I wanted to ask breastfeeding moms if they cover or not while they nurse in public.
I can understand for privacy if your baby pops on and off and would expose your breast/nipple to everyone - OR - if you have large breasts and its difficult to breastfeed without exposing them.
BUT if you can breastfeed without exposing anything should you have to cover up? Example: My sister wears a nursing tank under every shirt, so she can lift up her shirt and down the corner of her tank and she doesn't show anything. When she breastfeeds it just looks like she is holding a sleeping baby.
Sometimes I feel that covering up with one of those HUGE nursing covers draws more attention to a breastfeeding mother than not covering up.
What are your thoughts?
Re: Breastfeeding: to cover, or not to cover?
I'm a very modest person and would never expose myself no matter the situation. With that being said, I would use the cover ups. Even if I was able to nurse without exposing anything, I still would.
I'm more comfortable covering because he doesn't get distracted as easy and when he does pop up unexpectedly, I'm not scrambling to cover my nipples.
I don't care if others cover or not, although I would rather not be exposed to your boobs, just like I don't want to see your a$$ hanging out of a mini skirt.
I understand not wanting to see anything from anyone (boobs or crack).
But if nothing is shown at any moment, is it inappropriate NOT to cover up?
Posting from an Android sorry for any errors
I have no issue with nursing in public and I know that boobs are meant for nursing not sex...so before you flam I know both of these things and I'm well aware of them.
That being said, even when I'm with a friend/family member--I feel more comfortable if they would have a cover (or even a swaddle blanket) draped...I just dont want to watch.
At home, I will probably not use a cover, unless there are visitors, but in public you can bet I'll use a cover if I'm going to nurse. I get that its natural, and I'm not a real modest person and I get that BF is my right and babies right to feed, but it irks me to no end when because its natural people feel entitled to make other people uncomfortable.
But then you are covered, right? I mean just because you aren't using a blanket/cover doesn't mean you aren't covered. when I say I feel it is more respectful to be covered in certain places, I guess I mean not full on "there's a boob" nursing - you want to do that elsewhere (anywhere an adult human being would eat/drink/be casually) fine, not my thing, but it is your right to feed your baby, but when it comes to Church/Synagogue/Funeral homes - it just comes across as disrespectful, to me.
I should have specified cover up meaning to put on a nursing cover.
When I think of women nursing in public, I assume that they do their best NOT to full on expose breast, and its covered by clothes. - So then wondering if ON TOP of that if you would have to cover baby nursing, and yourself with a nursing cover. - Does that make any more sense?
It definitely isn't a one right answer question - more like a 'what do you think about this, a) for yourself and - b) if you saw a discreet nursing mother who wasn't wearing a nursing cover.
Sometimes I think of a better way of saying it AFTER I've already said it. I'm no linguist.
The cover draws more attention, in my opinion. Makes it so obvious that you are nursing. I nursed Sam without one, initially because he wouldn't tolerate being under one, and then because I realized it wasn't necessary.
No one ever saw anything as far as I know, at least not something they wouldn't see at the beach or in a low cut shirt. And no one ever said anything or made any type of fuss about my nursing him. I think most the time, unless you watched me latching him on, you just didn't know if I was nursing him or just cuddling.
ETA: Oh, and I did nurse him just this way at the funeral home visitation and the church funeral for my Grandmother when he was 8 months old. Really, it seems more disrespectful/disruptive to let him cry, and I wasn't about to miss being there, especially having traveled so far with my infant to do so. No one paid the slightest bit of attention to his nursing, the focus was appropriately on my Grandmother.
I could care less if I saw someone's breasts while BF. That's what they're for. To me, it's like seeing an arm - it's a part of the female body that has a purpose (and surprise, surprise, it's not sexual).
If I'm in a publicly designated BF area (like a nursing room), I don't cover up. I'd rather look at my baby and bond while BF, than looking down at a white blanket with ducks on it. And the decreased air flow can't be comfy for the baby either, so I don't use a blanket if I don't have to.
If I'm out and about in public like at a restaurant or walking around the mall, I'll use a cover. Not for my sake, but just to be respectful to other people around who may, for whatever reason, be offended or made squeamish by BF (although I'll never understand it).
And for those people who say "but I don't want my kids seeing someone's boob", I just don't understand why. It's only a big deal if you make it a big deal. When we're out and DD sees someone BF and catches a glimpse of boob, she gets all excited saying "Mommy! That lady is feeding her baby!". Normal, natural, and necessary. I'm glad DD will grow up realizing that breasts evolved to feed our babies. not for the pleasure of men.
*TW loss and children mentioned*
Apr 17: IUI #1 = BFN
May 17: IUI #2 = BFN
Jun 17: IUI #3 = Late BFP (18 DPO) | NMC 17Jul17 @ ~6w
Aug 17: IUI #4 = Cancelled due to premature ovulation | TI = BFN
Sep 17: IUI #5 = Cancelled due to overstimulation (10+ follies)
Nov 17: IVF #1 = Cancelled due to non-IF related health issue | TI = BFN
Dec 17: IVF #1 = Puregon 200, Menopur 75, Orgalutran, Suprefact trigger due to OHSS risk | 22R, 18M, 16F, 10B frozen
Feb 18: FET #1 (medicated) = BFN
Mar 18: FET #2 (natural cycle) = CP (beta 1: 54; beta 2: 0)
EDD: 07Jan2019 Team Green
My Rainbow Baby Boy born 03Jan2019
I'm always the one people love to hate, but I think people should go to a private place to bf. I intend on going to a bathroom or my car to do it or just bring a bottle with breast milk.
Here's the thing about making other people uncomfortable-
If I was doing *X* in an attempt to make others uncomfortable, that makes me an ass. Doing "X" because it works for me and is normal, legal, and so on, makes me just someone doing what works for me and is normal, blah blah blah.
It isn't my job to make others comfortable. There are plenty of things other things that make some uncomfortable, and I don't see a whole lot of support for forcing (through public disapproval or other means) those things to be done in private/under cover. Any of you going to advocate that gay couples not hold hands/kiss/whatever show of normal affection that a hetero couple makes in public? Plenty of people still "uncomfortable" with that. (I'm not, btw, so please don't take it that way. I DO know people who are.)
I'm definitely not hating, just to be clear.
Personally, I would never feed my baby in a public bathroom unless it had a lounge area specifically for nursing that looked remarkably clean.
I would never eat my meals in a bathroom.
I don't want to be flashed, but I'm not offended if I accidently catch a peek.
Once you get there, you'll know what is right for you. Any mom nursing is supported by me--nursing cover or not!
We used it sometimes and not others-it also depended on what I was wearing and how much I had to expose, or if I wanted to help my baby relax under the cover, etc.
Really--it should not matter--I don't care if a mom is sporting a bright orange nursing cover, it's great if they are nursing. There are a lot of great nursing clothing options for moms, now, too!
If someone is thinking about buying a cover now, I recommend the kind that has a piece of boning in the top so you can look down and see your baby. It really helped me when baby was learning how to latch on in the beginning. It's private so others can't see down to what your baby is doing.
I'm probably an all around prude but straight couples kissing in public make me uncomfortable too...a peck on the cheek fine, forehead fine, the way a 3 year old would give a kiss fine. But if its a romantic, kiss kiss --I dont want to see it. I guess I never think of myself as that modest of a person but I don't do PDA and I'm all about the BF covers...
I tried the cover once with DS when he was 10 days old. I found it such a PITA that I jsut stopped. It wasn't worth it and in the first weeks it's hard enought to figure breast feeding out that adding a piece of material so you can't see either is just not a good time.
I also have very small boobs so you could barely see anything anyway. I also never once had anyone give me a dirty look or say anything. I have zero issues with people seeing my boobs when I am clearly feeding my baby.
In the beginning I used it the entire time since I was so new at it. As she got older and started batting it away, I just used it for latching. Usually I was in a secluded place anyway (quiet bench or 'mother's lounge').
I'm not buying a nursing cover. I bought nursing bras and a Moby wrap, and maybe I'll throw a receiving blanket over top or something. I'm all for NIP and not feeling ashamed of any aspect of it. Boobs shouldn't be viewed as a primarily sexual object, which they are when you see one and go "OMG, BOOOOOB!!!".
I totally feel this way. I have a nursing cover but I almost never used it with DD because I felt like it was a big flashing neon sign saying HEY LOOK AT ME I'M BREASTFEEDING!!! I could nurse her discreetly enough without the cover that I thought less people would notice if I just did that. I don't care if other moms cover or not - I'm always happy to see anyone NIP however they do it.
I am personally not really very shy. And I have great boobs!
BUT - to me it is respectful to be discreet when BFing. Some women are great at is, without a cover. Some notsomuch. I personally used a cover or went to a private area. If at the mall or Target, I would just pop into a dressing room. Private, not a potty, and a decent place to change a diaper too.
If you are showing boob in public with a militant attitude of "It's natural! A boob is not sexual!" Then you get a major side eye from me. Boobs ARE sexual. But most moms I know who NIP don't have that attitude. They just feed their kids and are discreet about it how it works for them. That's cool with me.
DMoney will be a kickass big sister
Ditto this
No, our society has made them sexual. Biologically, they evolved as a form of feeding offspring with milk, like all other mammals in the animal kingdom. That is their purpose. No other mammal uses their breasts/udders/whatever during sexual activity - it just doesn't factor in. Because Homo sapiens have evolved very complex social behaviour, we have changed the way we look at our bodies. Breasts long ago became sexual objects. I'm not saying that most people don't consider them sexual and men aren't attracted to them, I'm saying that breasts did not evolve biologically for that purpose. And in many parts of the world, this is recognized. Men, children, and women in these areas would never bat an eyelash to see a woman breastfeeding or catch a glimpse of boob while she was doing so - you know why? Because breasts were originally meant for breastfeeding, and they still hold that mentality. Too bad North Americans don't.
*TW loss and children mentioned*
Apr 17: IUI #1 = BFN
May 17: IUI #2 = BFN
Jun 17: IUI #3 = Late BFP (18 DPO) | NMC 17Jul17 @ ~6w
Aug 17: IUI #4 = Cancelled due to premature ovulation | TI = BFN
Sep 17: IUI #5 = Cancelled due to overstimulation (10+ follies)
Nov 17: IVF #1 = Cancelled due to non-IF related health issue | TI = BFN
Dec 17: IVF #1 = Puregon 200, Menopur 75, Orgalutran, Suprefact trigger due to OHSS risk | 22R, 18M, 16F, 10B frozen
Feb 18: FET #1 (medicated) = BFN
Mar 18: FET #2 (natural cycle) = CP (beta 1: 54; beta 2: 0)
EDD: 07Jan2019 Team Green
My Rainbow Baby Boy born 03Jan2019
I'm pretty modest and I really don't relish the idea of being ogled in public, so I'm planning on covering up when breastfeeding in public. I think a receiving blanket or a nursing shawl seems like an easy way to give my LO what it needs when it needs it without making anyone (most importantly me) uncomfortable.
Kudos to mamas who can go all National Geographic, I'm just not one of them
Also, my lactation consultant said that a blanket can help keep babies focused on the task at hand, there are a lot of distractions in a busy public place.
This.
It just seems to be an American sexualization of everything so much so that the most natural thing in the world is sexualized. And out of some desire to seem pure and moral, a woman must cover herself so that she doesn't accidentally turn men on or make others uncomfortable- that somehow out of respect a woman cannot do the most natural thing in the world in public because someone might see some skin?!....wow. I could draw the parallels to other extreme forms of "modest" dress worn by women so as not to tempt men and to show respect for others, but I'll leave that for another day.
I think it's disgusting to feed a baby in a public bathroom. Or in your car for that matter. Eating in public is completely normal. And has nothing to do with how private of a person you are. And I don't equate seeing a bit of boob while a woman is breastfeeding to seeing someone's ass in a short skirt - one is completely normal and appropriate, the other is not.
This. Isn't this why everyone says you should buy a pump if you plan to bf anywho? Anytime I go out with LO I will bring bottles with breast milk in them incase I don't want to feed him in a bathroom or go to my car or whatever.