Tuesday, November 21, 2006

National Nurse-In

Today is the National Nurse-In. Josiah and I will be at the Delta counter at our airport. I don't know if anyone else in town will be there, but we will be! I did sent out a few emails to the BF community but got no definite responses. I wish there had been more lead time, but it is what it is. For those who haven't heard, the Nurse-In was organized in response to a breastfeeding mom being removed from a Delta flight for failing to nurse "discreetly" (i.e. she refused to use the blanket the flight attendent brought her). I wouldn't use the damn blanket either. Seeing as Josiah and I will be flying several times next year (Mexico in January, San Francisco in February for starters) I certainly don't want to be harrassed while feeding my baby. I can't wait to get to the airport this morning. I've been working on my sign. Perhaps it'll say something provocative like "The boobs at Delta are offensive, not mine!" (okay, I won't make a sign like that, but part of me wants to) My sign will probably say "Delta unfair to nursing mothers" Anyway, kudos to all my Dear Readers who plan to attend the Nurse-In in your city.

5 comments:

Mimi said...

Thank you for going!

Anonymous said...

I am a hardcore breastfeeder, but I see no problem using the blanket as long as it doesn't interfere with breasfeeding or bonding. I was able to use a blanket in a way that shielded my big boobies and yet didn't cover my baby's face or make him sweat. There is nothing wrong with being sensitive to other folks. It doesn't have to an "us vs. them" issue.

LaborPayne said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
LaborPayne said...

Karen,
Your boobies aren't BIG.

LaborPayne said...

As for being sensitive to others, it's that very sensitivity I'm trying to overcome. I do that by not using a blanket to "hide" anything, by not asking permission and not acting like I'm doing anything but what I'm supposed to be doing. 'Of course I should be breastfeeding my baby here and now, he's hungry' My goal is for breastfeeding to become the cultural norm and that doesn't come by hiding it- yes I believe in being discreet- but not in being invisible. Besides if the blanket doesn't cover the baby's face, then clothing can provide the same coverage.