Sentences with phrase «public i felt ashamed»

Every time I bottle fed in public I felt ashamed and judged because of what they had said to me.

Not exact matches

No other explanation was given, but the damage was certainly done, he had made Brooks feel ashamed for breastfeeding in public.
The parts where you express feeling betrayed by your body and feeling ashamed to bottle feed in public particularly resonated with me.
The ability to breastfeed in public without feeling ashamed.
It's really great to have them supporting us and, but I am a part of this broader culture that we live in our community and so I do feel like the whole thing I mentioned about kind of not really liking to breastfeed in public and Rose you mentioned how you don't tell people often how you breastfeed until four and it kind of makes me sad because I think you know, if everyone else in the world is doing it until 4, maybe everyone else here is doing until 4 and we just, we are all too ashamed or maybe we would kind of be, if I would be a little more brave about it, I would find a different circle of people that I am not so different from.
After I had my first daughter, I remember feeling nervous and even ashamed to nurse in public, like I needed to be somewhere no one could see.
Not feel embarrassed or ashamed to breastfeed in any location where they and their babies are — including public places.
My hope is that this can become a more public conversation so that people struggling with withdrawal don't feel ashamed or alone and can learn from the experiences of others.
When you take the Nexus 7 out of the box, it looks and feels like a tablet you would not be ashamed to take out in public.
A natural redhead himself, Knights has experienced personally the negative perceptions that come with being ginger, and, having no red - haired male public role models to persuade him otherwise, he grew up feeling ashamed of his red roots.
He said he doesn't feel like going to the beach today, but you know that what he really meant is that he's noticed you've packed on a few pound and is ashamed to be seen in a public place with you and your flab.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were discouraged from speaking their languages and made to feel ashamed of using them in public.
Professor Eboni Baugh at the University of Florida offers the following example of an I statement: «When we go out to eat, you always embarrass me,» becomes «I feel hurt and ashamed when you make fun of me in public
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