+100!! My former SIL insisted on breast feeding, even though it wasn't working--for months. It wasn't until the baby was rushed to the emergency room with liver failure that she understood that getting nourishment was the most important thing, and that baby was starving. Once on formula, the baby thrived.
Breast feeding is great if it works, and I agree that it should be the first choice, but formula shouldn't be knocked. Sometimes it's the only thing that works, and there is no shame in that. And sometimes there is no choice. My brother was adopted, and so formula was the only way to go.
I was allergic to my mom's breastmilk. I never got as sick as liver failure -just kept losing weight long after I should have started gaining - but it did take some time to figure out.
This breast-only and you're-a-horrible-unfit-mother-if-you-don't mentality seem to be symptomatic of highly educated women. I've seen it and attachment parenting take hold of some of my friends and find it terrifying.
Yeah, only thousands of years of human development.The scientific evidence for the benefits of breastfeeding is tenuous, at best.
Karen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
insidious ungovernable cardboard
no, millions of years! lol
I like Bikes - Mimi
Watercolor Blog
Davidson Custom Bike - Cavaletta
Dahon 2009 Sport - Luna
Old Raleigh Mixte - Mitzi
Uh, yeah, and I wonder how many children born failed to reach their first birthday, on average, over the course of human existence. I'm wager quite a lot.
Evolution is very, very messy. The fact that humans exist is not indicative that maternal milk is significantly better for early childhood development than formula.
That's like saying we evolved ears to hold our glasses a la Dr. Pangloss.
I know that not all breast feeding moms are "Nazis" about it, but it does seem to be the prevalent attitude. I know quite a bit about attachment theory in the psychological literature, and the "attachment parenting" thing is somewhat of a perverted version of what attachment theory really is. I doubt Bowlby and Ainsworth meant that parents had to sleep with their kids until they were 3 or 4 years old. My cousin's wife did this and it just caused a huge wedge in the family.
I know that breast milk is nutritionally superior; it still didn't make me want to nurse. Soy formula worked well and they both switched to regular milk at one year, when they started using a cup.
Oh yes, and my kids were on "schedules," too.
It's all a choice and it's good that everyone can give Limewave advice. But, even after almost 27 years, I can still feel the superiority vibes that were thrown my way.