aaand heās sucking on my boob. Still.
I never planned to nurse for this long. Truly. When I made it to 15 months with my daughter, fourĀ years ago, I felt pretty pleased with our end date. She was down to one feed a day and my milk supply was dwindling so I made an executive decision. It made me sad and I worried that our bond would be broken, but she was ready to stop, and so was I. But with my son, itās different.
This kid canāt get enough. Whether weāre on the couch, playing in the garden, or out at a restaurant, my son will walk over to me, sit in my lap, and assume the position. If I donāt immediately comply, he will help me by grabbing my hand and leading it up to the top of my shirt ā like maybe I forgot where my own breasts are. And if youāre wondering: Yeah, it can be kind of embarrassing. Heās getting big. I always swore I wouldnāt breastfeed a child who could legitimately ask for it in words, and yet ⦠āMommy, booboo!ā he shouts. Okay, so āboobooā isnāt exactly the Queenās English, but the dude knows what he wants, and he knows how to get it.
Sometimes I tell him no. I am not HBO On-Demand. I donāt like to give in when weāre out in crowded places. And itās not about displaying my sagging rackĀ (well, not much), itās more the fact that people look ā they notice theĀ 3-foot tall child in my arms ā and then awkwardly avert their eyes when they realize what weāre doing. What seemed natural and acceptable and my human right when he was a baby, suddenly feels shameful.Ā
Iāve obviously verbalized my paranoia at home because, a few weeks ago, I took my kids out for pizza and when my son started having an epic meltdown, I quickly brought him into my lap to shut him up. To my relief, he stopped crying, but then my daughter said, āMommy, not in public!ā I. Was. Mortified. For both of us. At that point I felt obligated to stand my ground, so I nursed for another minute or two, but I couldnāt help wondering why my daughter gotĀ so miffed. Was it because sheās a total teenager (at age 5) and everything I do is lame? Did a school friend tell her breastfeeding in public is wrong? Or did I project my own mania onto her?
I suppose I could have used that moment as motivation to start wearing turtlenecks and let the well dry up ⦠but ⦠somehow, I just canāt. My daughterās freak out was (thankfully) a one-off, and the fact is, Iām not ready to stop for several reasons. First of all, breastfeeding is really f*cking convenient. Your boobs are always there. Iāve lost my keys, my wallet, Iāve run out of the house with an un-charged cell phone, but Iāve never forgotten my boobs. They call breastmilk āliquid goldā for a reason, and mineĀ can keep my sonĀ busy when I need to get a bit of work done, lull him when itās time for bed, and comfort himĀ better than anything else in the world (except maybe Daniel Tiger) when heās upset.
AndĀ thereās another really, really good reason to keep breastfeeding. Aside from the glory of keeping another human being alive and giving them useful antibodies and (possibly) an IQ boost, what it really comes down to is the calories. Breastfeeding can burn up to 500 calories a day, and that is a pretty solid argument to keep doing it. In fact, when you put it that way, I may nurseĀ forever!
Just kidding, I will stop. Eventually. But stopping breastfeeding is going to be hard. The older my son gets, the more stubborn and demanding he becomes. Itās not that I feel powerless, per se, but taking care of two kids on little sleep has worn me down, and most of the timeĀ I donāt have the energy to deny him. Giving him the boob is just so damn easy, and it makes him so damn happy, and IĀ wantĀ him to be happy. And when I look at him now, curled up in my arms and feeling safe and protected, I just canāt bring myself to take it away from him. You rememberĀ that fear I mentioned earlier? The one about breaking the bond between me and my daughter? Well, it wasnāt totally unjustified. I know she loves me, and obviouslyĀ I love her more than anything ⦠but I do think she stopped needing me as much when she stopped nursing. Iām not ready to be needed less by my son. KnowingĀ that within a few days or weeks he will forgetĀ our bond makes me sad. Itāll be like living with a person with alzheimerās, only ā okay ā not at all.
SoĀ Iāll try to get there. Maybe soon, maybe not. Maybe when he learns to say, āMay I have some milk, please, Mommy?ā Maybe then Iāll close up shop.
More Mom Confessions:
- Back Off: Iāll Stop Breastfeeding My Daughter When Iām Ready
- I Breastfed One Child & Not the Other (& Theyāre Both FINE)
- What itās Like to Be Single & Dating As a Breastfeeding Mom
Photo: Getty
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