Beyond Toddlerhood: The Breastfeeding Relationship Continues
by Priscilla Young Colletto
From: LEAVEN, Vol. 34 No. 1, February-March 1998, pp. 3-5
While mothers who are still
nursing children at two, three, four or more years of age are exceptional
in Western culture, they are perhaps greater in number than most people
realize. Because nursing beyond the first year of life is seen as atypical
in Western culture, mothers making this choice may face heavy criticism.
They may also feel isolated, for as their children grow older, it often
becomes harder and harder to find support and more difficult to find
peers who have taken the same path.
Source of Support
As Leaders we are important
sources of information and support for these mothers. We can help them
to overcome the feelings of isolation and doubt that come with making
a choice that is different. We can help them see the broader picture:
there are mothers all over the world who nurse their children for years
rather than the few weeks or months that are common in Western culture.
We can remind them that many mothers before them, throughout human history,
have had nursing relationships with their children throughout the early
childhood years. We can make sure these mothers have the information
they need to counter the criticism and judgmental attitudes that they
may encounter. We can help support their self esteem so they may confidently
follow their inner voice and feel comfortable making the choices that
are right for them.
Since Series Meetings are
designed to meet the needs of new mothers, a special forum may be needed
to give mothers of older children the opportunity to share their experiences
and concerns about nursing through the toddler years and beyond. A special
meeting of this type gives a mother the opportunity to build a bridge
of support and knowledge that can be helpful in overcoming the isolation
that she may feel as a mother of an older child who continues to nurse.
At Area Conference workshops
on the topic of nursing through toddlerhood and beyond, mothers are
clearly grateful to finally have a chance to share their experiences
and are eager to ask others the questions that they may have had to
face alone. As they recognize the commonality of their experiences and
concerns they feel relieved. It is reassuring to hear that others have
had similar experiences.
Since nursing past infancy
is no longer the norm in many cultures and is, in fact, often perceived
as abnormal, we as Leaders can benefit by looking beyond our cultures
and our time period to gain a more in- depth understanding of what is
truly normal and natural human behavior. Katherine Dettwyler, an anthropologist,
has drawn attention to this subject through her article, A
Time to Wean, (BREASTFEEDING ABSTRACTS, August 1994). Here is part
of her answer to the question of the "natural" age of weaning
in humans:
According to the research
of Smith (1991), many primates wean their offspring when they are
erupting their first permanent molars. First permanent molar eruption
occurs around 5.5 to 6.0 years in modern humans. It is interesting
to note that achievement of adult immune competence in humans also
occurs at approximately six years of age, suggesting that throughout
our recent evolutionary past, the active immunities provided by breast
milk were normally available to the child until about this age (Frederickson).
Our evolutionary past has
produced an organism that relies on breastfeeding to provide the context
for physical, cognitive and emotional development. The non-human primate
data suggest that human children are designed to receive all of the
benefits of breast milk and breastfeeding for an absolute minimum
of two and a half years, and an apparent upper limit of around seven
years. Natural selection has favored those infants with a strong,
genetically coded blueprint that programs them to expect nursing to
continue for a number of years after birth and results in the urge
to suckle remaining strong for this entire period.
In her book, Breastfeeding:
Biocultural Perspectives, Dettwyler theorizes that the six-year
nursing practice for humans began to be modified, first by the use of
fire for cooking (one-half to one million years ago) and then even more
significantly by the domestication and processing of grains via pounding
and grinding, both of which provided alternatives to uncooked vegetation
and raw animal foods. It is interesting to note that the hunter/gatherer
lifestyle represents more than 99.9 percent of human existence on earth
and that agricultural societies have existed for only about the last
10,000 years.
Ethnographic studies of hunter/gatherer
and other pre- industrial societies show that while the duration of
lactation varies considerably between cultures and between individual
children within a culture, the average duration is between three and
five years of age. Here are some examples from Wickes' 1953 survey of
various tribes: Australian aborigines, two to three years; Greenlanders,
three to four years; Hawaiians, five years; Inuit, around seven years.
Lactational duration is just
one of many cultural variations in breastfeeding practices. Patricia
Stuart-Macadam, writing in Breastfeeding: Biocultural Perspectives,
informs us that the !Kung San of the Kalahari desert in Southern Africa
breastfeed frequently and intensively, "giving the breast about
four times an hour during the day and several times at night for at
least the first two years of life." This practice has a significant
child-spacing effect with conception occurring on average 35 months
postpartum, resulting in a birth interval among the !Kung of almost
four years.
Nature's Norm
Such frequent suckling may
indeed be nature's norm, reports Sheila Kippley in her book, Breastfeeding
and Natural Child Spacing, as it is true of both chimps and gorillas
as well as representative of a number of human cultures living in natural
conditions. The Gainj of New Guinea nurse their infants at an average
interval of 24 minutes. For their 3-year-olds, the average interval
between nursings is 80 minutes. It is interesting to compare these practices
to the standard recommendation given to new mothers today of 8 to 12
nursings in a 24-hour period.
In a thought provoking article,
"The Concept of Weaning: Definitions and Their Implications"
(Journal of Human Lactation, June 1996), Ted Greiner points to
research in northern Bangladesh where children who were breastfed at
3-4 years of age received the breast 9-10 times a day and those who
were still breastfed at 4-5 years of age received it 7-9 times a day.
Greiner comments, "Although the quantity of breast milk was not
measured, this sucking frequency can be assumed to maintain a relatively
high level of breast milk production (as indeed it does in women who
relactate), and should hardly be termed 'token breastfeeding."'
We seem to know so little about what is normal nursing behavior for
the four- to five-year-old that this cross-cultural information can
be very reassuring to a mother who is wondering about her child's nursing
behavior.
In her book, MOTHERING YOUR
NURSING TODDLER, Norma Jane Bumgarner gives us this glimpse into the
history of the decline in breastfeeding duration in English-speaking
countries. She reports that according to a study of advice given to
mothers by doctors from 1550 to 1900,
It was not until 1800 that
most of the popular English writings on child care recommended weaning
as young as 12 months. Even in 1725, writers commented with disapproval
on nursing four- year-olds, an indication that a significant number
of eighteenth century four-year-olds were still receiving love and
comfort at their mother's breast. By 1850 most "experts"
were recommending weaning by 11 months. At this time it was the nursing
two-year-olds seen by child-care advisors who drew official frowns.
It is enlightening how closely these changes in recommended patterns
of child care parallel other changes in family life that accompanied
the Industrial Revolution in England and the United States.
Bumgarner reports these other
interesting pieces of history:
In ancient India, influenced
by the belief that the longer a child nursed the longer he would live,
mothers usually nursed their children as long as possible, often seven
or even nine years sometimes. In Tsinghai, China, mothers observed
in 1956 were still nursing for several years, five years not being
unusual, or until another child was bom. In Inner Mongolia in 1951,
children nursed two or three years, nor was it rare that a six- or
seven-year-old would want to nurse for a bit of reassurance.
Kathleen Huggins and Linda
Ziedrich, in The Nursing Mother's Guide to Weaning, give an interesting
glimpse into weaning practices of other cultures. In one account a Sioux
mother "came to school at recess to nurse her eight-year-old boy
because he had a cold." And they comment "this wasn't a very
remarkable occurrence in her culture; the average nursing period among
the Sioux, traditionally, was three to five years."
Within Western cultures there
have been significant regional differences in breastfeeding practices.
While "experts" in England were recommending weaning as early
as 12 months in 1800, Gabrielle Palmer notes in her book, The Politics
of Breastfeeding, that "in East Lincolnshire women were reported
to suckle their children until they were seven or eight years old even
in the 1820s."
Though it is clear that the
majority of women worldwide and throughout history have nursed their
children into toddlerhood and beyond, women who choose to do so today
may face an uninformed and frequently critical audience. Therefore many
choose to make sure that they limit who sees and who knows, taking greater
care as the child grows older. Given this climate it is a highly select
group of mothers who nurse their children beyond toddlerhood.
Social Pressures
Because of the social criticism
and resulting secrecy, it is hard to get an accurate picture of just
how many children are continuing to nurse this long. Often the last
nursings to be given up occur in bed and so are hidden from all but
those who share the bedroom. It must be difficult even for the anthropologist
in a native tribal village to get an accurate picture of when nursing
has completely ended.
Older nursing children as
well as mothers feel the social pressures. They are often very aware
that other people just don't understand. Privacy may be even more important
to the child than it is to the mother. Knowing other children their
age who are continuing to nurse is helpful. Reading stories about other
nursing children also helps to normalize it. Unfortunately these stories
are not widely distributed or well known. My daughter has asked me several
times to reread stories of older nursing children from HARVEST, Area
Leaders' Letter of LLL New York West, USA. She chose to have a weaning
party after being inspired by one of those stories.
Given social criticism, people
who are unfamiliar with the practice of nursing beyond infancy may wonder
why mothers would want to continue to nurse through toddlerhood and
beyond. As Leaders we can help mothers answer this question confidently.
Mothers find many practical advantages in nursing. As a parenting tool
it is useful when easing the exhausted child into sleep or soothing
both mother and child after the storm of a tantrum has passed by. During
illness, breast milk may be the only food or drink that a child will
take or can keep down and digest. It can make the difference between
a dehydrated child needing hospitalization and a sick, but well-hydrated,
child at home in mother's arms nursing through a potentially serious
illness.
Health Benefits
The adverse health effects
of weaning a child before or during toddlerhood are well documented
for Third World countries such as Guinea-Bissau, where children who
were no longer breastfed at ages 12 to 35 months had a 3.5 times higher
mortality than did their peers who continued to breastfeed. There is
a lack of this type of comparative research between breastfeeding toddlers
and preschoolers and their already weaned peers in economically advanced
countries. The negative impact of early weaning on children's health
is not as dramatically evident but in time it may prove to be significant.
The scientific evidence on
extended breastfeeding is just now beginning to accumulate. A number
of the health benefits are now being found to be related to the length
of nursing with an increasing amount of benefit correlating with increased
duration. This is the case, research has indicated, with breastfeeding's
protective effect in maternal breast cancer, osteoporosis, childhood
ear infections and malocclusion anomalies (misaligned teeth).
Katherine Dettwyler reports
that "a wealth of scientific evidence exists documenting that the
benefits of breastfeeding (and the risks of artificial feeding) continue
for as long as the infant nurses. Aside from the health concerns, there
is now evidence that the longer a child breastfeeds, the higher that
child's IQ score and school grades will be in later years, with a dose
effect evident even beyond two years of nursing."
The word "benefit"
is perhaps misleading here, for these "benefits" are what
nature intended to be the human norm. Breastfeeding is normal. It is
artificial feeding substitutes and premature weaning that are, in fact,
abnormal from a biological viewpoint. It is these abnormal practices
that place the child at increased risk of illness and compromised intelligence.
For many nursing couples,
by the time the child reaches toddlerhood, nursing is a well-established
part of their relationship. We can help mothers to feel confident in
acknowledging that their breastfeeding relationship is mutually satisfying:
highly cherished by the child and often by the mother as well. For mothers
it is a mode of giving both nurturance and sustenance. For both mother
and child nursing is a momentary retreat from the increasing separateness
of their lives, back to the closeness they shared when the two were
one.
Nursing through Toddlerhood
and Beyond
Special meeting discussion
questions
- While it is clear that
nursing a child beyond the first 12 months of life is something we
have in common with the majority of mothers throughout history, in
many cultures we stand out as different. While we have been able to
find support, we also may face criticism. How do you feel about this
criticism? How do you deal with it?
- We want to meet our child's
needs and we want to promote the normalcy and healthfulness of nursing
without offending others or becoming a target of criticism. It is
a tricky balance to achieve and we each need to find our own comfort
level. How do you handle the issue of nursing a toddler in public?
- Sometimes our partners
or other close relatives have a different outlook on continued nursing.
How do you manage these differences?
- Children can be demanding.
At times it may feel that your child's demands to nurse are excessive
or inappropriately interrupting your activities. How do you balance
your child's needs and wants with your own?
- When we choose to limit
nursing or decide to wean completely, how can we help our children
handle their feelings of loss?
- The nursing child may
be keenly aware that peers or adults disapprove of continued nursing.
How can we protect our child from social disapproval and help him/her
handle the situation constructively?
- What do you see as the
benefits of nursing through toddlerhood and beyond?
An Anthropological Look
at Nursing Beyond Toddlerhood
Time Period
|
Who and Where
|
Nursing Duration
|
| Ancient
Egypt |
|
3 years |
| Early
1900s |
China
and Japan |
4-5
years |
| 1940s |
Burma |
3-4
years |
| 1950s
|
Kenya |
up
to 5 years |
| 1950s |
Siniono
(Bolivia) |
3-5
years |
| 1950s |
Inuit |
around
7 years |
| |
Chimps/gorillas
|
5-6
years |
Natural Reassurance
When reading a children's
book about chimpanzees by Jane Goodall to my then five-year-old daughter,
I learned that mother's milk remains a chimp's most important food until
about three years of age. The book described Goodall's field observation
of a chimpanzee mother named Fifi and her four-year-old daughter Flossi.
"Flossi starts to suckle.
She will not be able to do this for many more months. Fifis milk is
drying up and she often prevents Flossi from nursing these days. Then
Flossi pouts and utters sad crying sounds until Fifi relents and lets
her suckle for just a little while. In about a year Fifi will probably
have another infant."
Of the hundreds of children's
books I have borrowed from the library and read to my daughter, this
is the only one that described nursing a four-year-old. As another nursing
mother I found myself reassured by both Fifi's and Flossi's behavior.
I identified with the mother's ambivalence, at first resistant and irritated
at the youngster's demands and yet, in the face of her daughter's grief,
relenting and giving in. Perhaps those experts who admonish mothers
to be firm and consistent are out of touch with our nature as primates.
Priscilla Young Colletto
References
LLLI
Bumgarner, N. MOTHERING YOUR
NURSING TODDLER. Schaumburg, Illinois, USA: LLLI, 1982; 67-68.
Dettwyler, K. A time to wean.
BREASTFEEDING ABSTRACTS August 1994; 1.
Facts about Breastfeeding.
LLLI, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996. Publication No. 545g.
Group Library
Huggins, K. and Ziedrich,
L. The Nursing Mother's Guide to Weaning. Boston: Harvard Press,
1994; 169.
Kippley, S. Breastfeeding
and Natural Child Spacing. New York: Harper and Row, 1989; 42.
Palmer, G. The Politics
of Breastfeeding. London: Pandora Press, 1993; 129-73.
Stuart-Macadam, P. and Dettwyler,
K., eds. Breastfeeding: Biocultural Perspectives. New York: Walter
de Gruyter, 1995; 36-39.
Other
Cater-Cyker, T. A weaning
story. LLL of New York West, USA, Harvest Fall 1992.
GoodalI, J. The Chimpanzee
Family Book. London: Picture Book Studios, 1989.
Greiner, T. The concept of
weaning: definitions and their implications. J Hum Lac June 1996;
127.
Richardson, K. The weaning
of Samantha. LLL of New York West, USA, Harvest Fall 1992.
Robinson, M. A weaning party.
LLL of New York West, USA, Harvest Fall 1992.
Wiesinger, D. A tale of two
weanings. LLL of New York West, USA, Harvest Fall 1992.
Page last edited Sun Oct 14 09:31:58 UTC 2007.