I am not an IBCLC, but I am a former LLLL, and I found these sorts of restrictions insulting even for
a trained volunteer. We leaders regularly consulted each other to develop new verbal gymnastics
routines that would enable us to give women the information they needed without overstepping
our bounds, which did, indeed, often have us feeling bound and gagged. We could, for example,
read Hale verbatim to a mother. We couldn't, though, just say to her that her doctor had been
incorrect when s/he told her that ibuprofen is incompatible with breastfeeding. While I was a
leader, too, there was an added push to keep leaders from recommending any herbs, vitamins, or
minerals. Yes, we could say, "many mothers find," and engage in all sorts of other semantic tricks
that made us feel as though we weren't really daring to impart solid, research-based, time-tested
information and go so far as to suggest that these mothers follow our recommendations.
And we had reason to fear reprisal. The first time I ever posted on lactnet, and identified myself
as an LLLL, I had the unmitigated moxy to add to a thread about co-sleeping. My post, among
other things, elicited other people's thoughts about how to support mothers in light of new,
scary-sounding recommendations that mothers never co-sleep with their babies. I quickly
received a rebuke offlist from an LLLL who was, I guess, supposed to police the internet for LLLLs
saying inappropriate things. Even though my post was meant purely as a conversation starter, it
sounded to her too much like an LLLL admitting to ignorance about a topic that had been covered
in my training. The message from this online liaison was about as patronizing as anything
anybody has said to me since I was six years old.
And it shut me up for a long time.
I don't blame LLL, actually. They have indeed suffered the consequences of leaders making
unfortunate and very public statements, and it is understandable that they want to enforce
standards for what can and cannot be said in their organization's name. I know there is ongoing,
authentic conversation about how to do this while respecting their leaders' autonomy.
But when I see IBCLCs being fitted with the same muzzle I so resented a few years ago, I must add
my voice to the chorus of dissent. Letters behind our names should not silence us. If an LLLL or
an IBCLC or, for that matter, an MD, gives bad advice, spreads misinformation, or is unduly
influenced by a profit-making entity, she or he should be held accountable. What kind of upside-
down world do we live in when those who are best able to provide that accountability are told to
shut up? Regardless of our credentials, we are adults. Most of us live in free societies. We should
be able to join in conversations, ask questions, express opinions, share knowledge and, for
goodness sake, help people.
It's not that complicated.
Kerry Ose, PhD, feeling solidarity with my IBCLC friends and feeling happy that I can now say
whatever I darn well please.
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