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Alban Ydder
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lee jeans (6th Nov 21 at 7:44am UTC)Quote Reply
An important thing to remember about those early days of breastfeeding is that your pants most likely won’t fit—and you’ll be willing to sell your soul to the devil rather than don another pair of stretchy leggings in public. Enter the ultimate lifesaver: the dress. “I’ve always been drawn to easy, oversized garments. I was largely able to live in non-maternity flowy dresses throughout my pregnancy, which translated seamlessly into the postpartum realm,” says Myer, who spent her postpartum year in her beloved styles from brands like Ciao Lucia, Dôen, and Johanna Ortiz. joes jeans DuBoise loves a slip dress by Aurora Sage and Hatch, which offers easy access for feeding and pumping and can be layered in chillier months. Greene’s go-to is the Oasis Midi from Sotela, as well as other cleavage-baring styles. “I’m not flaunting my breasts on purpose, but they need to be easily accessible when I’m out and about. So, the more cleavage, the easier my life is!” On that note, she adds that it has been quite a relief to separate from the societal stigma of breasts as sexual objects that exist solely for the male gaze. “Now that I’m experiencing what their true purpose is, it has totally changed my own view on them. That’s not to say breasts aren’t beautiful—they are! But for many more reasons than society makes us believe.”
If you’ve recently noticed every cool mom on Instagram sporting a particularly chic accessory, it’s because they are all wearing Artipoppe carriers. “My favorite thing about them is that they feel like an adult wardrobe piece rather than a baby accessory,” says DuBoise, who has a few of them, as her children practically live in them up until two years old. She also finds them to be an excellent way to ease into breastfeeding in public. “You have a little private nook and for someone to see your breasts, they’d have to really stare. In that case, shame on them.” lee jeans After more than three years of breastfeeding, she has abandoned any notion of discomfort or shame around public breastfeeding and encourages other women to do the same. “Motherhood has helped me abandon the notion that it’s my job to make others feel comfortable. It’s my job to feed and love my child, and no one’s discomfort will get in the way of that,” she says. Now those are words to live by.
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