Birth

Orgasmic Birth, Our Birthright

©2008 Jada Shapiro www.birthdaypresence.net
Who would think birth could be a sexual experience? The contractions, the hormones, the ecstatic orgasms. Yes, the fantastic, glorious orgasms that women, if relaxed enough, experience during birth.

Like almost every other human being, I never thought birth could be pleasurable, until I experienced a spontaneous orgasm while giving birth to my son three years ago. Little did I know at the time, that orgasm was 22 times more relaxing than the tranquillizer I was asking for earlier during labor. But it was a confusing and embarrassing experience, so I never mentioned it to a soul. About 2 years later I stumbled upon the phrase 'orgasmic birth' in an online discussion. Naturally I wanted to investigate it, and when I did it made a lot more sense. Here's what's interesting:

Women's sexuality involves making love, giving birth and nursing. In each case, nipples become sensitive, blood flow increases, vaginal lubrication increases, and production of the hormone Oxytocin soars. Also like sex, childbirth is horrendously painful and traumatic if it occurs forcibly or under conditions that undermine a woman's sense of dignity.

The key player in sexual pleasure – whether it be sex, birth or breastfeeding – is the hormone oxytocin. It diminishes pain, triggers ecstatic sensations and increases feelings of empathy. As the level of pain increases during these sexual activities, as does oxytocin, allowing the body to experience both intense pain and intense pleasure at the same time. However, oxytocin is only released when a woman feels relaxed and safe. It is secreted in spurts and not continuously, and levels decrease over time unless you retrigger its release with stimulation. Anything that causes tenseness, anxiety, stress or fear can easily inhibit its release – turning a potentially ecstatic experience, into a horrifically painful one.

This explains why currently it's estimated only 30% of women experience orgasmic birth, these are often women who birth unmedicated at home where surroundings are conducive to relaxation and sexual activity. A dimly lit room, dotted with candles, sensual music, luxurious fabrics, and a warm bath are a wonderful starting point for orgasmic birth.

I can tell you that when I did orgasm during birth, I felt like a goddess. I was so in control, powerful, relaxed, and focused with every cell in my body. I could feel everyone in the room stand back and look on me with awe. I am surprised my body managed such a feat despite birthing in a fluorescent lit, clinical hospital room. Powerful is how every woman should be given the chance to feel during birth. But most women don't feel that way during birth, they feel weak and vulnerable.

The concept of a sexual, pleasurable birth is new to most women. So why is orgasming during birth not widely known? Many women struggle through excruciating childbirth unaware that orgasmic birth is possible. The sexual element is all but removed from childbirth and viewed as taboo. Most women enter their births with the expectation of experiencing the worst pain known to human civilization. They fight with every muscle in their bodies against each contraction, oblivious to the fact that fighting the contractions is exacerbating the pain. Is it possible that if women were able to relax they may just experience earth shattering orgasms instead?

It seems the majority of women in our society have been given a false or incomplete concept of birth. By perpetuating the myth birth can only be painful, and by enforcing every conceivable medical intervention during birth, we are hindering the possibility of a natural, relaxed, pleasurable birth, possibly making women suffer unnecessarily through horrific childbirth pain. The way modern obstetrics has inhibited pleasurable birth almost feels misogynistic and oppressive.

Tinamarie Bernard, from her article 'Orgasmic Birth' describes a very different vision of the future of childbirth….
"Consider this legacy for the next generation of birthing mothers: Quiet room, dim lights, husband kissing his wife, massaging her perineum, whispering loving words to her, all while she's in a state of ecstasy. As the baby is crowning, she is given clitoral stimulation to bring much needed blood and reparative nutrients to the genital region, so that instead of tearing, her perineum is flushed with blood, preventing damage to her sensitive, sensual tissues."

And I'll leave you with a description of what an orgasmic birth feels like….
"All my erogenous zones were stimulated. I was making sounds very similar to a sexual climax. And it was a very definite climax. I was doing the most feminine thing a woman can do and it felt fantastic."
- Katrina Caslake, Midwife and mother of two


Sources:
Orgasmic Birth: Discovering Sexuality in Childbirth
By birthamiracle
Sensual and Orgasmic Childbirth
By Juniper Russo
Orgasmic Birth, the Eco-Sexy Way to Deliver?
By Tinamarie Bernard
How to have a sensual, drug-free birth
By Anastasia Stephens
Oxytocin Hormone and Birth Less-Painful, More Pleasurable Delivery
By Laura Shanley
Instinctive Parenting

About

I'm a 30 something year old proud mother to four rambunctious boys. I investigate all things 'mother' but have leaning towards breastfeeding, birth, vaccination, and child learning.

When I became a parent I found myself in a sea of conflicting, but well meaning, parenting advice from family, friends, my GP, magazines, adverts and websites. After much trial and error, I decided to find definitive answers. I began researching, digging through study after study, article after article, and summarizing the info in documents. One day a friend asked me to share my story about relactating in a post for her blog. I whipped up the article and posted it. From there I got the bright idea to start my own blog, and share with others my research, and my experience as a mother.

For more info I've written a post about my story of breastfeeding, post-natal depression and relactating here.


Gentle Discipline

My favourite motherhood & parenting quotes


Life affords no greater responsibility, no greater privilege, 
than the raising of the next generation.
- C. Everet Koop, M.D.

Mother is the name for God in the lips and hearts of little children.
- William Makepeace Thackeray

The formative period for building character for eternity 
is in the nursery. The mother is queen of that realm 
and sways a scepter more potent than that of kings or priests.
 - Author Unknown

Children are the sum of what mothers contribute to their lives.
-  Unknown

Men are what their mothers made them.
-  Ralph Waldo Emerson

A little girl, asked where her home was, replied, where mother is.  
- Keith L. Brooks

Mother - that was the bank where we
deposited all our hurts and worries.  
- T. DeWitt Talmage

Every beetle is a gazelle in the eyes of its mother. 
 - Moorish Proverb

When you are a mother, you are never really alone in your thoughts.  
A mother always has to think twice, once for herself
and once for her child.  
- Sophia Loren

A mother's love for her child is like nothing else in the world.
 It knows no law, no pity, it dares all things 
and crushes down remorselessly all that stands in its path.
-  Agatha Christie

To describe my mother 
would be to write about a hurricane in its perfect power.
-  Maya Angelou

The commonest fallacy among women is that 
simply having children makes one a mother—
which is as absurd as believing that having a piano
makes one a musician.
-  Sydney J. Harris

 One woman will brag about her children, 
while another complains about hers; 
they could probably swap children without swapping tunes.

Children need love, especially when they do not deserve it.
- Harold Hulbert

Parenting is not something perfect people do, 
but something that perfects the person. 
- Frank Pittman (edited)

There will always be a struggle between a parent and child 
when one aims at power and the other at independence.
- Ibid (edited)


The most important thing a father can do for his children
is to love their mother.
-  Theodore Hesburgh

A person soon learns how little he knows
when a child begins to ask questions.
- Richard L. Evans

Taking time and sharing is the essence of teaching. 
- Author Unknown

Parents can tell but never teach, unless they practice what they preach.
- Arnold Glasow

Each day of our lives we make deposits in the memory banks
of our children.
- Charles R. Swindoll

There are two lasting bequests we can give our children. 
One is roots. The other is wings.
- Hodding Carter, Jr.

Speak a word of affirmation at the right moment in a child's life 
and it's like lighting up a whole roomful of possibilities.
- Gary Smalley

As much as we watch to see what our children do with their lives, 
they are watching us to see what we do with ours. 
I can't tell my children to reach for the sun.
All I can do is reach for it, myself.
- Joyce Maynard

If I had my child to raise all over again,
I'd build self-esteem first, and the house later.
I'd finger-paint more, and point the finger less.
I would do less correcting and more connecting.
I'd take my eyes off my watch, and watch with my eyes.
I'd take more hikes and fly more kites.
I'd stop playing serious, and seriously play.
I would run through more fields and gaze at more stars.
I'd do more hugging and less tugging.
- Diane Loomans

We don't yet know, above all, what the world might be like if 
children were to grow up without being subjected to humiliation, 
if parents would respect them and take them seriously as people.
- Alice Miller

We have a cultural notion that if children were not engineered, 
if we did not manipulate them, they would grow up as beasts in the field. This is the wildest fallacy in the world.
- Joseph Chilton Pearce

A baby's cry is precisely as serious as it sounds. 
- Jean Liedloff

This generation of mothers labors under dubious pronouncement that 
babies sleep best in isolation. Every infant knows better. 
His protest at nocturnal solitude contains the wisdom of millennia.
- Thomas Lewis, M.D.

Children raised with love and compassion will be free to use their time
 as adults in meaningful and creative ways, 
rather than expressing their childhood hurts.
- Quote by Jan Hunt

It is my pleasure that my children are free and happy, 
and unrestrained by parental tyranny.
- Abraham Lincoln

*Feel free to add any great quotes you love.
Instinctive Parenting

The importance of touch

The image of little orphans dying in their cots because of lack of human contact has always haunted me. Then I hear parents protesting over the abundance of 'bucket babies' (infants left in transportable capsules all day long without barely being held) in our culture. Then I see images of little African babies attached lovingly to their mama's backs. It all prompts me to investigate the dynamics of human touch, the positive effect it has, and why we choose to have 'bucket babies'.

Our 'touch system' is a primitive survival mechanism found in all mammals, and it is the strongest sensory system during infancy.

Touch is so crucial to infants that its absence will cause mental and physical growth retardation. A mothers presence alone does not have a resounding effect, nor does trying to shovel more food into an infants mouth - it is the infants perception of warm, physical touch that triggers growth. Prolonged absence of a mother's touch triggers a slowing of the infant's metabolism, thus lessening the need for nourishment, conserving the stores of energy, and slowing the rate of growth. The slower metabolism stunts growth if excessively prolonged.

Touch is also crucial in reducing infant stress. When infants are separated from their mothers, activity in the pituitary-adrenal system rises, while physical contact with the mother lowers this stress response. Touch plays a significant role in an infant's ability to learn how to regulate his / her own response to stress.

Infants who are picked up, hugged, cuddled, cradled, and stroked, gain weight faster, sleep better, are more alert, relaxed, and begin developmental milestones like crawling and walking earlier. Touch develops and strengthens attachment and communication between parent and baby, giving rise to feelings of security, trust, comfort and relaxation. Gently stroking a baby’s stomach in a clockwise direction promotes healthy digestion, also alleviating gas and constipation. Infant massage helps relieve colic and teething pain, improves muscle tone, development and flexibility, and helps regulate all the body systems (digestive, respiratory, circulatory, immune, nervous, lymphatic, cardiac, hormonal).

My heart sinks for the poor dear 'bucket babies' whose need for human touch goes ignored or unrecognised. As a culture we demand our babies and children be independent, unattached, solitary human beings, as if that's some sort of positive trait? Is an epidemic of insecure, unempathetic, narcissist's what we really want? Knowing the importance of touch, I am at no loss as to why parents carry their children literally all day, and practice regular infant massage. It makes sense - you want to give your child the best start in life, you want a bright, healthy, happy, intelligent child - then you provide your child with as much skin-to-skin contact as humanly possible. It is that simple.

I never knew just how important touch is, particularly to an infant. Now I do, my brain continually prompts me to kiss, hug, cuddle and stroke my boys in every moment. It's not just a show of affection, it's literally a switch, turning on mental and physical growth.



Infant Massage
  • Choose a moment when baby is calm and relaxed.
  • Be sure that the room temperature is warm.
  • Undress baby completely.
  • Place baby on a soft, comfortable surface.
  • Rub massage oil on your hands, rub hands together so they're soft and warm.
  • Generally the massage flows from head to toes - head, face, shoulders, arms, hands, chest, stomach, legs, feet.
  • Use gentle, long, flowing strokes. The pressure should be the same as pressing your closed eyelids without any discomfort.
  • While massaging communicate lovingly with baby. Doing this you stimulate all the senses of the baby and establish a more intense visual and tactile communication.
  • Allow baby to change position if he / she wishes. Don't force baby to keep a position.
  • In the small areas use your fingertips. In bigger areas use the palm of your hand. 
More infant massage instructions are found at:
Postnatal Stimulation Baby Massage

Babywearing
  • Practice positioning and carrying a doll or teddy first.
  • Try a new carry with baby when you are both well rested and generally content.
  • Get another adult to help get baby positioned.
  • Use a mirror to see what you're doing.
  • Support baby with your arm until you are confident that baby is securely held in the carrier.
  • Wear baby sitting down first to safely help build muscle and confidence.
  • Back carries are more challenging, but there is more freedom of movement, and they're great for heavier babies and toddlers.
More Babywearing instructions are found at:
Baby Wearing International

Want to make your own babycarrier?


References:

The Experience of Touch: Research Points to a Critical Role
by Daniel Goleman
How Important Is Physical Contact with Your Infant?
By Katherine Harmon
Postnatal Stimulation Baby Massage
Make Way For Baby
Is Babywearing Safe?
by Baby Wearing International
Sewing and improvising babycarriers
by The Baby Wearer
Feminism

What it means to be a feminist

What does being a feminist entail? I've never heard it defined in vivid detail. I'd like to think of myself as a feminist, it sounds good, catchy, strong, but until I actually know what it means, I'd just be a fraud on the 'feminist' bandwagon.

How about this for a definition: a feminist is one who is an activist for all causes unique to females - experiences  unique to females such pregnancy, abortion , birth, breastfeeding,  motherhood and menopause;  unique societal issues such as female discrimination, chauvinism, prejudice, objectification, sexual harassment, sexual abuse and domestic abuse;  unique health issues such as breast and cervical cancer, menstrual and fertility problems (deeply sorry if I've left anything imperative out, also I know many experiences such as domestic abuse go both ways, but I am speaking of the female experience).

But it goes deeper than that to the 'role' of a woman. How she is controlled, pressured, pushed, harassed, criticized, objectified, labeled, oppressed and depressed into a tiny little box. And with that I'm confused as to what it is my society wants a woman to be. Is it a stay at home mother, a career woman, a family manager, a submissive wife, a busty sex queen, or a modest cookie cutter soccer mum?

None of that is me, I refuse to be labeled by anyone. Maybe I'm too proud, but to me a person is so much more than a mere description. I don't want to BE anything in particular, I just want to be, I just want the world to let me be.  And for the record ‘woman' describes anyone with female genitalia, and I'm happy to own that, but any other societal expectations and prejudices placed on me because I am a woman can go shove it.

When researching for this post I found over 17 different types of feminist movements, all of them generally believed women were oppressed by dominating men. I don't feel oppressed, do you? But often what we think is normal, healthy and fine, is actually abnormal, unhealthy and unnatural – we just have nothing to compare it to. I can not believe some Muslim women have to wear burka's or be escorted by a man in public! But I haven't been brought up in a strict Muslim community, which to many women, I suspect, feels very normal.

The one way I do feel oppressed however, is in the fact there are so few women in positions of influence and power running the country. That's what many mothers excel in – managing a family, negotiating conflict, understanding different points of view, nurturing those in need, making sure everyone is fed, clothed and cared for. Every night I shake my head in disappointment at the deployment of more soldiers sent to resolve a conflict – WTF??!! I bite my tongue out of respect for the males in the room, but what I really want to say is, "is violence the only way men know how to solve a problem?!" I know all males aren't like this, I have three boys, and I know, like females, they are exposed to immense pressure to conform to societal gender norms. I make a conscious effort to encourage their individuality in whatever interests they pursue, and I am determined to raise little boys that see gender prejudice as needless and oppressive.

Feminism starts with parents in the home; raising daughters with confidence and high self-esteem, with the belief they are held under no one's thumb. This is the beginning of a generation of women who may hopefully infiltrate government, bringing with them the immeasurable skills of motherhood, and with that a country that resembles more of a gigantic family rather than a warzone.

Yes I do consider myself a feminist – not a man hater or a lesbian (though those certainly do exist in the feminist community), but a person who recognizes most females go unrecognized, undervalued, underestimated, and underutilized in their strength, potential and abilities, that could not only be a massive contribution to the running of our country, but the major influence steering our country in a more individual, family and community oriented direction.

Simply put though, as one feminist said, "A feminist is a woman who just doesn't want to be treated like shit." Enough said.

Strengthening Our Daughters:

  • Encourage Discussion: Discuss the history of feminism and the struggles women have faced in the past and still face today. Discuss how images of females in the media are portrayed; how it makes her feel; how she feels about her own appearance and achievements?
  • Try and try again: Encourage her to never stop exploring and trying, offer suggestions but help her feel capable and confident that she can solve her own problems. Resist the urge to always protect and rescue her.
  • Provide Diverse Opportunities: Experiment with a wide range of people, activities, hobbies and skills – never assume you know what she may like.
  • Regular Sports and Physical Activity: This enhances mental health, reducing symptoms of stress and depression, and can provide a sense of strength and accomplishment. It also reduces the risk of chronic diseases. Female athletes have been shown to perform better academically and have lower school drop-out rates than non-athletes.
  • Education: Studies show education plays a key role in improving the quality of women's lives. Math's has shown to be key in achieving equal pay to men.
  • Be the Role Model: Monitor your own comments about your self and your daughter. Watch your own stereotypes; help fix the kitchen sink and let dad make dinner. Surround your daughter with other strong confident women. Give her real-life role models that are inspiring and encouraging.
  • Get dad involved: Girls with active, hardworking dads attend college more often and are more ambitious, more successful in school, more likely to attain careers of their own, less dependent, more self protective, and less likely to date an abusive man.
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References:

What Parents Can Do To Promote Self-Esteem in Girls
Written by HealthyPlace.com Staff Writer
How to Raise Girls with Healthy Self-Esteem
by Anita Gurian, Ph.D.
Raising Feminist Girls
by V Sobol
Cry-it-out

Protecting their impressionable little minds

"A child has formed 80% of his / her personality by the age of three years old." This statement has haunted me from the day I heard it. If it were true, the experiences and relationships my child has will be the basis of his entire life - that's not to be taken lightly.

I investigated further, and yes an infant's brain grows to 80% of adult size by three years of age, and 90% by age five. An infant experiences a massive burst of brain formation known as the 'exuberant period', at its peak creating an astonishing two million new synapses every second. Connections that are used frequently become permanent, those that are neglected die off. This is where experience is vital in wiring an infants brain - experiences of neglect and abuse literally cause genetically normal children to become mentally retarded. Children who are malnourished throughout this period do not adequately grow, either physically or mentally.

Parents who are preoccupied, who do not have the resources, information, or time, may not provide the stimulating experiences needed for infant brain development. For instance infants and children who are rarely spoken to, exposed to few toys, and have little opportunity to explore and experiment with their environment, may fail to fully develop the neural connections.

Infants whose mothers frequently speak to them learn almost 300 more words by age 2 than their peers whose mothers rarely speak to them. Mere exposure to language such as listening to the television or to adults talking amongst themselves provides little benefit. Rather infants need to interact directly with other human beings, to hear people talking about what they are seeing and experiencing, in order for them to develop optimal language skills. Unfortunately, many parents are under the mistaken impression that talking to babies is not very important because they are too young to understand what is being said.

Chronic stress in an infant, such as that seen in cry-it-out techniques, causes inhibited nerve tissue development in the brain, growth suppression, and immune system depression. Regions of the brain are altered similar to that seen in adults with depression. Infants who experience persistent crying episodes are 10 times more likely to have ADHD, poor school performance, poor fine motor development and antisocial behaviour. Such a child may display increased aggression, impulsivity, emotional unattachment, and violence later in life due to an overactive adrenal system.

The sensitivity and responsiveness of a parent stimulates and shapes sections of the brain responsible for attachment and emotional well-being. It's been noted the single most important influence of a child’s intellectual development is the responsiveness of the mother to the cues of her child.

Things you can do to positively stimulate your baby:

  • Show love and affection, respond to your babies cries without hesitation.
  • Talk to your baby often with a kind voice, a wide range of vocabulary, and a lot of expression, and encourage imitation.
  • Touch your baby, researchers discovered that premature infants that were massaged grew faster, cried less, and were released earlier from the hospital than those who weren't.
  • Let your baby experience and explore different surroundings, textures and temperatures.
  • Read books and play music (Mozart's music has been found to stimulate the same parts of the brain that are later used for mathematics).


I am reminded of these facts every time I interact with my child. Regardless of my own hard wiring, I want better for my children than what I had. I don't want my children to end up with all my problems, I want to provide them with better opportunities, and more positive and stimulating environment. And that's where parenthood truly benefits your life as a parent - you are forced to challenge your own hard wiring, to learn and better yourself, so your child can have a more learned and better life. Through your love of your child, you become a better person.

References:

Nature, Nurture and Early Brain Development
by Sara Gable, State Extension Specialist, Human Development
Brain Development - Frequently Asked Questions
by Zero to Three
Science Says: Excessive Crying Could Be Harmful to Babies
by www.askdrsears.com
Baby Brain Development
by All About Babies
Instinctive Parenting

The elusive maternal instincts

Little girls look at mothers with reverence, for some little girls a mummy is all they want to be when they grow up. I for one wanted to be a mama.

But when the dream of becoming a mother came true for me, the transition to motherhood wasn't as rosy as I imagined. Modern parenting is a lot more stressful than you imagine. To attain a modern standard of living while raising a child you've got to do a hell of a lot of work. Houses, cars and groceries, social life, appearance, cleaning, laundry, your relationship, some sort of career, along with the myriad of standards you as a parent are to live up to if you are to be accepted in this society…is that clear!

What happened to the dream of motherhood being a beautiful, love filled adventure (rather than a regimented 'boot camp')? So much time was taken up meeting every societal standard, there was barely enough time to actually enjoy parenthood. For me, it got to the point where I literally threw my hands up and gave up; but it's always in those moments that a spark rises up from the ashes. And that I believe is where 'maternal instincts' lie.

As soon as I gave up obsessing over the judgments and opinions of 'everybody else' my instincts, usually hidden under layers of stress, made themselves apparent – and it felt so damn good. Letting go of my fears and worries allowed my body to actually function correctly and my mind to think clearly. It was the bombardment of pointless, useless fear mongering by the media and those around me, that sent my mind and emotions into a spin, clouding my ability to make authentic, instinctive decisions.

It was a matter of 'how long am I going to let others decide for me what is best for my family?' My tolerance wasn't very high, but it took guts to learn to trust myself and take responsibility for my decisions. So how long are you going to continue to get taken for a ride, before you decide it's not good enough for your family?

I know what is right for my family, I may not be a doctor or a psychologist, but I know instinctively when my child is in danger – and I won't be ridiculed for it. I am more bonded and connected to my child than anyone else, therefore I should be the only one with the responsibility of making decisions for my child –  if it doesn't feel right in my gut, I don't do it.

Motherhood forced me to become strong, to find out who I was, to stand up for myself, but most of all to trust myself. When asked what are 'maternal instincts', I say it is the powerful, yet highly underrated ability to TRUST yourself as a mother.
Breastfeeding

It’s not too late to relactate & reconnect

"There is no nutritional value in breastfeeding past the age of 12 months". Not only is this statement wrong (breastmilk has fantastic nutritional value for anyone who consumes it), it also implies there is no reason to breastfeed your child past the age of 12 months, which couldn't be further from the truth (the immunological benefits are vital to a child as their immune system does not fully develop until the age of six).

When I first heard the above statement, I didn't know any different, like so many other mums. I'd done a small amount of reading on the subject of breastfeeding, but it seemed "why breastfeed if it's no longer convenient, and there's perfectly good formula as a substitute". After all, aren't these the perks of a modern feminist culture, we don't have to breastfeed, we have all sorts of inventions to give us time to do other things? I even had an incredibly involved partner who was eagerly willing to take over parenting jobs whenever I wished.

Newborn Jamie
Yet as easy as I had it, it all seemed to backfire; the connection with my child dwindled, and I was diagnosed with post-natal depression. Though it happened so subtly, each day more formula instead of breastmilk, more time with other carers, and eventually I felt like a stranger to my child. I'd completely weaned him from the breast, and between daycare, and family members eager to care for him, I was barely spending any time with him anymore.

I loved my little boy dearly, but I wasn't 'in charge' as a parent. I put everyone else's opinions regarding my parenting above my own. I didn't trust my own instincts, desires and opinions, I honestly thought everyone else knew better, so I just did what everyone else told me to do. And before I knew it the motherhood I dreamed of since I was a child and had finally achieved, slipped from my fingers.

My journey out of post-natal depression and becoming 'in charge' as a parent started with a lot of research about parenting. I learnt formula is in no way 'equal' to breastmilk, the main point being it lacks the immunological benefits of breastmilk, protecting children against many illnesses and improving brain function. The skin to skin contact also helps maintain the bond between mother and child.

Things really took off when I joined in discussions with other mothers online. I heard from mothers and websites that were living and promoting my mothering dream – babywearing, co-sleeping, breastfeeding well beyond 12 months, healthy vegetarian diets, non-vaccination, gentle guidance as apposed to punishment. This was the encouragement I needed; no, my parenting ideals weren't abnormal, mothers all over the world were parenting in the same way my instincts always veered towards. The support I had may have only been from strangers online, but it was enough to give me the strength to take back my relationship with my son.


After completely weaning my son at 12 months, I allowed him, now 15 months, to suckle again whenever he felt inclined, and slowly built up a steady milk supply. I looked after my son almost entirely on my own; I didn't want anyone else to look after him anymore, I wanted to enjoy him, as was always the plan, and my motherhood dream.

Toddler Jamie

This winter I have felt such pride. My boy, now 20 months, has never had any sickness past a runny nose. I have watched friends around me with their little ones continually sick, taking trips to the doctor and even hospital. I attribute my son's health entirely to his daily intake of breastmilk, and the unrivalled immunological properties it contains.

When I hear statements like "there is no nutritional value in breastfeeding past the age of 12 months", I am now educated and strong enough to stand up for myself; I don't rely on another persons judgment when it comes to the welfare of my children, and beyond any opinion I will always trust my gut.

My lesson was I must trust myself as a mother, stand up for myself in the face of opposition, and never feel guilty about putting my love for my child above anyone or anything else. There is so much parenting advice available it is mind boggling. The most important advice I can personally give is to let your love for your child be your guide to parenting, it will always steer you in the right direction.