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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to hate breastfeeding my baby

307 replies

FeelLikeTweedleDee · 18/10/2010 14:36

It's supposed to be nurturing and an amazing bonding experience. But I despise breastfeeding. I'm one of those malcontent mothers who breastfeed out of duty alone. When I read about mothers who enjoy breastfeeding and who feel sad when their child self-weans I feel like sectioning them.

10 Things I Hate About Breastfeeding:

  1. THE PAIN. They say "if it hurts you're doing it wrong". That's one of the many breastfeeding bluffs you'll hear at antenatal classes (don't want to scare off all the new expectant mothers do we?) Well it hurts me and I've had my latch checked by a thousand professionals. Also I've had thrush. Also I have a very strong let-down reflex. Considering the let-down reflex is normal, and indeed essential, then it's safe to say that breastfeeding hurts and I'm doing it RIGHT.
  1. YOUR BODY IS OWNED BY OTHERS. All through your pregnancy you console yourself by saying "I can't wait to give birth, then I can have my body back to myself". WRONG. As a breastfeeding mother, your baby continues to have dibs on your body.
  1. THE HUMILIATION. Aside from imprisoning themselves in their home for 2 years, breastfeeding mothers have to face the humiliation of breastfeeding in public. Every Tom, Dick and Harry can get a view of your baps. Some may even decide to comment as you sit there and flop an udder out. So not only does your body belong to your baby, it also belongs to the general public too. You may as well sign on the dotted line because ownership ain't yours anymore.
  1. LIMITED WARDROBE. Because someone else owns your body, that means that you have to dress to their tastes. Chest access is key. Say goodbye to that inseason lacy bodysuit you've had your eye on. Say goodbye to most dresses actually. Say hello to Primark vest tops and masculine shirts. Joy.
  1. FORMULA CULTURE. Most people give up breastfeeding after a few weeks. Thus we live in a formula culture. Bottles are everywhere. On Congratulations cards, in soaps, in children's books, on babygros. The result is that most people (your close family included) think that by breasstfeeding you have changed into a strange earth-mother type, and maybe even slightly pervy. And of course you're the only BFing mother at your babygroup.
  1. MRS MARTYR. As a breastfeeding mother you are soley responsible for your baby's continued existence on the plannet. Only you can feed baby. (It's understandable why a lot of new dad's support breastfeeding these days!) Welcome to the world of lonely midnight feeds. Welcome to your partner going for drinks down the pub whilst you stay at home, udders at the ready. But what about expressing I hear you say? For most women the breastpump extracts 3oz. As baby grows she'll want more than that. You make an appointment with your doc but she won't prescribe anything to increase your supply. Time to pop to Holland and Barrett to get some Fenugreek herbs. As a result you end up smelling of curry. Your FFing friends at the babygroup avoid your side of the mat.
  1. SO-CALLED "PROFESSIONALS". Health visitors, midwives, GPs, breastfeeding counsellors - they don't know shit about breastfeeding. But they will love to mindfuck you with conflicting info. "Your breasts have dried up because the pump isn't getting much out". "Just top up with formula, it's fine". "Don't bother feeding past 6 months". Because this is your first time breastfeeding you don't know any better. You trust these professionals. As time passes you notice that a lot of what they have instructed you to do has actually sabotaged your BFing efforts. You swear that you'll learn from these mistakes for your next child. But what about your poor first child - the breastfeeding guinea pig.
  1. GROWTH SPURTS. Every month or so you're going to hit one of these bad boys. You'll be constantly feeing every 1-2 hours. No sooner have you clipped your bra cup back up then your baby demands its next meal. If you were on formula you would simply increase the volume of feed and hand it over to dad/grandma/sister in law/the dog. Also because baby is feeding so frequently you worry that your milk is not enough, and you can't see exactily how much milk your baby is getting. Are you STARVING your baby? Dark throughts creep into the back of your mind. The old lady in the post office gives you evils as your baby screams the place down. "Baby needs her bottle" the old lady comments, tutting and shaking her head. You begin to wonder if she's right.
  1. MONITORED INTAKE. Really looking forward to several double vodkas after giving birth weren't you? After 9 months of t-totalism, a big blow out was just what you needed. Well tough titties. And that medication for your acne? Say goodbye to it and hello to a face that resembles those Cath Kidston pokerdotted handbags.
  1. YOU HAVE NO CHOICE. A large part of motherhood is about making the right choices for your family. Stay at home - go to work, co-sleeping or seperate rooms, dummy or no dummy. And breastfeeding or formula feeding is one of those choices right? WRONG. you have no choice. From the moment of conception we are bombarded with "breast is best". The scientists and the government have made your choice for you. Afterall, you want to do what's best for your child, right? (How can you answer no to that question and not live with guilt).
OP posts:
faverghoulles · 18/10/2010 14:56

If you hate it so much, why are you still doing it?

If it's something you want to continue, why not post in the feeding section and get some positive support and advice?

Either way, I think yabu posting this in AIBU, as it's not going to help you in the least.

FWIW, I loved bfing, and found it quite easy, but it's not for everyone. If you feel so strongly, just stop.

Fibilou · 18/10/2010 14:56

FTTD - I wanted to murder the baby during the 3 month growth spurt. It does stop, I promise ! It's just that it's quite a biggie. Have you always felt this way or is it the growth spurt that has made you feel this way ?

Sidge · 18/10/2010 14:57

Well if you hate it that much, stop. No-one's forcing you to breastfeed.

How you feed your baby is up to you - you're not going to get a sticker at the end of it for persevering in the face of adversity.

TheOldestCat · 18/10/2010 14:57

Writing this in the second person does make it sound a bit aggressive, OP - especially point number 3. Not helpful. If you'd stuck to the first person, then it would read much better as your rant.

But I'm sorry you hate breastfeeding so much. Why don't you stop if it's making you so sad? Sod the guilt-trip - do what's right for you.

I can see where you are coming from (especially the limited wardrobe bit - DS is eight months and I hate having such little choice, although layering is coming into its own now the weather is cooler). But you DO have choice. And, of course, the right to rant here Grin

As for limited intake (of alcohol), I have a beer or glass of wine most nights now DS sleeps for four hours in a stretch. It's vital to my well-being.

kveta · 18/10/2010 14:58

I should add - I have mostly enjoyed breast feeding - DS is nearly 13 months and showing no signs of self weaning. going down to the nursery to feed him mid afternoon is one of the best bits of my work day!

nickytwotimes · 18/10/2010 14:58

I actually feel more in control/confident about my body from bfing.
Am amazed that this imperfect body can grow and sustain such a perfect little person.
I hated ffing actually. It was far more restrictive wrt getting out and about. And I love bfing in public - feel proud whereas I felt ashamed ffing ds1. My hang up, I don't judge others as I don't really give a damn how they feed their kids.

HCPs are often completely shite though, that's true!

Avocadoes · 18/10/2010 14:58

If I had felt even a fifth as badly as you do while BFing then I would have given-up. I actually expected to feel much of what you described but turned out to be one of those mothers you want to section.

Its sounds like your feelings towards BFing are colouring your whole experience of motherhood and that is not good for either of you. If you think you will enjoy your baby more when bottle feeding then I would really consider doing that.

TBH, I suspect some of your feelings of being trapped will remain whether you breast or bottle feed, new babies impact on every aspect of your life however you feed them.

Tortington · 18/10/2010 14:58

lordy, life with children is all guilt.

its doing what you can when you can.

no one likes a martyr love. so do yourself a favour and think about yourself sometimes

NewbeeMummy · 18/10/2010 14:58

Your boobs your choice so you ANBU to dislike it, but I'm with kveta, I don't agree with your points (Except maybe the HV one - mine were bloody useless!)

ragged · 18/10/2010 14:59

If Breastfeeding is that awful then just ditch it, honestly. As for the problems you've found:

  1. I had letdown pain, it sucked, but I got the rush of happy-feeling oxytocin, too.

2, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10) Not really solely breastfeeding things. After you have a child your life is now owned by others; what you wear, what you do, what you wear, the role of motherhood is all-consuming and opens you up to the nosiest of judgemental observers, as well as the constant demands of Little One.

  1. Why is ok in British culture to flaunt your tits for money in the newspaper or in the streets after binge drinking, but bad taste to let a little skin flash for the sake of your baby's best health prospects? There is something seriously wrong in all that, I'll agree with you there.

  2. There are plenty of us militant breastfeeders about, too; go on, give yourself over to the cult. Go on, you know you want to Wink.

7, 8) Yup, you gotta have a sense of humour about every aspect of parenthood. Take all the advice you get with a pinch of salt.

FeelLikeTweedleDee · 18/10/2010 15:00

faverghoulles - re: giving up, see point 10.

OP posts:
cornflakequeenie · 18/10/2010 15:01

TweedleDee - I know what your saying, and in most circumstances yes.

But it's obviously making you very unhappy, babies must be able to pick up on this. Why would you feel so guilty if you stop?

FeelLikeTweedleDee · 18/10/2010 15:02

nickytwotimes - why feel ashamed FFing in public? It could look like EBM.

OP posts:
LBsmum · 18/10/2010 15:03

I think you have decided that bf is the source of all your problems though its possible that the fact you have a new baby that wakes at night and your life has changed irreversably might also have something to do with it,

i struggled with bf but perserved because i wanted to, it was the right decision for me, if you can't continue then stop or mix feed or do whatever you think you need to do improve your state of mind ( you are expressing quite skewed and negative views on bf), babies need happy mums

nobody is asking you to be a martyr, you are putting yourself in this position, sod the guilt, make positive decisions, (based on facts!)and don't dwell on them

things to look forward to;
teething, colds, weaning, falling over, running off, tantrums,............its the way you view things that will help you get through tougher times

Fibilou · 18/10/2010 15:05

Here's how I got round things:

  1. THE PAIN. I had a hyperactive let down until about 2 months ago, I tried various tricks to deal with it as recommended on Kellymom. I had mastitis and establishing BFing was very difficult. I took it one feed at a time, just kept thining "I will do one more feed" rather than imagining 6 months of agony. Makes it much more manageable
  2. YOUR BODY IS OWNED BY OTHERS. No advice here I'm afraid, I don't mind this
  3. THE HUMILIATION. Erm, I never flash anything. The more you feed in public the better you become at it; I started off feeding in places like Surestart and graduated to other places. Now nobody gets a view of my norks when feeding.
  4. LIMITED WARDROBE. Fraid so !
  1. FORMULA CULTURE. And of course you're the only BFing mother at your babygroup. I don't care what other people are doing so it has no effect on me that I am the only one BFing.
  1. MRS MARTYR. Never had a problem with going out, I do party plan and have an active social life. I just ensure that whatever I am doing starts after I put the baby to bed, we never go anywhere before 7pm ! I can express quite a lot of milk so am lucky that I can easily leave baby with others for long periods. THat was a godsend in the early days just to be able to go out and have a coffee alone
  1. SO-CALLED "PROFESSIONALS".Yes, this is VVVVVV annoying although most of the HCPs I have come across have been v good. But that's what the internet, Kellymom and Mumsnet are for. Everything I've learnt about BFing I learnt from the internet
  1. GROWTH SPURTS. If you know they're coming then you can at least know it will be over in a week and normal service will resume
  1. MONITORED INTAKE. I still drink. You can drink quite a lot as the alcohol that goes into your milk is minimal.
  1. YOU HAVE NO CHOICE. Bfing is the natural status quo. AFAIK no, there isn't a choice. I never wanted to give my baby second best
TandB · 18/10/2010 15:05

YANBU to dislike BFing - you can't help how you feel. However, I think you are being a bit unreasonable and aggressive in this post. If you want to BF because you believe it is best for your child then there are positive steps that you can take, and help that you can seek. If you don't want to do it, then it is your right to make that decision and you will have to come to terms with that decision.

Not everyone will have the same experience - some women find BFing easy and enjoyable. It is unreasonable to suggest they need sectioning.

The style of your post doesn't particularly invite sympathy. There are solutions to many of the points you raise, or at least ways of reducing their impact, but the feeding section, or a dedicated BFing website might be a better place to look into those solutions.

faverghoulles · 18/10/2010 15:06

What's right for some isn't right for all.
If I've read rightly, you've bf for 3 months, which is more than most. We're not living in a third world country where ff is almost certain death.

You are not doing yourself or your dc any favours at all by continuing whilst hating it. Life is too short.

Congratulate yourself on doing as much as you have, and move on. You have nothing to feel guilty about.

FeelLikeTweedleDee · 18/10/2010 15:06

cornflakequeenie - my DH once joked that if I gave up brestfeeding and 16 years later my DC came home with a B instead of an A in her exams then I'd blame myself for not BFing longer.

Truth is, I'm such a perfectionist that his comment is not far off the mark.

OP posts:
BuntyPenfold · 18/10/2010 15:07

I did struggle with the pain, the tiredness, the only one in the baby group who was breastfeeding which meant I was regarded as weird.
Also MIL and HV both said it was a waste of time.
I stopped at 4 months and felt really guilty.

Megatron · 18/10/2010 15:08

YABU. I never understand this kind of attitude, if you don't want to do it, don't. I loved BF'ing my kids, nothing wrong with that either. There is always a choice.

ScaryFucker · 18/10/2010 15:09

God help you if you remain such a perfectionist about all aspects of your children's development Hmm

I see some very stressful times ahead for you (and some very miserable ones for your DH, and your children, tbqh)

sweetpea5 · 18/10/2010 15:10

YANBU - I agree on every point. I am keeping going hoping it gets better. Good luck!

Fibilou · 18/10/2010 15:11

Sweetpea5, how far in are you ? I found things got a huge amount better at about 7/8 weeks

FeelLikeTweedleDee · 18/10/2010 15:13

kungfupannda - is there any help I can seek to address any of the points raised in my OP?

Fibilou - I can't express lots. I think if I could I would be A LOT happier as I would be able to share feeding duties. I'm currently on Fenugreek and it has only increased my supply by 1oz. I've also tried pumping after each feed. Also doc won't give me anything.

faverghoulles - thanks. When I was pregnant I said I would breastfeed for 2 years as per WHO guidelines. Now I think I'd be satisfied with 6 months.

OP posts:
BarbaraSeville · 18/10/2010 15:14

I pretty much agree with you- I never got along very well with it either, but I did try. The crunch for me was that I could only express about three drips of milk. At that point, the shackles of the next few months bludgeoned me to my senses and I introduced the bottle.

Breastfeeding is great when it works, and hell when it doesn't.

There are a hundred and one things to feel guilty about in this life- but mostly, other people don't actually give a shit, so giving yourself a hard time is a pretty futile exercise.

Just stop if you want to. Feeling so shitty about such a basic thing can really put the mockers on enjoying your baby and developing your confidence in your own judgement as a parent.

Your post sounds wryly comic- but look after yourself in case that black humour is masking post-natal depression. It's worth considering.