Breastfeeding support alone is lacking in our culture and extended breastfeeding is like an underground network. I remember meeting someone at the pool when my son was a baby who whispered to me, "I am still nursing my child (about age 2) but I don't tell anyone."
I believe that how breastfeeding is viewed in the US can not change until women stop hiding the fact that they are breastfeeding their babies and children. I realize there are situations where it is not in your best interests to inform everyone that you are still breastfeeding your 2, 3, 4 or 5 year old (or older child) and yet somehow we must slowly make this jump.
I have decided now that my two children have weaned, I need to make every effort to inform people, especially those who comment on their health or intelligence, that maybe it is in fact because they nursed until they were 6. You may find this funny but it is true. Somehow in our culture it is safer to say this after the fact then while they are still nursing.
I realize many of you are challenged enough with nursing a 2 or 3 year old. Believe me, I never imagined I would nurse both of my children for 6 years. I attended my first LLL meeting when my son was 3 weeks old and thought, I will never nurse past one year. Slowly, over time, I became ok with the idea of nursing him until maybe 2 or 3, after all most kids wean by that age- and yes in fact, many do. As all of you know, once your baby turns one, they are not suddenly grown up, neither does this happen at age 2 or 3....or 6 for that matter. Weaning is a gradual thing. It begins the minute you introduce anything other than breast milk into your babies diet. And so if anyone pushes you about weaning, you can always say, "Yes, we have begun weaning".
Take a look at other things with children. Even schooling (not that i agree with these practices ) but we begin by sending them to preschool for a few days and then kindergarten- in many states for half a day before they begin full day school. Is that not gradual? Surely it is more gradual than the typical America view that once a child turns one year of age it is time to wean. If in fact, they have breastfed for that long. And if they have- kudos to them for that is wonderful! Any amount of breastfeeding, if even for a few days, is far better than none at all. Yet, I challenge the idea that weaning needs to be quick and I suggest the idea that is not in the baby's or mother's best interest for it to be sudden, no matter the age of the baby.
Well, once a child is 6 years of age, and I must add that nursing is a far different experience at this age. My son would go three weeks without nursing and both of my kids were apart from me for one or two nights by the time they were 4 years of age. My son no longer nursed to sleep at night by age four and my daughter was never consistently nursed to sleep from a young age and volunteered to put herself to sleep at a much younger age than my son. I digress, but my point was that by this age and even by 3 or 4 in most children who still nurse, nursing does not happened very often and sometimes not even every day, therefore when they do wean- it has been gradual. Like when my son turned 6 and I told him, “Now you are 6 and no longer need to nurse.” No, it was not his idea, but he did not argue with it either. Ironically, my daughter weaned herself without my suggestion shortly after her 6th birthday.
Not to scare anyone- not all children who wean naturally nurse this long. I believe my kids are just making up for a generation of no nursing- as my siblings and I were not even nursed for one day.
Thanks for listening, I love writing about nursing and hearing others stories of extended breastfeeding. Who knows, maybe some day I will write a book on the subject! (I am an aspiring free lance writer- but I will ask permission to reprint others stories first
Love to hear others views, opinions and stories- even those that differ from my own.