Tag Archive for 'lactivism'

Breastfeeding Dad

A Transgender Dad Looks Back on One Year of Breastfeeding His Baby

Trevor is a Milk Junkie and a transgender man with a husband and a baby

trevor breastfeeding his baby

Yup, my little guy turned one last week. It seems like just yesterday that I was struggling to latch him on for the first time. He was tired from a long labour and I was inexperienced and so very unsure of myself. Eventually my midwife stepped in and expertly guided his head toward my nipple at just the right moment. We have been through so much together between then and now.
I am a transgender guy. This means that I was born female but transitioned to male by taking testosterone and having a chest surgery that removed most of my breast tissue. When my partner and I decided to start a family, we consulted with my doctors and then I went off my hormones in order to become pregnant.

That’s when the reading started. I read piles of baby books and quickly came to the conclusion that I ought to try to breastfeed. Even if I could only make a small amount of milk, it would be of great benefit to our child. I decided to nurse using a supplemental nursing system, which consists of a tube going into a bottle of supplement. You latch the baby onto the end of the tube and your nipple at the same time so that even supplemental feedings can be done at the breast.
Learning to use the SNS was our first great challenge. It felt like I needed about four pairs of hands to hold the contraption, position the baby, and mold my meagre tissue into a shape that a newborn could latch onto. For the first two weeks, my partner had to help me with every single feeding, night and day. Luckily, by the time he had to go back to work I was able to manage it myself.
As Jacob became stronger, latching him got easier but he also started to find the tubing with his creeping little fingers. I had to learn how to juggle the SNS and a wriggling, curious baby who had no idea that when he pulled on that enticing piece of plastic, the food would stop. But we found our rhythm with this too and kept on nursing.
Over the course of the last year, I’ve had to deal with the glares and stares of strangers who have wondered what on earth I’m doing. I have a beard and I nurse my baby because I know it is good for him. One woman harassed us on an airplane, telling me that I was ruining my child. Then she advised me that Jesus loves me.
But mostly I look back on this year and I am overwhelmed with gratitude that breastfeeding did happen for us. Jacob is happy and social and active. Now he crawls over to nurse when he wants to touch base, or if he is scared or tired or hurt. And although it is maybe not the most manly of tasks for a transgender dude to take up, I am happy to oblige. He’s my baby and I’m his parent, after all.
Trevor MacDonald lives in Winnipeg, Canada, with his partner, baby and dog. He is currently a stay-at-home dad, and has an honours BA in political science from the University of British Columbia. While remaining secure in his identity as a gay man, he breastfeeds his baby boy because of the zillions of studies that prove that breastfeeding is a healthy, biologically normal choice for babies. He writes about his queer breastfeeding adventures on his blog at www.milkjunkies.net
Photo via Milk Junkies
News and Culture Five

News Round-Up March 2: Marriage Equality in Maryland, Anger Over Loot bags and Two-Year-Old Vocabulary

What we’re reading today:

1. Maryland joins Team Marriage Equality! And no roadblocks here, unlike New Jersey, Gov. Martin O’Malley signed that bill!

2. Score one for the lactivists: People caught harassing nursing moms in Georgia could face a $1, 000 fine.

3. Are loot bags over the top? What’s fair and what’s too much?

4. How many words should a 2-year-old know? It varies, but there are 25 words that a researcher says all toddlers should know, including dog, milk and cookie. (We assume mom and/or dad are in there, but given that it’s entirely possibly for a 2-year-old not to know any dogs, why is that one of the key words?)

5. One-year-old baby is pretty good on the drums! (And sorry to go all concern troll and judgey, but shouldn’t he have noise-canceling/reducing headphones?

Photo by pillowhead designs via Flickr

News and Culture Five

News Round-Up Sept. 26: Boys and Friendship, Sperm vs Egg Donors and the Breastmilk Dad

What we’re reading today:

 

1. Teenage boys need close male friendships. “The boys are aware of the power of their relationships. They are overtly saying, ‘I want him, I need him, I miss him — no homo!’ And then they grow up and become depressed.”

2. Those of us that use sperm donors to procreate — what exactly are we looking for from a donor?

3. Speaking of using modern technology to make babies, a Brazilian woman is about to give birth to her first child at age 61.

4. Did you hear about the California dad who decided to see how long he could survive on breastmilk his wife had pumped? A Montreal mom made the connection between this dad and a mom of quadruplets who was definitely in need of an extra supply.

News and Culture Five

News Round-Up September 19: Modern Family Ruled the Emmys, Story Time in Malls and What the Dads Said About That Testosterone Study

What we’re reading today:

 

1. How do you feel about publisher-sponsored story-time in malls when libraries are in danger of so many cuts?

2. Two of our pals, HerBadMother Catherine Connors and PhDinParenting Annie Urban take opposite sides in the great formula advertising debate. Should formula ads be banned, or would banning them make women who have difficulty breastfeeding just feel shameful failures at motherhood?

3. Remember that study that found men’s testosterone levels dropped once they became fathers? Here’s what some dads said.

4. Hoping an anonymous donor will help you grow you very own Weasley? The world’s largest sperm bank is turning away redheads.

5. And who watched (or read the highlights of) the Emmys last night? Modern Family got a whole whack of awards, including best supporting roles for Julie Bowen and Ty Burrell. Let’s look at a classic Phil and Claire moment: