When a woman gives birth to a child, the child needs to be able to digest the mother's milk; but when this child is old enough to begin to eat other foods, there is some switching off of this ability to consume milk.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The maternal duty of suckling her own children, prescribed to mothers by hygienists, is based on a physiological principle: the mother's milk nourishes an infant more perfectly than any other.
Milk is for babies. When you grow up you have to drink beer.
Giving birth is like taking your lower lip and forcing it over your head.
Being a mom, I can't imagine my child not having a meal. That's hard to digest.
My mother didn't find motherhood easy. I've heard her saying that. She didn't breastfeed me. I woke up when I was breastfeeding my own child thinking, 'How can a woman feel an attachment to a child without breast-feeding?'
It's a reality that in this business there's an expectation of being thin. But having a baby is a reality too, and it's more important for me to make milk than to fit into those tiny pants. So that's just going to have to wait.
Like most North Americans, I'd been raised on the notion that milk is the first food, and everybody must like it because it's so good and so important for growing up and for being healthy.
A child, like your stomach, doesn't need all you can afford to give it.
Breast-feeding does not belong in the realm of facts and hard numbers; it is much too intimate and elemental.
Breast-feeding is the natural, optimal way to feed a child.