Sarah
You raise another really important perspective about debriefing. I
think you're saying that the way we characterize a mother's
experience can be helpful, or unhelpful, depending on how we frame or
interpret it for her? If so, I agree. While _we_ may think that,
say, the duration of breastfeeding may have been too short, or that
the mother may have weaned too early, I think it's really important,
as well as simple good manners, to validate her effort, and
acknowledge the benefits to the baby of any length of
breastfeeding. For the mother contemplating weaning I truly believe
that 2 days of breastfeeding is wonderful for the baby, 2 weeks is
even better, 2 months is better still and so on, and I think the
mother herself deserves the full recognition of making that gift to
her baby. It's important, and she often doesn't want her effort and
dedication to be framed in such a negative way that we might grieve
with her, particularly if she herself feels pretty good about what
happened.
When working with individual mothers who wean prematurely, I'm always
struck by how many pressures a mother has, how many calls on her time
and her emotions and the duty she feels to certain significant others
in her life. I think women make "little decisions" (as described by
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy) in order to juggle these demands, ie they do the
best they can in their own circumstances. And at times, those of us
supporting an individual mother have a responsibility to acknowledge
her gallantry, even as we ourselves might mourn the fact that the
society she lives in under-values the importance of the breastfeeding
relationship, or the best health and well-being of her baby-child.
For me, it's really easy to make a distinction between how I interact
with individual mothers, and how I approach institutionalized policy,
even including HCPs who may have not breastfed their own babies at
all, or for long. There is a responsibility to give up to date
advice and assistance, but clearly, no-one told them that. The real
failure, I think, is national and sub-national authorities who make
recommendations about the value of breastfeeding, and have many good
paper guidelines and policies already in place, but seem to fail to
implement and enforce them. That medical people can sabotage
individual breastfeeding relationships by sharing their own
undermining 2 cents' worth, even in an effort to save a mother pain
in the future, is astonishing to me. I would expect that Departments
of Health, or professional associations would jump on these little
acts of medical misconduct whenever they occurred. I would think
that journalists and editors of influential publications that shape
societal attitudes would be called to account. But this doesn't
happen. The policy doesn't filter down to those whose duty it is to
implement it. Ultimately there seems to be a higher value placed on
freedom of speech and promotion of free choice than on babies' health
and well-being. Having worked for thirteen years in a country where
I could count on paediatricians to whole-heartedly support
breastfeeding, where GPs would prescribe a lactation consult for a
mother who requested drying up pills, or where a nurse trained
elsewhere who gave her own outdated point of view about breastfeeding
would be called into matron's office and put right, where a media
conference was called by the Ministry of Health to get journalists
fully behind breastfeeding promotion, and where no-one frankly
_dared_ to undermine breastfeeding, I still find it absolutely
astonishing here, in this otherwise quite civlized country, that this
wholesale sabotage of babies/young children's health goes on and on
and on. I must say I do like living now in a democracy, but it
comes with a price. Perhaps we've always done it that way, and a
different way can't be imagined....
Pamela Morrison IBCLC
Rustington, England
--------------------------------
On 22/03/2012 17:48, Sarah wrote:
> Pamela, Rachel, all: Yes, *very* interesting!!
>
> How do these observations about protection and grieving and
support jibe with my sense (at least) that even in the "natural"
course of breastfeeding and weaning, a mother grieves when the
breastfeeding portion of her relationship with baby ends.
I would personally describe my reaction to weaning as nostalgia rather
than as grieving. I suppose that technically nostalgia is a mild form
of grieving, but, since the word 'grieving' has connotations of quite a
severe reaction, it isn't the one I would have wanted to use. It would
have framed my reaction in a way that was more severe and painful than
was actually the case. Just as I needed to acknowledge my feelings, I
also needed to avoid framing them as something more than they actually
were, because that wouldn't have been any more helpful than trying to
deny them altogether.
I think it's important to be aware of this, because so much of what I
was reading at the time seemed to be trying to tell me that it was all
going to be horrible and so sad for me and baby and so difficult to deal
with... I would feel far worse after reading the stuff that was meant to
help me deal with weaning than I would before! It's important to
acknowledge mothers' feelings and give them permission to feel that way,
but it's also important to listen to how they *do* feel and not be in
too much of a rush to assume they feel terrible.
Best wishes,
Sarah
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