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Breastfeeding for 'TIME'

I heard about the new TIME magazine cover on my way to work this morning. It's a startling picture, really: A three-year-old boy is standing on a chair suckling at his mother's breast.

While controversy has already sprung up regarding the age when a mother should wean her baby or toddler off breast milk, I get the feeling that this picture wasn't about the value of breastfeeding so much as how to shock the American public. I already feel sorry for the poor kid, a little guy who will grow up.

Then again, maybe it's a plug for a growing trend: Attachment Parenting. The belief is that if you and your child are constantly around one another, including sleeping, the child will grow into a more secure individual.

I'm wondering if this growing trend is compensating for the daycare blues. Due to financial strain and the divorce culture, many people have had to place their children into daycare. While sometimes necessary, daycare is not optimal for small children. (There is a vast amount of literature on this particular subject -- here and here, for instance. I particularly recommend reading some of Bryce Christensen's work.)

However, I'm also leery of going so far the other way. My daughter, thank God, is able to stay at home with her little ones. They're flourishing. However, she needs time for herself, which she gets after they go to bed. That's healthy for her, her husband, and her children.

Comments:

I don't know about "shocking image" given the context. But it is one thing to see it because someone is actually feeding a baby and another thing when it is for the purpose of exhibitionism. Who says she has to do it for Time?
Here we go again
Seems like almost everytime a news outlet produces a new shocking image, I hear Don Henley's "Dirty Laundry" resonating in my head.
Based on his character I'm convinced that Gregory had in mind the sinking statistical average of American parenting, Ellen, not you and other parenting paragons like you. You may put down your dukes.
Wow, Gregory, those sound like fighting words. Not all American parents are hopelessly lost!
American parenting is so hopelessly lost.
My issue is with the tagline "Are you mom enough?" Like a friend of mine said, "as if mothers don't have enough they feel guilty about these days!" I think some healthy separation is good, but I also think we do well to not get too riled up about other parenting styles than our own chosen way. I work part time and my children were in a loving private home day care setting before they were school age. They are all well adjusted and doing great! It always sets me a bit on edge when people make blanket statements about daycare, so I am pretty careful not to make blanket statements about other child raising issues. Just something to keep in mind.
Oh good grief...cliking that "Time" link immediately after eating a 4-egg cheese omelette and 2 pieces of toast for breakfast probably wasn't the best decision I could have made today...gahh potential images of Newsweek's "1-up" cover are painting themselves in my head.

Must...pray...harder...
Remember the days, Kim, when Time would do something with their cover and Newsweek would try to one-up it? Well, if those days returned, both of them would need the plastic shields supermarkets use for Cosmopolitan.