breastfeeding and more breastfeeding education.

My problem comes from the very shady gray lines that people draw to pass judgment.

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11746. amygrrl said in September 8th, 2007

“The percentage of those actually medically proven to not produce breast milk, aren’t all that high.”

is there a study to show this? if so, can you point me in that direction?

also, beyond production, there are a ton of medical reasons why some can’t breastfeed… preemie/ sick babies with special dietary needs, sick mothers, mothers on prescription drugs not compatible with breastfeeding, etc.

‘could breastfeed’ to me is a loaded statement. i had thrush for 5 months (that no amount of herbal or prescription drugs could cure). yes, i could have attempted to put dd to the breast when she was about a month old and had recovered from the jaundice, being early, and nearly dying at delivery… but to what point? to have us pass the thrush back and forth?

i just don’t think the whole ‘almost everyone can’ is really an accurate statement. it’s like the naturally skinny person telling the naturally chubby person ‘anyone can weight 105 if they really wanted to’. sure they can… at what cost though?

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11747. tray622 said in September 8th, 2007

There is a study and I have it bookmarked on my other computer, so I will post it. However, I definitely agree with you 100%. I bottlefed and formula fed myself and for reasons I feel comfortable with. My point is that judgements are being made if a mom did this, this, or this, but not if she didn’t do this. The judgement lines are very gray and I feel for moms who may have a lot of rejected feelings based on those lines. It doesn’t make sense for the judgements to be drawn on women who didn’t bf at all by saying if they had even just tried then you (generally speaking you) wouldn’t judge them.

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11748. Delta said in September 8th, 2007

Again, I actually don’t really judge a mom either way. I don’t think formula feeding makes ANYONE any less of a mom (duh!) and I don’t think anyone needs to justify their choice to anyone except themselves. That’s why I get so annoyed by these false claims that defensive formula feeders throw out about their husband bonding more with the baby because he could feed it, or dismissing the many, many studies that prove that breastmilk is best, etc. Just acknowledge the facts and then own your decision.

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11752. magdesilver said in September 8th, 2007

Well said Delta!! That is what I was trying to say in my (too wordy) comment above. (by the way, I’m nfowife, I entered the wrong username when posting the comment, not trying to hide!).

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11767. krl626 said in September 9th, 2007

I think if anything the fact that women do not get nationwide paid maternity leave to be able to stay home with their babies for at least a year is probably a huge reason why so many women don’t breastfeed.

Someone mentioned that in Sweden nearly 100% of women do, but they also get paid to stay home for a year (I think). Many times the decision has to be factored in with the iminent return to work. I myself pumped at work until my son was 1 but I know that is not always possible.

Instead of pointing fingers at each other we should be banding together against our establishment that makes breastfeeding such a dificult decision in the first place. JMO!

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11775. kemorr said in September 9th, 2007

You know often times “I couldn’t breastfeed” means a lot more than “I didn’t produce milk”. The two statments aren’t interchangeable. I am pro-BF. I planned on BF for a year. It didn’t work out for us. I nursed for 4 1/2 months and pumped for another 2 months - so DD received BM until 6 1/2 months old, but only exclusively for the first 3 weeks. For the entire 6 1/2 months I battled a crappy supply, painful and bleeding nipples, clogged ducts, mastitis and a baby who would scream and cry 50% of the time when I attempted to breastfeed her (due to reflux and slow, sometimes non-existent, letdown). I spent $1000 on lactation support and several more $$ on herbs for my supply. Didn’t work. So, theoretically I could have continued BF because I was producing milk (although not enough to sustain her) but I stopped because it was tormenting my child (it got to the point that everytime I even put her in the nursing position she would start flailing and crying) and thereby tormenting me. So, even though I am pro-BF, I don’t judge a woman who doesn’t choose to try BF. Just like I don’t judge a person who turns their kid forward facing at 1 year but less than the RF weight limit, a woman who feeds her kids McDonalds once a week, a woman who lets her 1 year old watch 2 hours of TV a day etc. etc. There is so much more in life that you can do to affect your child’s health and development that in the long run, BF or FF is a drop in a very large ocean. (Your kid may be EBF for 1 year or more but if you feed him/her pizza, icecream, McDonalds and KFC on a regular basis for the next 18 years, I don’t think the BF is going to make much difference.)

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11888. lawphil said in September 12th, 2007

I just want to chime in on the NYC debate. Many women who give birth in NYC hospitals do not have the economic and social resources to have a successful breastfeeding experience. Nor do they have the funds to purchase formula. By removing that choice - and really you are when you say to a woman that doesn’t have the money to buy formula and the support to have a succesful breastfeeding relationship - you are ultimately harming the child. It is not about whether bf or formula feeding is best but how to ensure that children will get high quality sources of nutrition.

On another note it is a highly personal decision - whether to breastfeed or not. It was very brave of you to write this blog, particularly in the face of so many women who feel that it is there place to comment on how other women raise their children. It is quite interesting in this day and age that we can not support and applaud our fellow women for the choices that they make.

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11952. Wendalah said in September 13th, 2007

For all of you moms who “don’t understand why a woman would choose not to breastfeed”–do any of you work fulltime outside the home?

Many women are responsible for earning substantial portions of their family’s income–out of necessity, not simply because they like their jobs–and the choice to switch to formula is not simply one of “breastfeeding isn’t convenient for me.” Unfortunately we aren’t at a utopian point in society where all workplaces and job schedules are conducive to a breastfeeding relationship.

Nor do I think it’s productive in any way to suggest a woman is being selfish for not feeling able to maintain breastfeeding/pumping and hold down a demanding job.

I plan to try breastfeeding during my maternity leave, but I also plan on going back to work after four months and I’m not sure what will happen then. I work in a progressive office and I am sure they will be accomodating if I wish to pump. Will I be able to keep it up, though? I don’t know and I make no speculations until I’ve tried it to see how it goes.

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11962. lawgirl4 said in September 13th, 2007

“For all of you moms who “don’t understand why a woman would choose not to breastfeed”–do any of you work fulltime outside the home?”

I don’t, but many of my friends do, and absolutely breastfed their children while on their maternity leave, and continued to do it for as long as they could (while supplementing with formula when it became necessary, which, IMO, was a great approach and one that I myself would probably have taken if I hadn’t been in a position to be a SAHM once my daughter was born).

Personally, I am not “anti-formula” but again, I don’t understand someone deciding not to breastfeed before their baby is even born. I don’t understand not even *trying* - that’s to what I am referring when I say I “don’t understand why a woman would choose not to breastfeed.”

just wanted to clarify that.

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12197. lawphil said in September 19th, 2007

I don’t think you need to understand and I don’t believe you (generic)have any right to question. It is a choice that each person has to make for themselves. What is right for them and their child. I don’t think your “I don’t undersand” is as simple as you are trying to make it sound. You think their choice is wrong and you want them to convince you otherwise.

As I said above I find it so disheartening to hear women beat eachother down over the choices they make with regards to how they raise their children. Work, don’t work, breastfeed, formula feed…it is so difficult to figure out what is right for you and your family we really don’t need other women fighting against us.

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