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
  • Breastfeeding While Working
  • Getting Help From Co-workers?

Getting Help From Co-workers?

Coworkers break room

Being a breastfeeding mother affects your relationship with your job and with your co-workers. Your colleagues may wonder about your frequent breaks, your pump, the milk stored in the refrigerator, or the way you leave work promptly to spend time with your baby. Some mothers may feel uncomfortable if co-workers make comments, or you may worry that taking time to pump milk could cause others to feel resentful. Here are some suggestions for heading off difficulties and enlisting the support of the people you work with. Depending on the culture of your workplace, some of these strategies will work better than others.

• Be open and honest about your need to pump milk for your baby. After all, breastfeeding is nothing to be embarrassed about. It’s just the best way to feed a baby.

• Use humor. Laugh off any teasing that comes your way.

Related Articles

  • Baby Blues Getting Worse
  • Finding Professional Breastfeeding Help
  • Slings for Caregiving and Breastfeeding Baby

• Be very discreet, if this is what your workplace demands. Some people are clueless and will never guess what you’re keeping in the lunch bag on the refrigerator shelf.

• Cite a medical reason for continuing to breastfeed, such as “My baby is allergic to formula.” (This isn’t necessarily a lie, since most babies, we believe, have at least microscopic allergies to formulas.) By claiming a medical reason, you aren’t putting a guilt trip on the co-workers who chose not to continue breastfeeding.

• Share information about the benefits of breastfeeding, especially the ones that are important to you. (“My husband has terrible allergies, but breastfeeding will lessen the risk for our baby.” Or “Six months old and no ear infections yet!”) If you’ve missed work because of the flu, point out that your baby had only a mild case–or no problems at all–because of the antibodies in your milk.

• Talk about how breastfeeding at home and pumping at work help you feel connected to your baby.

• Acknowledge and thank people for the times when they’ve covered for you while you’ve been pumping or feeding your baby. Return the favor when they need your help.

• Listen with sympathetic interest when co-workers share their breastfeeding stories with you– especially when breastfeeding didn’t work out in their families. Acknowledge that they did the best they could under the circumstances.

• Wow them with facts and figures about breastfeeding, or just tell them that you’re continuing to breastfeed because your pediatrician–and the entire American Academy of Pediatrics recommend it.

August 12, 2013 June 25, 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.