Interview 48
Apprehensive at first about not feeding straight after the birth and then positioning baby at the breast. No problems thereafter. Managing gradual weaning.
Scotland has a law that forbids discrimination against women breastfeeding their babies in public and this woman is very proud of that because she thinks that breastfeeding is ‘a natural thing and if you were feeding your child a bottle nobody would ask you to move’. She has breastfed in public but always does it as discreetly as possible to avoid embarrassing other people as much as for her own comfort. She says that a few shops in the city have baby rooms with feeding chairs and changing facilities where she can go to breastfeed her baby if she wants a bit more privacy. Her older sister breastfed two children and she was a good source of information and support, together with antenatal classes, books and the internet. At a special antenatal class on breastfeeding, the tutor used a cloth breast and a doll to demonstrate how to position the baby. While this was basically a good demonstration, this woman thinks that a doll doesn’t move like a real baby and a cloth breast doesn’t move like a real breast, so, while it gave a good idea, nothing could prepare her for the real thing. Also, at the antenatal classes, she was told that breastfeeding was easy but she did not find that in the beginning herself, perhaps because the staff at the hospital were very busy the night that she delivered her baby and she did not get the help that she felt she needed to get started. Eventually she was seen by a lactation consultant from a breastfeeding clinic who helped her to sort out her positioning and latching problems. She hasn’t looked back since. Now, with her daughter at eight months of age, she is carefully planning how she will wean her gradually by her first birthday.