Breastfeeding: When is it time to stop?
February 15, 2008 by Pauline Lupercio | one question or comment
Or, to push the cultural norm just a bit more, what about a six-year-old?
An internet debate on this very subject was recently posted on
When is it time to stop?
How old is too old to breastfeed? And should mothers who practice extended breastfeeding even be subjected to age limits?
I’ll be honest, I’m not sure if there is an answer to the first question. As Annalisa Barbieri of The Independent says in a previous post on baby gooroo®, she never expected her pre-baby views on the practice (which included descriptions like “odd” and “needy”) to change so much that she is now breastfeeding her four-year-old.
Motherhood, she said, introduced her to a whole new self (and the new perspectives that came with it) that she never knew was there.
Before and After Baby
As a formula-feeding mother who strongly supports those who choose and are able to breastfeed their babies, my thoughts mirror those of Annalisa, before she had her child.
But then again, I also thought those who co-sleep and wear their babies were setting themselves up for a needy and spoiled child. (Anyone want to guess where my little Buttercup is sleeping tonight? Or where she spends most of her day? That’s right: in my arms and attached to me.) My point is that, like Annalisa, my views on parenting topics that are frequently up for debate, changed with the birth of my daughter. And so did my perspective on mothering as a whole.
I don’t judge anymore. (Or, at least, I really, really try not to.) What works for you may not work for me.
Would I still be breastfeeding my daughter now at 8 months if I could? Of course. Would I do so after she turned one? Yes, again. But would I extend the breastfeeding relationship into the pre-school years? I seriously doubt it.
While the “Breast is Best” campaign strives to encourage more mothers to exclusively breastfeed for the first six months of their baby’s life, citing the obvious, like protecting baby from childhood diabetes and obesity, there are plenty of raised eyebrows and frowns of disapproval that accompany public breastfeeding of older children, even from within the medical community itself.
What the experts say
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that infants be breastfed, with complementary foods, up to two years and beyond. La Leche League Great Britain (GB) also supports extended breastfeeding, saying that until 100 years ago extended breastfeeding was not considered taboo. A child’s immune system, LLL says, is still developing between the ages of two-and-a-half and six, and long-term breastmilk consumption can only be a health benefit for the child.
And while all experts agree that breastfeeding for a minimum of six months is best for both mother and child, not all believe extended breastfeeding is necessary, or even “normal.” Children, they say, may even be made fun of by their peers if it is learned they are still suckling at their mother’s breast when they are five or six years old.
Negative reactions from both medical professionals and society in general force many extended breastfeeding mothers into the shadows.
It’s about choice
Why is this such a hot-button issue? Because in the
I don’t think so.
Regardless of how you decide to feed your baby and for how long, it is a uniquely personal and individual decision, and should be treated as such.
In other words, tell anyone who thinks you are kooky to get their mind off of your boobs and back on their own business.









Good insights Pauline–
When people ask me how long I nursed my twins, I usually leave it at “oh, I did it African style” which is to say longer than your average North American–my nursing time is measured in years, not days, weeks or months. All I can say is so much for “extended” breastfeeding making your kids too dependent on you–if my two (now 15 years old) were any more independent, it would be scary!
Odd? I’ve been called worse than that. My grandmother nursed all nine of her kids 2-3 years–she even nursed a few of her grandkids and several of my aunts nursed their nieces or nephews. So I consider myself in good (even if it is odd) company.
Living in Botswana had a huge impact on my parenting. I remember watching a friend, Majic–something of a mother figure for me there–nurse her three year old grandchild after the child fell down and scraped her knee. She asked me if I thought it was odd–I told her no, it looked like it was just what the child needed, she had been crying and now she wasn’t, and was back to playing happily after less than a minute at the breast. I can still recall Majic patting her 50-something year old breasts and saying, “there’s no milk in here, but there is love.”
Beautiful.
Here’s to choice, odd or otherwise. That’s what worked for me.
Stay well,
Kendall