I'm aware of that. But you were suggesting - or so it seemed to me - that very few women would actually want to breastfeed in public. And I can assure that is just not true.
OK, but where is your statistical evidence for this? On what and whose research is it based?
If and when I have a child, I would have no problem feeding him or her just because I happened to be around other people. This was true of my mother and most of the women in my family, and most of the women I know. There's so many women who feel comfortable with it that I wouldn't even call it a minority view.
That's as maybe; clearly, we don't know the same women!
As you are not a mother or even a woman, I really don't think that you are able or entitled to make comments about what breastfeeding is for a mother and a child.
I'm entitled to make coments on such as I know - and I do not pretend to know what it is in its entirety for those who do this.
Sure, it's an intimate activity. Hugging or kissing a family member or loved one could also be considered an intimate activity. Are you suggesting everyone go to the bathroom when they want to hug or kiss someone else?
Of course not, but that doesn't of itself involve the same kind of physical exposure.
Also, how can you say that breastfeeding is not natural to be in public when women have been doing it in public for literally thousands of years? I happen to think it's extremely unnatural of us to sexualize and be embarrassed by such a natural act.
I didn't actually use that word - that's down to you - but it is at best a spurious assumption that what might have been "natural" or considered to be "natural" millennia ago remains so in today's very different society.
I have no problem exposing parts of my body in public. Neither do all the women who breastfeed in public. The ones who do have a problem with exposing themselves in public just don't breastfeed in public. No one is making them do it, and the rest of us just want to have the right to. Please stop assuming what a woman's "first choice" would be. I know that it definitely wouldn't be my first choice to cram myself into a bathroom stall every time my child needed to eat.
No, I am aware that breastfeeding inpublic is not compulsory and I am not seeking to speak for all women about their first choices in such matters - indeed, no one could do that because not all women have the same ones. All that I know is that every woman in whose company I've been in a public situation when they've wanted to do this has excused herself to go and do it in private.
As this is the "anything but piano" forum I don't think it's necessary that we stay on the topic of music. But if you're looking for someone to blame for straying from the original thread topic, it was thalbergmad who brought up breastfeeding, not me.
The fact that this thread is in the
Anything but piano section does not of itself provide an excuse to depart from its topic which, to remind you, is
sexism in music. Whilst I admit that I have never seen a woman breastfeeding while singing, playing an instrument, conducting or composing and Thal's reference to it might be seen to represent something of a side issue where the practice of music is concerned; his introduction of it is not so far from the topic in certain contexts; think, for example, of auch activity being carried out in an auditorium in a concert hall or opera house with many hundreds of audience members present - would you consider that to be a more comfortable experience for the woman concerned than disappearing into a ladies' toilet to do it?
Anyway, I think that there's been quite enough on that aspect of the topic by now and there are, aftr all, many other aspects of "sexism in music" to identify, explore and discuss.
Best,
Alistair