June 2016 Moms

How long to breast feed for?

Atlast111Atlast111 member
edited December 2015 in June 2016 Moms
I realise this may be a controversial topic but for women who choose to breastfeed, I wondered what you thought was an ideal amount of time to breast feed for?

How long to breast feed for? 132 votes

Under 6 months
3% 5 votes
6 months
10% 14 votes
A year
53% 70 votes
18 months
13% 18 votes
2 years
12% 17 votes
2 to 3 years
5% 7 votes
3 years plus
0% 1 vote
«13

Re: How long to breast feed for?

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  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    Haha....Thought I might spice things up with a little debate! I mean an interesting one not a mean one! Debate should always be respectful. :smiley:
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    The reason I'm asking is I have a friend who is still breast feeding her 4 1/2 year old. Tbh I find it a little unusual. She doesn't need it for nutrition and I suspect my friend is doing it because she has a deep rooted desire to be needed. She has always been very insecure. I'm just not sure it's very healthy for her daughter as she is stopping normal child development in my mind as she seems to be the one actively encouraging it rather than her daughter requesting it. This lead me to wonder what the average age for finishing BF was?
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    @fishwife799. I'm just interested in different people's views. It doesn't necessarily mean there is a right or wrong answer. I'm happy to discuss anything. I don't think a topic should be off limits because it is a sensitive subject.
  • I enjoyed bf'ing for about 18 months (my daughter loved it) but was then ready to stop.  I think it's a very personal decision.  I'm glad it came naturally to me and was easy for both of us.  I was bottle fed exclusively as a kid and I've turned out pretty well if I do say so myself.  
  • Ditto to however long mom/baby wants. Maybe add that as an option to your poll? With my first we stopped at about 3 months. With my second we went to 2 years.
  • I bf DS for 18 months and would have gone until 2 if I didn't have to wean to TTC.
    DS 9/2/13 was a BFP from an IUI!
    Triplets due 6/29/16 also from an IUI!

    Lilypie Pregnancy tickers
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    I'm thinking of going around a year. There are 3 main reasons for this. 1) We would love our children to be close in age so will start trying around a year after our baby is born. As I've heard that BF can slow down conception, I think it's best to stop as it took me 18 months to conceive. I may try and pump extra and bottle feed breast milk for another few months if possible. 2) I think after 1 year to 18 months I may struggle to get them to stop.My MIL BF all her children until 2 and had a terrible time getting them to finish. She ended up having to put a bitter liquid on her nipples and telling them her milk had gone off! Lol. 3) I think by this time their immune system and nutrition should be developed enough to do without. :smile:
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    @Wyattnash00. The bizarre thing was her daughter was commenting on the taste and quality of the milk. I feel if they are old enough to critique the milk, it might be time to move on. I would never say this to my friend as I love her dearly and wouldn't want to hurt her feelings but I was interested to see what others thought. I absolutely do support women's right to choose and just because I have my view it does not make others wrong in their choices, it is just my opinion only.
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015

    Atlast111 said:

    @fishwife799. I'm just interested in different people's views. It doesn't necessarily mean there is a right or wrong answer. I'm happy to discuss anything. I don't think a topic should be off limits because it is a sensitive subject.

    I'm not saying that it should be an off limits topic.
    Atlast111 said:

    Haha....Thought I might spice things up with a little debate!

    This is what struck me the wrong way. With a comment like this it seems like you are intentionally trying to stir the pot on a topic than can cause many hurt feelings.

    Edited for spelling
    Oh...I see, apologies. Nope unicorn here! I don't like to hurt people. I just enjoy active conversations. I was raised around a dinner table that used to love debate. But spicy to me means interesting not mean!! I have strong opinions but always try to be respectful.
  • Atlast111 said:
    @Wyattnash00. The bizarre thing was her daughter was commenting on the taste and quality of the milk. I feel if they are old enough to critique the milk, it might be time to move on. I would never say this to my friend as I love her dearly and wouldn't want to hurt her feelings but I was interested to see what others thought. I absolutely do support women's right to choose and just because I have my view it does not make others wrong in their choices, it is just my opinion only.
    I definitely agree, and it sounds like the mom is more interested then her daughter and at this age I'm not sure of health benefits, haven't done research into that. 
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  • Atlast111 said:

    @Wyattnash00. The bizarre thing was her daughter was commenting on the taste and quality of the milk. I feel if they are old enough to critique the milk, it might be time to move on. I would never say this to my friend as I love her dearly and wouldn't want to hurt her feelings but I was interested to see what others thought. I absolutely do support women's right to choose and just because I have my view it does not make others wrong in their choices, it is just my opinion only.

    I definitely agree, and it sounds like the mom is more interested then her daughter and at this age I'm not sure of health benefits, haven't done research into that. 

    Idk, I wouldn't do it myself but if the kid actually doesn't want to do it, I don't see how she would be able to force her to. I'm a FTM but my experience with young kids has been that if they don't want something they will heartily refuse.
  • I would totally tell my friend it's strange and had gone on too long! Lol that's what friends are for, to call you out on your crap! Knowing its out of love! Anyway... Just my opinion but everyone's friendships are different. So if it will hurt the relationship... Don't take my advice! Ha!

    In general, I think however long mom and baby are comfortable with it is usually the rule of thumb, our doctor states ending before a year is the sweet zone. Breaking it up between solid foods and breast milk maybe at night for bed time... We want to space our kids pretty close so depending on when baby number two comes, will be when we transition our first off of breast milk.
  • I planned to make it to a year if I could, my son just weaned himself last week at 20 months. I wanted him to do it on his own time whenever he was ready and comfortable and not base anything on timelines. It worked out beautifully for us, I couldn't ask for a better bf experience overall. If he wanted to be done at a year or wait until 2, that would have been cool too. I believe in most other countries breastfeeding until 2 is the norm and the WHO recommends two.
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    @Sgoldberg247. I don't think she minds either way but children do take their parents lead. My issue with BF for very extended periods, is that BF releases endorphins for the mother so they can actually become addicted to the action in some respect. As a parent there is often a fine line between doing what you enjoy and what is best for your child. A classic example is another friend of mine (a single parent and I say this as it is relevant to the story) kept her a son out of nursery until he was 3 and sleeping in her bed until he was 7. When I spoke to her about him not going to nursery, she admitted to me she wanted his company and didn't want to be lonely. The son had sort of filled the role of a partner for her. We talked about it and she finally decided to send him to nursery as he was ready and needed to be with kids his own age.
  • With DD I went 3.5 years, 2.5 years with DS (they overlapped by 1.5 years).  It worked for me - the thought of formula & bottles totally overwhelms me, and my kids were never big on cow's milk.  I think however long works for a mom/baby is fantastic - it's definitely worth a try, but no one should suffer or torture themselves for it.
  • I would have liked to make it to a year...but with mastitis at 6 months and huge drop in supply, I broke down (I was a mess crying) and bought formula. We definitely didn't have it easy..one side was always in pain and switched back and forth...it was rough. I ended up with mastitis because he clamped down so hard and collapsed the ducts.

    Honestly, stopping was the best choice I could have made for us. I hope the bf relationship is better with this baby..we can start by not being 3 weeks early, hopefully!
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    Rosehip15 said:

    With DD I went 3.5 years, 2.5 years with DS (they overlapped by 1.5 years).  It worked for me - the thought of formula & bottles totally overwhelms me, and my kids were never big on cow's milk.  I think however long works for a mom/baby is fantastic - it's definitely worth a try, but no one should suffer or torture themselves for it.

    @Rosehip15. Thanks for sharing! Just wondering did your children stop feeding of their own accord or did you have a difficult time getting them to stop? I have heard toddlers can be very persistent when they want feeding and I was worried I might struggle to get them off the breast. Thanks. :smile:
  • If I wasn't so lazy I'd find some more information on extended breastfeeding as I know little about benefits, pro's con's etc. Can you seriously become addicted to it?

     Knee-jerk reaction from me is that whatever works for their family and it's not negatively affecting either mom or baby - I think go for it. I know there's the instant "ew, gross" reaction to breastfeeding a 4 year old from MANY people, but I would not want to be judgemental of a mom based soley on the opinion of it's 'weird' with nothing to back that up.

  • @courtjack. It's pretty interesting. I saw a documentary on it recently. I think your body makes serotonin or endorphins, which makes sense at it encourages the mother to continue feeding. I would have to look it up.
  • @Emztron500. I have never heard of the usual term extending to 7. Do you know which groups practice this? Of course I respect her wishes as I have stated a number of times, that's why i am expressing my thoughts to strangers and not her.
  • @HBamama2B. I have never mentioned this to her as I said earlier. As i said my view is just one of many. It's not a judgement just a view.
  • HBamama2B said:
    @Atlast111 TBH your post about your friend turned me off the thread. I don't think @lyette1206 was impolite at all, she made great points and shared her experience in humorous way. I think the way you presented your opinion in prior posts has a tone of judgement you may not have realized. My first boyfriend in high school was from a Mormon family with 11 siblings. When he brought me home to meet them, his 5 yr old brother detached from nursing and introduced himself before returning to his pre-bed routine, a 6 month old was also nursing at the same time. I remember being shocked about it, especially since my siblings and I were all 100% bottle fed and I'd never seen a breast before, let alone a talking nursing child, but the culture is different and I just couldn't ever judge. As I got to know the family I realized that what is 'normal' is nothing. I think this is 100% a personal family decision. I would suggest never, ever mentioning your feelings to your friend. Just my opinion. I will personally try to follow the WHO guidelines with mine, but as pp said it's really up to the situation and what works best for me and each child.
    Ditto
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  • https://kellymom.com/ages/older-infant/ebf-benefits/ This article lists a few different sources giving the "2 to 7" range and 1 that gives normal weaning age as "between 6 months and 5 years". It isn't a matter of specific groups breastfeeding longer than others. There is a wide range of normal in all cultures. I know lots of middle class Canadian moms nursing beyond 3-4 years. 7 years would be an outlier, but all the health/paediatric organizations I've looked up have said something to the effect of their being no upward limit.
  • We went to about 20 months - because it worked for us.  I despise pumping and work full time, which made the first 12 months very difficult to get through.  Once we were just morning and night, mama was a lot happier :-)
    Married: June 25, 2011
    DS #1: Born September 29, 2013
    Baby #2: Due June 3, 2016

    DST T4L




  • HBamama2BHBamama2B member
    edited December 2015
    @Atlast111 Im sorry, I read too quickly and missed the 'I'd never' in the tell my friend on your following comment.

    I think you might be splitting hairs on the not judgment thing.

    @Emztron500 good point. Follow up: the kids between 2-3 in my boy friends family mostly didn't breast feed, they stopped when they stopped I think. Don't remember if that came up though, but I know it wasn't universal.
  • I have mixed feelings about it honestly. I probably would stop around 18months... but I am a FTM & have no clue if I can even breastfeed lol. My thoughts are just that I pray I am able to breastfeed!
  • @HBamama2B. No problem. It's hard to make a personal decision for yourself without making a judgement one way or another. There is a big difference between having a personal thought and imposing it on others. Yes I find it unusual.....but it is absolutely her right to do what she thinks is best. Anyhow, this isn't about me. I prefer to hear all your views.
  • Atlast111Atlast111 member
    edited December 2015
    Thanks to everyone for sharing. There seems to a mix of everything in the group! It's interesting to learn when children self wean too. :smile:
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