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But why does American society view breasts primarily as sexual objects and not
as baby feeders? Carolyn Latteier voiced it out this way
in TV program "All about breasts":
"Well, I think it is partly to do with the fact that we don't
breastfeed very much. I mean, breastfeeding rates have improved,
but most women don't breastfeed very much or very long or in
public. So when we see a breast, we don't say, "Oh there
are those magical milk-making things."
(see
transcript)
Let's see how that might come about.
Bottle feeding story
Baby is fed from the bottle, so it doesn't get to know Mom's
breast as a food source and as the best pacifier. Also if Mom never undresses or
uncovers her bosom in front of her child, the child never gets to see breasts. Parents,
society, TV, and media show breasts to be shameful, sexual,
forbidden, supposed to be big and upright, and the child can easily end up believing that way too.
But what if the baby is breastfed?, you might
say. After all, most women do breastfeed their babies at
least in the hospital. But they don't do it for very
long! Let's imagine what happens in the weaning process.
Weaning story
Baby is breast fed in the beginning. Mom maybe has
problems with milk supply, she starts a supplement bottle, which
reduces her milk supply, and soon the baby is weaned
say at three months. Or maybe Mom goes to work at six
weeks and weans the baby.
But just because Mom quits nursing doesn't mean that
the baby wants to. The attachment and love for
Mommy's breast doesn't just go away like that. Baby loses its best source of
food, yes, but also loses its source of comfort and
security! Little baby is probably feeling along
the lines, "Hey, don't take those away from me! Those
soft sponges belong to me! You can't do that! Hey, nobody
here cares about my feelings. Please
please Mommy....."
Of course, the baby can't talk, so Mommy can go on with the weaning process just as she wants it.
This kind of early and forced weaning can cause the baby a
emotional/psychological trauma. Deep inside it
retains this feeling of wanting the breast. The baby still
likes Mommy's breasts. It is still interested in
Mommy's bosom and wants to touch it, cuddle the breast, feel
close, get yummy milk.
You can see this when weaned toddlers and babies are still interested in
breasts and want to touch them. But many times the mother
feels uneasy about it and maybe thinks it is indecent
and perverted behavior. The father may feel the same way
and fear that his child (and especially his son) is going to
grow up to be some kind of pervert. but that is not true! Little children don't think sexual things!
So the mother tries to get her child to stop this nipple
twiddling and breast cuddling. Perhaps the child is taught that touching naked breasts is BAD, it is a "NO-NO". Now, if the mother never lets her children see bare breasts, it is no wonder that the child develops a curiosity towards breasts. The child stars thinking, "Wonder what they look like? I'd like to see!"
While the child is growing up, everything around her touts that breasts are a forbidden taboo. And we all know that taboos just encourage curiosity. Breasts
are a no-no, thereby exciting. What is forbidden and exciting, and presented as sexual in the media, then starts arousing sexual feelings especially with boys since girls at
least get to see their own breasts and often times Mom's too.
So what started as innocent curiosity and love towards Mommy's breasts can be turned into sexual obsession in boys, whereas young girls start worrying about breast size, and consider having buying push-up bras and breast implants to make their own breasts look more "attractive".
| It all starts when you take
the breast away from the child AND then make seeing breasts a forbidden no-no for the rest of the child's growing period. End result is a distorted view of female breasts. |
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