Sunday, March 22, 2009

BREASTFEEDiNG 101

The girl who is teaching our birthing class says that breastfeeding can be tougher than giving birth. Clearly, I have no clue and I never will. But there are a couple things about it that I find intriguing, beautiful, remarkable, and/or just dang weird. 



First, if you're a believer, you're called to think about this. It's a picture of our dependence on what God has revealed. Read 1 Pe 2.1-3.

Secondly, when a child is born, the extent of their vision is usually about 18 inches or so. This happens to be about the distance from the mother's breast to her face. Newborns are hardwired for intimate dependence and not mere provision from a distance. This is explicitly the product of nothingness, chaos, chance, random mutations over billions of years, and people with real emotions surviving because they're better than others [like Hitler]. Or... even as Darwin suggets ["To suppose that the eye... could have been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree."], there is likely another Source for its intricate design and beauty.

Lastly, [and I'm sure I'll miss some miniscule biological detail here], when a baby first latches on to breastfeed, he/she exchanges fluid with mama through the breast. This newborn spit tells mama's body what the appropriate balance of nutrients should be for that child. Thus, mama's body makes a special batch of milk for her kid that wouldn't be the best for any other kid.

Again, because we worship the scientific method and human reason, this is easily explainable as surviving to be fit. But if you actually think about it, it's humans needing humans to remind humans that we need something other than humans. Any school of thought demands that we need external means to survive. But surely that cannot apply spiritually because spirituality is a product of the human psyche to pacify humanity so that they can get through tough times. It is "the opiate of the masses" [Marx]. Or... There is a good and wise God who sent Jesus [who went through more crap on earth than you'll ever go through] in order to make whole those who trust Him.

This is how theological neatniks think about breastfeeding. Maybe this is also what Jesus had in mind when he said, "Consider the lilies." I sure hope so.

5 comments:

Daniel Thompson said...

I've gotta be honest, that's just more than I wanted to hear/read on breastfeeding.

RosieLayne said...

so true! I love the simplicity of your argument for God... isn't it awesome that He made it so simple for us, yet so tragic that we make it so hard?

Andrew Lewis said...

Dude, I love that you posted about this. I hope to not sound creepy when I say I think breastfeeding is a beautiful and spiritual thing -- for some of the reasons you just mentioned. Though you explained them far better than I could.

Also, that baby outfit needs to be on JWTV.

Anonymous said...

did you know that also when a mommy hears her baby cry that it makes the milk come in?? once i heard asher crying over the phone while my mom was keeping him and my milk came in-even over the phone!it's neat how mommies are made to respond to their babies.

thesandifers said...

I agree 100% with the first sentence.