Ask Dr Sears
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
MENUMENU
  • Pregnancy & Childbirth
  • Feeding & Eating
  • Parenting & Behavior
  • Health Concerns
  • Brain Health
  • A to Z Topics
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Wellness Institute
  • Home
  • Topics
  • Feeding & Eating
  • Breastfeeding
  • Rightstart Techniques
  • Breastfeeding Bonding

Breastfeeding Bonding

Breastfeeding bonding

Building Closeness through Breastfeeding Bonding

When women look back on the time they spent breastfeeding their babies, what they most remember is the closeness, the intimate breastfeeding bonding. Whether you’re someone who is swept away by the romance of motherhood or a more practical person who feels the milk is there for a reason, the feeling of satisfying your baby’s hunger with your own milk will strike you as incredibly fulfilling.

Continue the “Oneness”

The breastfeeding bonding between mother and baby is important. When you feed your baby at the breast, you tap into a valuable resource for mothering and nurturing your baby that is tested and true; as old as time itself. When you choose to breastfeed, you continue the “oneness” that you and your baby experienced during pregnancy. Your body continues to provide nourishment, warmth, comfort and safety, just as it did when baby was inside you. Once you’ve mastered the basics, breastfeeding bonding will make mothering easier.

  • Breastfeeding is convenient. Food is available for baby within seconds wherever you go. No sterilizing bottles and nipples, and taking the time and effort to prepare formula.
  • Breastfeeding helps you know and understand your baby. It can affect the way you listen to your child, the way you communicate and the way you respond for many years to come.
  • Breastfeeding makes discipline easier as your child grows, since a breastfeeding mother knows her baby well.
  • Breastfeeding mothers take pride in providing food for their babies, and they feel confident about parenting children they know so well.

Learn to be Child-Centered

How does breastfeeding do all this? To breastfeed successfully, mothers must learn to pay attention to baby’s cues and trust them. Mothers learn to be child-centered, to think in terms of the baby’s needs and how to meet them. The many, many times and different ways in which a breastfeeding mother interacts with her baby make both members of the breastfeeding pair more sensitive to one another’s social signals.

Related Articles

  • Breastfeeding Newborn Baby
  • Slings for Caregiving and Breastfeeding Baby
  • Tips on How to Awaken and Feed a Sleepy Baby

Of course, it’s possible to breastfeed and ignore these lessons in lifelong parenting, but for most mothers and babies (and fathers, too) learning to breastfeed is an important step in building a trusting relationship that extends well beyond the baby years.

August 12, 2013 June 22, 2018 Dr. Bill Sears
Hearts Embraced Pendant Necklace

The Health Brain Book

Help Heal Yourself from Cancer
Become a Dr. Sears Certified Health Coach
Dr Poo: The Scoop on Comfortable Poop

Juice Plus+ - The next best thing to fruits and vegetables.

Lummi Island Wild

About Ask Dr. Sears

AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual needs.

Recent Articles

  • Free Health Webinar with Dr. Bill
    Free Health Webinar with Dr. BillMarch 24, 20250
  • Feel Good Book Reviews
    Feel Good Book ReviewsFebruary 18, 20250
  • Hearts Embraced Pendant Necklace
    Hearts Embraced Pendant NecklaceJanuary 30, 20250


Resources

  • Sears Parenting Library
  • Dr. Sears Family Newsletter
  • Dr. Sears Wellness Institute
  • Prime-Time Health

Connect

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

  • support@askdrsears.com
  • Contact Ask Dr Sears
  • About Ask Dr Sears
  • About Dr. William Sears
  • Dr. Sears Wellness Institute
  • Media Relations Information


© 2020 AskDrSears.com All Rights Reserved.