Not exact matches
I'm not really in the carnival of
breastfeeding toddlers (particularly my dd3 weaned last year at 3 years), but I did post a toddler nursing
picture while studying a human development textbook
with my nursing story at http://raisingsmartgirls.wordpress.com/2009/05/10/my-
breastfeeding-story-and-this-is-what-nursing-a-toddler-looks-like-while-studying/ (scroll down to see the pic).
Make, Do & Push is full of wonderful
pictures of the life of her and her family, along
with posts about the difficult parts of motherhood like
breastfeeding and pregnancy that you're sure to learn from.
With my daughter, I knew that I wanted to have more
breastfeeding pictures.
Maybe Olivia Wilde's photo shoot will help a young expecting mother consider
breastfeeding or maybe it will help mothers who never would have thought to take
pictures of themselves
breastfeeding to take the opportunity to document that special time
with their baby through a photo session or at least a few iphone
pictures.
In the post, she included this
picture of her sitting on the bed, nursing her baby,
with laundry strewn around her, a half consumed drink and off - kilter lamp shade on the bed side table, and the
breastfeeding pillow on her lap and more pillows behind her back to provide the needed support in those early days.
This is a great book that explains (
with pictures) different positions, common misconceptions and pitfalls, and ways to navigate * most * situations while maintaining your
breastfeeding relationship.
Anxious that I would be inviting drama and attacks from other
breastfeeding supporters, educators, blogs, organizations, and my own readers, I didn't want to risk being accused of being a WHO Code violator by posting
pictures of my babies
with their bottles.
It's a shame that someone put a negative comment on your
breastfeeding picture —
breastfeeding is tough and there's nothing wrong
with celebrating your achievement!
Coupled
with the
picture of a bottle - feeding baby, it sends a dangerous message to parents that there is a negative connection between
breastfeeding and allergies.
It's beautiful because it's a mom
breastfeeding her baby, I actually can't see much of the mom its mainly a
picture of the baby, but the big deal is that this baby was born
with cancer and so, born
with cancer, yeah, like I mean totally horrid kind of situation.
I guess what bugs me about
pictures like these, and
with most displays of public
breastfeeding, is that they're more than what meets the eye.
Picture this — a young, first time mom, prone to clinical depression and anxiety, trying her very best to be the BEST mom she can possibly be because she loves her baby so very much... and despite her best efforts and
with help,
breastfeeding is just not going well.
If you know anyone
with a positive
breastfeeding experience like friends, relatives, or your mom, pick their brains to get a more realistic
picture of what it may be like for you.
Pictures of our daily life and posts about homeschooling,
breastfeeding, cloth diapering, eco-frugality, natural childbirth and homebirth, handmade goods, cosleeping, crafts, food (growing it and cooking it) and much more in the works like natural remedies and natural ways to support your health, baby led feedings, general reflections on mothering from a natural living standpoint, traveling
with kids, and Waldorf posts.
There are many good
breastfeeding videos and
breastfeeding pictures available to help explain and encourage mothers in their journey
with their babies.
But painting a one - sided
picture of
breastfeeding as an ideal gold standard gift means many mothers think it's an unattainable ideal — on a par
with never eating sugar or using silk diapers — rather than the biological norm, something that is simply meant to happen.
And I think if everyone is armed
with those facts we would see a total different
picture because if you go to some other culture
breastfeeding is the norm, where you can sit on the beach topless and your toddler comes up and nurse it's no big deal.
And you know, people are always going to get up in arms and I really don't understand the whole issue
with breastfeeding,
with people thinking that like
pictures are you know grouse, and you can't do this!
Results Adjusting for sociodemographics, maternal intelligence, and home environment in linear regression, longer
breastfeeding duration was associated
with higher Peabody
Picture Vocabulary Test score at age 3 years (0.21; 95 % CI, 0.03 - 0.38 points per month
breastfed) and
with higher intelligence on the Kaufman Brief Intelligence Test at age 7 years (0.35; 0.16 - 0.53 verbal points per month
breastfed; and 0.29; 0.05 - 0.54 nonverbal points per month
breastfed).
My husband has been enormously supportive
with breastfeeding all 3 of our kids and
with the 4th due to arrive in August, he's even asked me if it would be okay to take
pictures of me nursing in various places as part of a public health campaign (he's a preventive medicine doc).
The McDonald's has since apologized to the mother, but sadly, this situation is too often repeated, not only in restaurants, malls, and other public places, but on the internet as well — most recently
with a mom's
breastfeeding pictures being banned from Facebook.
In developing countries, outcomes are sometimes worse in kids that
breastfeed for longer, probably in part because this might be occurring in poorer families
with other challenges, but having breast milk displace other foods, such as those rich in iron, is probably part of the
picture.
One of the Finnish tabloids did a similar story today
with a
picture of a mom
breastfeeding an older child on its cover — have not read any comments on that either, as they tend to be along similar lines that you quoted from Time.
Yes, it was removed from Facebook, but really we just want to share this gorgeous
picture of a mother
breastfeeding her child while pregnant
with another.
How about a campaign to replace every racist image on Facebook
with a
picture of a woman
breastfeeding?