Dear Daughter,

You are only three weeks old and so no one really asks yet about your weaning time.  Those questions will come later, along with the many and varied opinions about when you should be weaned. Having been through this twice before with your older brothers, I already know the answer to this.

Let me share a secret with you. Weaning is misunderstood. It views nursing as an act with a beginning and an end where the end is chosen and a hard drawn line in the sand. It’s not like that.

Nursing is a part of motherhood, of parenthood. It blends in with all of the other things and it fades in from the obligations of pregnancy and then fades out into the series of obligations of a parent to their growing child.

There was no hard drawn line for the start. Even before your birth you drew from my body. You grew within my womb. You were nourished from my placenta. I was your life support system and home while you prepared to be born. It was when you were ready to be born that you signaled to my body that it was time, and it was then that labor began.

Moments after you were born. You squinched your little eyes at me and bobbed your head around and fussed because you understood that there was something to be done, but not what to do.  Instead of sucking, you chomped down. Then you pulled your head back and mewled. We worked together and gradually you learned what to do. And a few days later you stopped biting and set into an easy pattern of nursing that allowed my cracked nipples to heal and my milk to flow.

I do not know the moment that you were conceived. I do not know the moment that your cord stopped pulsing. I do not know the moment that you stopped chomping down and began to nurse.

Some day you will no longer need the sustenance from my body, your suckling reflex will fade away, and instead of turning eagerly toward my breast you will do as your older brother does now as I am writing this. You’ll turn your back to me and curl into my arms in a different way, and you will comfort yourself to sleep with my proximity rather than my breast. And then on another day further into the future you will be even more independent still and instead of curling into my arm you will use my belly as a pillow while you talk to me about Kindergarten friends, as your oldest brother does. And then you will walk back to your own room and your own bed, and you will fall asleep on your own.

I do not know the moment that you will stop nursing. I do not know the moment that you will stop comforting yourself to sleep with the closeness of me. I do not know the moment that you will move off and be fully independent with a life of your own creation. I know that you will do each of these things when it is time for you to do them. And I know that I will smile with pride at your independence even if I want to hold on a little longer.

The commitment that I’ve made to you is life-long. There is no hard start, no hard ending, no fading away of obligation. There is no “weaning” that I plan on doing. There is you. There is your quest for independence. There are the needs that drive your little body and that will fade and change with time. And there is me. My job is simply to be here and meet your needs as you have them. I need neither to push you away nor hold onto you, as you will peel off or cling close according to your needs.

You already have that drive for independence and will take it eagerly at your own pace. Weaning is not something that I need to do. It is something that you will do as an inevitable part of growing up and of life.

I will not hold you back, and I will not push you away. I will not nurse you forever, but I will always be there for you and I will always love you.

❤ Mama

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99 responses to “I Will Not Nurse You Forever”

  1. jujumama Avatar
    jujumama

    Love it! Posted to Facebook. Thank you for this beautiful description of what we do. 🙂

    Like

  2. Deva Avatar
    Deva

    Thank you! This made me cry, as I sense my time nursing my son are coming to a close. He is 18 months and only nurses about once a day anymore – so bittersweet!

    Like

  3. Marika Autrand Avatar

    Sometimes it makes me sad to think that I will not nurse my daughter forever. This letter is a lovely reminder that nursing is just part of, and just the beginning, of the bond we form with our babies. Beautiful.

    Like

  4. Teli Avatar
    Teli

    Thank you thank you thank you! I feel stronger after reading this. We will persevere. My son is 1 and my daughter will be three. When will it end, I don’t know, but I will follow her lead. Nature knows what she is doing.

    Like

  5. Melissa Avatar

    I. love. this. I’m nursing a 15 month old and getting the “comments” now 😦

    Like

    1. Katherine Avatar
      Katherine

      Pretty simple solution to that; don’t get mad, ignore them.

      Like

    2. DragonMama Avatar
      DragonMama

      I got snarky when people gave me those comments (my 3 sons all nursed past 18 months, my older two were about 30mo when they weaned, I lost my milk due to illness on my 3rd son when he was about 20mo but I’m pregnant again and hope he’ll come back to tandem with his sibling – the older two tandemed with their younger brothers occassionally). My response to “when are you going to wean him? Are you going to follow him to college so he can still breastfeed???” (yes, that was actually said to me, more than once, around when my eldest was 2) was “if he starts getting signs of puberty, he’s DEFINITELY cut off.”

      They stopped asking after that. 😉

      Like

  6. Gina Avatar

    This is wonderful, made me tear. I have a 15 month old nursing son, and he will wean when he is ready, I could never take it away from him.

    Like

  7. Larissa Avatar
    Larissa

    My son is almost 3, and loves to nurse still very much. This answers my question to go ahead and keep going as long as he needs. thank you.

    Like

  8. Krystal Avatar
    Krystal

    Beautifully written. ❤ Thank you.

    Like

  9. LeeAnn Avatar
    LeeAnn

    Thank you for these beautiful, affirming words! I lie here next to my 13 month old son whom I have been angsting over weaning out of our bed when every instinct tells me to keep him close. This was lovely reassurance that our time here is short aand should be treasured, not rushed away. Thank you thank you!!

    Like

  10. nicole Avatar
    nicole

    LOVE this! Thank you!

    Like

  11. Momma that enjoys nursing! Avatar
    Momma that enjoys nursing!

    Thank. You! I have a 28 month old daughter still going strong! I have no desire to stop until she’s ready! I get comments from my mil the most. She actually told my daughter to stop on their last visit! It’s no ones place to say but my daughter and I! We will stop when she is ready. Again, THANK YOU!

    Like

  12. Leslie Avatar

    You put into words, what I feel. Thank you for sharing! Nursing is so special and wonderful, I’m starting to wonder when it will stop. But know like you do; there is no set timeline.

    Like

  13. Jen Avatar
    Jen

    So beautiful! As I nursed my 15 month old this morning he wanted to wear his daddy’s hat. I looked at him and laughed saying he looked like a 17 year old. Daddy laughed that he might still be nursing at 17. Of course he won’t. He ebbs and flows now as it is. Molars are coming in and he has been nursing more, but just a couple of weeks ago there were days he could take it or leave it. He will decide when he’s done, and I realize I will miss our 4am time together, him kicking me in the stomach and rubbing my arm, throwing his head back in sleep when he pops off.

    Like

  14. Erin Avatar

    Beautiful. I nursed 5 of my children, the last one weaned at about 15 months old. As they are getting older and changing so much, there are times I miss nursing, especially the intimate, relaxed time we spent together. I mourn that I won’t have that kind of experience with my new daughter who is coming to us as a toddler through adoption. We will have to create our own “nursing-like” bond.

    Like

    1. Caryl Avatar
      Caryl

      You can nurse an adopted baby. Contact La Leche league or check the Internet.

      Like

  15. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    Beautiful.

    Like

  16. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    thank you.

    Like

  17. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    Absolutely loved this! My 20 month old daughter only nurses at nighttime now, so no comments here, but even if there was, she and I know what works and when she is ready for the next stage, she will wean herself. No hurrying from me!

    Like

  18. Jennifer Roland Avatar

    This made me cry. Thank you for sharing.

    Like

  19. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    My son is almost four and still nurses to go to sleep and when he gets up. In some ways I am hopeful he will stop soon and in other ways I wish he could be little for ever. In the end I just respond to him and his needs and I am thankful to do so. Thank you for the perfect read.

    Like

  20. Debbie Avatar

    I have nine children. The oldest almost 28 with two children of her own. My youngest is 9. It all happened as you said. You write beautifully.

    Like

  21. Confusion Avatar
    Confusion

    Ok, I understand holding off till 1 and a half MAYBE 2. But you crazy ones saying 3&4 wtf is wrong with you. Your children are going to be going to preschool soon. Seriously, you are what’s wrong with most crap when it comes to this nations children. Yes there is a thing called over nourishment and you are doing it. Just like soothers and blankies. My children let go of both of these at a young age. Your children are going to grow up needing to be nourished through each step in their life. And let’s not forget about the mental damage that you are doing to you children when they get old enough to understand that you are breast feeding them at such a old age. Past the age of two breast milk is not needed for children. My child right now is 17 months old, breast fed till he was one year old. He is talking, walking, feeding himself in all ways (ie with a spoon) is already learning to read. So please don’t tell me the longer you hold out the smarter they will be.

    If no one speaks the truth 90% of you will just go on like nothing matters.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      @Confusion, please provide a single study that backs up what you say and that there is a certain point where breast milk is somehow harmful for children. Because unless you can provide studies to back up what you are saying, I wouldn’t quite go so far as to call it “the truth”. Especially considering that it goes against the AAP and WHO’s position on breastfeeding.

      Speakers of the truth can provide studies or official viewpoints to back up their “truth”. That is my challenge to you. You’ve said it, now back it up.

      Like

      1. J Avatar
        J

        I don’t think that when she said “harmful”, that she meant harmful as in toxic. I think she meant more phsychological harm in a child remembering breast feeding as they grow up and the issues that can stem from that.

        Like

      2. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Whether she meant harmful to the body or harmful to the mind, her beliefs have no basis in fact or in study. When someone accuses another parent of doing something blatantly wrong and harming their child for life and proclaims “I SPEAK THE TRUTH OTHERWISE NO ONE WILL!”, they have an obligation to be able to back it up with studies or other factual information.

        Plenty of studies show that popular parenting practices have ramifications. Crying it out, spanking, and even the practice of using rewards systems. NO study that I have ever been able to find shows any harm- physical or mental- to full term breastfeeding. Yet the terms that people so happily apply to full term breastfeeding would be considered quite rude if they were applied to people that use CIO or that spank.

        Like

    2. Lindsay Avatar
      Lindsay

      @Confusion:
      You are entitled to your opinion. However, 99% of us who comment on these beautifully written words about breastfeeding and bonding agree that there is no specific age for weaning or breastfeeding to be ‘wrong’. Please be informed of the facts before you make comments on such topics. Breastmilk is one of the purest, healthiest foods you could ever put into your child’s belly.

      Like

    3. M Avatar
      M

      There are actually studies out there that show if all mother’s nursed their children for at least a year trillions of dollars would be saved in health care in the United States. The reason being that nursing babies reduces risks of obesisty, diabetes, heart disease, some cancers…. yadda yadda yadda. If more mothers felt like they wouldn’t be judge no matter how long they nursed, maybe they would be more likely to do it. Society has some very negative thoughts on nursing, when they should be thanking mothers who do it!! This passage was beautiful. Thank you for sharing!!!

      Like

    4. Marie Avatar
      Marie

      Confused, you are just plain wrong. Nursing is supposed to be extended – as a culture we just don’t do it as long as we should. Speaking out against extended nursing is not helpful. Nursing for any lenghth of time is better than not at all but do not denigrate women who are doing what nature intended.

      Like

    5. Bethany B. Avatar
      Bethany B.

      Perspective for future readers:

      http://www.incultureparent.com/2011/02/breastfeeding-land-genghis-khan/

      Extended breastfeeding hardly seems to have done the Mongolian society any harm.

      Like

  22. Karie Avatar
    Karie

    I’m so thankful I came across this. I am a first time mom and I have come to the weaning stage with my 11 month old. I have gotten the questions from very early on how long I will nurse. I wish I could keep her little so we could have this time a little longer. Nursing is truly the most amazing (and difficult at times) thing I have done.

    Like

  23. lo Avatar
    lo

    @confusion, You sound like a loving parent and proud of your kids.

    I find your comment confusing. And painful – this is what’s wrong with kids today? huh?

    This is what I hope for you: that you find a place in your heart to be less judgemental.

    Will you have a future daughter in law? Will you judge her choices? I hope you have some time to find your joy between now and then – a joy that comes from other than judging strangers anonymously.

    Like

  24. lex Avatar
    lex

    lo, you are very well-spoken, respectful and compassionate towards Confusion. Wonderfully put. I agree; I’m sure Confusion is a loving parent. Also, an incredibly ignorant one. Hopefully Confusion will inform herself more before making further ridiculous comments. :/
    This post was perfect. Thank you ❤

    Like

  25. CS Avatar
    CS

    @ confusion: What’s wrong with this nations children is that we don’t strive to live naturally anymore. Everything is fast, processed, and unnatural. Tell me why we are ridden with disease, is it breastmilk past 1? the WHO must be very wrong then. Those paleolithic humans must have been super unhealthy and mentally damaged because of how long they were feeding from their mother’s breast. It is only attitudes like yours that lead to mental damage… IMO. But Im sure your children are superior to self weaned little ones.

    Like

  26. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    I love this!! Thank you. Currently nursing a 21 month old.

    Like

  27. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    @Confusion- Here is some truth for you!

    I have five children and I nursed all of them until they were 2 or 3. With the exception of my youngest who is only 4 months old, but I suspect I will be nursing her for the same period of time. My pediatrician’s (I have 5 of them in the group, and see them all equally), NONE and I repeat NONE of them have ever told me that there is an age limit to nursing or spoke of “OVER NOURISHMENT”. They encourage me to nurse as long as possible. In fact, I was told by one of these same doctors that a mother’s breast milk changes with the child as it ages to be able to provide it with the proper nutrients and nourishment.

    None of my children have ever gone to preschool, but what I can tell you is when they start their first day of Kindergarten they are ready to go…diaper free, bottle free, binky free, and breast free. You might want to think of your son, and worry about what he is going to think of you for taking his “infant-hood” away by forcing him to do UNNATURAL things like read at 17 months old. By-the-way, my sister is a DR. and she told me that it has been proven that children who read that young, do not any better than children who read at a normal age. Because, when they are that young they are not comprehending the words they are reading…they are just reading as robots…memorization…which can actually be educationally stunting. So, if I were you instead of calling NORMAL breastfeeding mothers names and accusing us of mentally damaging our children, maybe you should be worried about the damage you may be doing to your child. As far as mental damage goes…the 3 children of mine that are in school… excel. My eldest daughter who is in middle school, is high honors, which is similar to the “Deans List”. Her average is 99.3. Her principal even called me and wanted to put her in National Honor Society early. Oh, and that was accomplished with out me making her read at 17 months old, with her watching Spongebob cartoons, eating junk food, playing with useless toys and video games, and running around and getting dirty. I am sure all things you are also against. To each his own..live and let live. Who are you to say whatever works for somebody else is wrong? I think you are what is wrong with Society!

    Like

    1. NoJudge Avatar
      NoJudge

      I was lucky enough to get a pep talk from my cousin, when my oldest son was a baby. She was Head Cardiologist at a children’s hospital in Canada at the time. I told her I didn’t want to wean my then 6 month old, but was getting pressure from family. She told me she was TANDEM nursing; her 6 month old and her 4 year old! Not only that- but she also brought them to work with her! This knowledge empowered me, and gave me the strength to listen to my instincts and to do what was best for me and my kids. This is all you have to do. Listen to what your heart tells you and it will happen when the time is right.

      Mine were 3, 2 & 4. This is for @confusion:
      They are now 10, 13 & 16. They are all well rounded, A+ students with lots of friends and excel at sports. One is boarding at a top ballet school. All super strong. Mentally and physically. But the best part? They ALL talk to me. I KNOW my kids. MOMS, don’t underestimate those mommy-feel-good hormones running through your veins;they make good moms!

      Like

  28. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    Two different Natalie’s by the way! LOL!

    Like

  29. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    Yeah! We are different but I totally agree with that Natalie! 🙂

    Like

  30. Trish Avatar
    Trish

    I have three kids. The first one mostly weaned herself by 13 months, and with my decision to ‘close the milk bar’, a few weeks later she was fully weaned. No regrets.

    I was traveling a lot with my second child, and he and I weaned at 9 months. Happily. And he was a real biter, so no regrets either.

    My third one didn’t wean himself at all. I was so drained by 18 months, and I decided to wean. He wasn’t totally on board with it, but wasn’t too upset about it and got on with life very fast. No regrets.

    Sure, it’s your right to keep on nursing for as long as you believe it’s in your child’s best interests. But it’s the mother’s body, too, and we shouldn’t feel guilty for following our own intuition, not just our baby’s instincts.

    By the way, I co-slept with my kids till two-three years old, and am very much attached to my kids.

    Nursing alone is just one way to nurture a baby. And ultimately it’s the mother’s right to choose if/when she will wean, without any guilt trips.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      My position on mother-led weaning is that it is mom’s body and only mom knows why she makes the choices that she makes. No one should have to justify why they chose to wean at one year, one month, one week, one day, one hour, or why they never chose to breastfeed in the first place.

      Simultaneously, it’s mom’s choice to allow her child to make the choice. This latter choice gets far more guilt trips and judgement than does the decision to wean early.

      Neither should get any guilt trips.

      Like

    2. Natalie(the other one)-lol Avatar
      Natalie(the other one)-lol

      Trisha, I couldn’t agree with you more. I co-slept with all of mine including the new one. And I love every minute of it. That is something a lot of people will tell you not to do too. And, once again to each his own, but, personally I feel like to not do it would be missing out on a very special experience too.

      Like

  31. mookiemama Avatar
    mookiemama

    this was written so beautifully. my daughter is eight months old and this describes our relationship truly. with her older brother i fretted and second guessed myself and made myself feel crazy because i couldn’t make him more self soothing. i spent countless hours trying to teach him to need me less when in fact he did so on his own time. this time around i am not fighting it, just enjoying it. it all happens so fast, i know that now.

    Like

    1. Danieye Avatar

      @Mookiemama— I can totally relate! The second time around for me too and I’m not fighting it either 🙂 will just go with the flow and enjoy my 3 month old baby girl!

      Like

  32. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    I was only able to have one child and he came into this world a wee 3 pound preemie and had to stay in the hospital for his first month. At first he was too tiny to nurse and I had to pump. When we were finally able to start, it was the most beautiful time of my life. It helped me bond with my son as he had been fed via bottles by the nurses in the hospital. I nursed him until he was almost 3 years old and for the last 6 months, it was only at bedtime. I always heard the comments “are you STILL nursing him??” and chose to ignore the ignorance of others and go with what worked for my son and I. If I had caved to the pressure to wean, I would have missed out on one of life’s most beautiful experiences with my son. When he was ready to wean, it was a non-event. He is now a happy, extremely healthy, energetic, independent 6 year old in Kindergarten. I agree that 3 or 4 is too old to nurse in public, but in the privacy of your own home? That’s no one’s business but our own. It is the norm for other countries to nurse their children until 3 years old, but in North America where people are brainwashed to believe that formula is just as good as breast milk and that we Moms should be weaning our babies at 6 months to a year so we can go back to work is shameful. That mentality is only in North America! I went back to work after a year of maternity leave, but I STILL breastfed my son and we are both the better for it. No one can take that special time away from us and the incredible bond it created. He is a loving, affectionate little boy and loves to cuddle with his Mommy in our “nursing” chair. What could be better than that?? For all of you that are receiving the know it all comments… ignore them and go with what’s best for you and your child! Keep it to yourself if you need to, but please don’t stop nursing to satisfy others ignorance.

    Like

  33. Our Muddy Boots Avatar

    Amazing. I have never seen this act captured in this way. Throughout I found myself sinking deeper and deeper into your beautiful words, and their accuracy.

    Well done, Nurshable. In fact, I’ve never seen it done better.

    Thank you.

    Like

  34. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    BTW… my son doesn’t remember breastfeeding or that we used to do that in our cuddle chair. He never talked about it out loud once before he weaned and definitely not after. So “Confusion”… I think you’re confused. There is no mental damage and my child doesn’t resent me for breastfeeding him until 3. He is healthy, incredibly smart, and has a fantastic immune system. Plus, he and I have a close bond. All good, right? Just saying…

    Like

  35. jessica Avatar
    jessica

    I don’t agree with nursing until 3 or 4 at all. It is my opinion. If anyone else chooses to do so, then so be it, its your choice. Everyone should respect someone else’s opinion. It doesn’t have to match yours. Good luck to all you breast feeding moms.

    Like

  36. Jane Avatar
    Jane

    Remember, NORMAL worldwide averages for weaning are 4 to 6 years old! I have technically nursed my child to 4 years old. I say technically b/c he only nurses for a minute or two, at night or if he gets hurt. Sometimes he doesn’t nurse at all.

    It is child-led. If he asks in a situation and I don’t want to, I tell him no not right now and he is fine (he knows tantruming will not get his way and that he needs to respect my body’s boundaries. If he is genuinely upset and/or in need of comfort I can tell and do nurse at those times.)

    It is lightyears of difference from how he nursed when he was an infant or even a 1 year old. He is more confident than most children his age and very bright and happy.

    Follow your child’s schedule and your own instincts and work it out between the two of you. There are ebbs and flows but progress and change and independence do come along. 🙂

    Like

  37. Elzan Avatar
    Elzan

    Love the way you pouring it into a beautiful words..I’m still breast feeding my first 18 month’s lil’boy, and nursing is the best way that “WE” can serve for our next generation
    All I know…Nursing is fun..full of joy..passion..affection..unforgettable
    And the rest of it..let it be natural

    Like

  38. Kate Avatar
    Kate

    Beautiful. Thanks for expressing so beautifully what many of us feel. ❤

    Like

  39. alicia Avatar
    alicia

    Beautifully written and so true!

    Like

  40. Melanie Avatar
    Melanie

    My daughter turned 2, two days ago. We generally only nurse at night now, but with all of the excitement, so seems to be feeling a little under the weather and has been wanting to nurse 3 times a day. I’ve been letting her. In general, I have chosen to refuse her in the mornings and afternoons for my own reasons. I approach it as a mutual decision. If one of us particularly needs it or doesn’t want it, I respect it. As to stopping overall, it no longer breaks my heart to think about it, so I will just watch for signs and we’ll see how it goes. I don’t know what those signs are exactly, but I figure ‘ll know it when I see it. And I imagine we might have some back and forth on it – no nursing and then reverting sometimes. But who knows. It makes me a little sad to think of stopping, but I have found that with every step of her development, when the real time to do something arrives, we are both ready for it, no matter how much I have been dreading it and crying over it. We both just know when we are ready to make the next step as a team. 🙂 I get a lot of comments and this is my first baby, but I am also 40 years old and could care less what other people think. It just mildly irritates me. 🙂 People have been asking how long I planned to bf since she was born! I always just say, “until we’re done.”

    Like

  41. The Anecdotal Baby Avatar

    Love this! I followed baby-led weaning with a tiny push and weaned my girl at just over the year mark, because it’s what worked best for us. But you can bet I heard all the questions as the year approached, as if she’d turn 1 and just stop! It’s crazy to me how people are so obsessed with a weaning date. Nursing into toddlerhood wasn’t for me, but who am I to judge and worry about for that matter what another mom chooses? I wish people would mind their own business. Why do they care so much? There are many other important things to obsess over!

    Like

  42. Charlotte Avatar
    Charlotte

    I tried to nurse but my daughter just fell asleep and never took which did upset me but we have a lovely relationship and now at 2.5 she is eating proper food with the family snd she doesn’t seemed to have suffered from not nursing.

    Like

  43. OlliesMum Avatar
    OlliesMum

    Pure love…Thank you so much for writing such a beautiful reminder to us all. Happily enjoying my extended breastfeeding with my beautiful 17 month old son and in absolutely no rush to have him wean. Baby-led weaning is such a compassionate gift we can give to our children. Thank you again!

    Like

  44. Anne Kristin Griggs Avatar

    Loved and shared it on my fb and twitter

    Like

  45. Brandi Michel Avatar
    Brandi Michel

    I just wanted to post this as a reference:
    ■The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that “Breastfeeding should be continued for at least the first year of life and beyond for as long as mutually desired by mother and child… Increased duration of breastfeeding confers significant health and developmental benefits for the child and the mother… There is no upper limit to the duration of breastfeeding and no evidence of psychologic or developmental harm from breastfeeding into the third year of life or longer.” (AAP 2005)

    Like

  46. SNH Avatar
    SNH

    I tried with my first child to nurse until a lactation consultant told me, “You need to supplement”. Your story stands for all mothers. Thank you. It is beautiful.

    Like

  47. Jenn Avatar
    Jenn

    I really enjoyed this post – thank you so much for sharing this with us. I think that you should change the title though to “I will nurse you forever” because as a mother, do you ever really stop “nursing” your child? This really hits home for me – as a working mom who has EBF her child for almost a whole year at this point, I’ve been struggling over the past few weeks with the idea of weaning because I hate being attached to the pump, but at the same time, I don’t want to cut her off before she’s ready.

    Like

  48. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    LOVE this, thank you so much, shared it on Facebook!

    Like

  49. Suzanne Avatar
    Suzanne

    Beautifully written and so very true! I happy nursed two happy healthy boys into their second year and love to see all these loving mothers giving their children the best nutrient they will ever receive.

    Like

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