becca011906 said:
And actully the AAP has stated just recently in the past 1-3 months that it is exceding there recomendation to thoes of the WHO and say that is't benafical to age 2. So if the AAP and WHO says there are benifets to BF after the age of 1 or 3-4 months (this is like 1980's info) then i'll continue to breastfeed my dd till alteast age 2. With or with out teeth, that has nothing to do with nursing.
As for the thinking above that if a child gets teeth at 3-4 months is a little off, some babies are born with teeth so should they not breastfeed or be bottle fed from birth, NO. And some babies don't get teeth untill close to 1 year (my second child had no teeth till 10 months). Teeth have NOTHING to do with feeding you child from the breast or from a bottle for that matter, i know some women who's 5 y/os are still taking a bottle at night time...
Whoa, for me teeth had everything to do with breastfeeding! When my daughters got their upper AND lower teeth in they could actually bite me, and it was extraordinarily painful! My older daughter at about 9 1/2 months would bite me, see me jump and say "ow" and giggle hysterically. She thought it was a really funny game!
It got to the point where I was bleeding and I said, wow, this has to stop, so every time she bit me I would stop nursing her. If she was still hungry I'd offer her some food that wasn't from me, if I remember correctly some oatmeal gruel or mashed up apple or some such.
Finally, she'd latch on, nurse for a minute, and then CHOMP! and spit me out. And it finally dawned on me that she was preferring the other foods to me and would bite me to let me know she wanted other foods. D'oh! Way to train her!
My younger daughter let me know that she was ready to stop nursing when she was nursing while I was eating and she'd grab the food out of my hands, stop nursing, and shove whatever I had been eating into her mouth! I was like, no, you can't have a hamburger!
So you've got all these arbtrary guidelines put out by "experts" (a term I am always suspicious of-do you really think they're any smarter than you are?), who aren't around you, don't know your kid, and are telling you what's best.
If you pay attention to your kids, they'll let you know when they're ready. I think the extended breastfeeding suggestion is for poorly developed countries where clean water isn't readily available and breastmilk is often the safest choice for the child. If I lived in Ethiopia or Sudan, I might still be breastfeeding today if it was the best way to keep my kid safe. But I don't, and it's not.
And the original title to the post was 'breastfeeding an older baby'. When does a child stop being a baby and start being a kid? My daughters definitely were NOT babies by 18 months. They were potty trained, they walked and talked and could express their likes and dislikes, could sing entire songs, and could strip in public in a flash whenever the moment struck. Definitely not babies.