Quizzes & Puzzles8 mins ago
Breastfeeding Mum Verbally Abused In Nando's Restaura
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/37 939718
I am not that surprised at this, as prejudice and bigotry abound when it comes to nursing mothers.
But in this particular case, the ignorant person making the complaint was another woman !
I am not that surprised at this, as prejudice and bigotry abound when it comes to nursing mothers.
But in this particular case, the ignorant person making the complaint was another woman !
Answers
If something is in my eye-line that offends me, I merely have to rotate my eyes a few degrees in either direction, and it is not longer in my eye-line. If something offends you like this, you have the option to look away. I find most peoples' table manners are absent in restaurants these days, but I wouldn't abuse someone over it - and that is the key to this. You are...
08:49 Fri 11th Nov 2016
> If you wind a new-born baby properly with frequent pauses in feeding, they don't vomit
The thing is, andy, that new-born babies do often vomit - we've all seen it. Possibly because not all new mothers know your methods, possibly because you're wrong, possibly because it's impossible to lump all mothers and babies into the same perfect category, but babies do vomit in public - fact.
Personally, I can take this. Anything but screaming ...
> she said she didn't want to see my breasts when she was eating her dinner
I'd rather *see* a breast (or, more accurately I guess, "nipple") than *hear* a screaming baby while I was eating, but just because the complainant said they could see breasts, doesn't mean they could, or at least not for long. That type of expression is often used by people who complain about breastfeeding in public. The fact is, if something unusual happens or if the mother/baby is still learning, a nipple may be on display for a short time for any who are looking in that general direction. It's preferable to hearing a screaming baby no matter where you're looking.
The thing is, andy, that new-born babies do often vomit - we've all seen it. Possibly because not all new mothers know your methods, possibly because you're wrong, possibly because it's impossible to lump all mothers and babies into the same perfect category, but babies do vomit in public - fact.
Personally, I can take this. Anything but screaming ...
> she said she didn't want to see my breasts when she was eating her dinner
I'd rather *see* a breast (or, more accurately I guess, "nipple") than *hear* a screaming baby while I was eating, but just because the complainant said they could see breasts, doesn't mean they could, or at least not for long. That type of expression is often used by people who complain about breastfeeding in public. The fact is, if something unusual happens or if the mother/baby is still learning, a nipple may be on display for a short time for any who are looking in that general direction. It's preferable to hearing a screaming baby no matter where you're looking.
///Ms Skelcher said: "I was in the restaurant with my partner and mother-in-law when Evie woke up and needed a feed, so I lifted her and latched her on discreetly. ///
///"I felt like I hadn't done anything wrong, in fact I had specifically selected a table in a quiet corner of the restaurant so that I could be discreet.///
She's a pretty poor exhibitionist.....
///"I felt like I hadn't done anything wrong, in fact I had specifically selected a table in a quiet corner of the restaurant so that I could be discreet.///
She's a pretty poor exhibitionist.....
OK, let's take a step back from the minutia we are tangled up in here - let's park the amount of breast that was or was not on view and return to the gist of the OP -
this young mother was verbally abused in a restaurant by someone who took exception to her behaviour, and refused the offer of another table.
Now I don't care if the woman was breastfeeding, or chewing with her mouth open - the adverse behaviour of another diner requires a discreet word with the manager, not abuse to disturb everyone.
Abuse of strangers in public is wrong - the reason is secondary.
this young mother was verbally abused in a restaurant by someone who took exception to her behaviour, and refused the offer of another table.
Now I don't care if the woman was breastfeeding, or chewing with her mouth open - the adverse behaviour of another diner requires a discreet word with the manager, not abuse to disturb everyone.
Abuse of strangers in public is wrong - the reason is secondary.
The word ‘offence’ is bandied around far too freely and is much abused. This wouldn’t ‘offend’ me, but when I go to a restaurant I don’t expect to be confronted by someone’s exposed breasts. It is not a mother’s ‘right’ to make other people feel uncomfortable unnecessarily, but we’re all expected to embrace the Mother Earth mentality of the people who think it is. Well, I don’t. Babies can be fed discretely.
> Ellipsis, no one has suggested a baby be left screaming, simply that the mother feed the child discretely - which this one doesn't appear to have done
What makes you say that? The opinion of the complainant, reported through the partner of the mother? Why would you read more into that second-hand opinion than what the mother herself said directly in the article?
In any case, whether she was dicreet or not (or even had to be) is simply a matter of opinion. Nando's says it is a breastfeeding-friendly restaurant that welcomes nursing mothers, so people who don't like that are free to eat elsewhere.
What makes you say that? The opinion of the complainant, reported through the partner of the mother? Why would you read more into that second-hand opinion than what the mother herself said directly in the article?
In any case, whether she was dicreet or not (or even had to be) is simply a matter of opinion. Nando's says it is a breastfeeding-friendly restaurant that welcomes nursing mothers, so people who don't like that are free to eat elsewhere.
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