Private Nurse
No, we don't mean a nanny for the baby.
By now you may have heard about the incident in which a woman who was nursing her baby on an airplane was forced to get off, presumably because she wasn't being discreet enough.
We personally don't know any women who don't try to show some discretion while nursing - okay, maybe a brazen few, but they're the exceptions - but babies have a way of pushing aside whatever is covering their faces, to peer at you in glee as you hurriedly shuffle the cloth - and your mammaries - around. It's no easy feat - what do you use to cover up? The airplane blanket that's been God knows where? Your pashmina, which will undoubtedly slip off just as some teenage boy passes by?
Thankfully there is an answer that keeps your dignity and your sense of fashion intact. Bebe au Lait has a line of nursing covers in fabulous prints: you can either pick one favorite or, like us, go nuts and choose several to coordinate with your wardrobe. (The company used to market these as Hooter Hiders, and still keeps the name around for those who may remember it, but we, for one, appreciate the more upscale branding, since we've never in a million years referred to our own breasts as "hooters".) The covers are stylish, practical and inexpensive. Best of all, the design keeps the cover securely fastened around your neck while allowing you to peek at baby - something that may have been hard to manage when you were smothering her with a blanket...
www.bebeaulait.com
$35
2 comments:
I was not familiar with that story. I wonder if it was something to do with nursing during takeoff. Of course, isn't that when you want to do it? Hmmm...
I like this product. Very intriguing. It seems like in just the last 3 years, there are more options available for being discreet in public.
Love your blog - keep it up.
Nicole -
Thanks for the encouragement - keep checking back and pass the word!! :)
I don't think it was a takeoff issue. They weren't asking for the child to be seated or UNcovered, which would be more likely if it were a takeoff issue. Rather, they wanted her to use a blanket so that other passengers wouldn't be uncomfortable. So it seems it was not a "safety" issue as much as a "moral" issue. I'm all for other passengers' comfort, which is why I advocate for people to to have well-behaved children when traveling, and for people in general to talk quietly, whether on cellphone or to a seatmate. Although I do cover up when nursing, it is really sad that so many people squirm at the mere thought of someone breastfeeding. I see videos on MTV with more skin exposed...
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