nzherald.co.nz

Keeping Mum: There's no harm in The Breast Milk Baby

By Dita De Boni
9:16 AM Tuesday Nov 13, 2012
The Breast Milk Baby feeds like a real baby. Photo / AP

The Breast Milk Baby feeds like a real baby. Photo / AP

These days mentioning the words 'breast feeding' seems to have the same effect as throwing a lit match onto a pile of gasoline-soaked rags - thanks a lot, Piri Weepu!

But even Piri can't be blamed for the furore surrounding a new doll being marketed this Christmas (that is, the new three month lead-in to Christmas).

The doll - 'The Breast Milk Baby' - can suckle at a specially designed top worn by its owner; contact from the doll on the top triggers strategically-placed sensors, setting off a suckling noise.

The Spanish-made toy has taken a year to hit mainstream shelves in the US, thanks to views that the doll doesn't allow children to be children long enough, or 'creeps parents out' with its realistic milk slurping sound.

Famous right-wing blowhard Bill O'Reilly gave the dolls a marketing boost, ironically, by decrying them on Fox, accusing them of 'sexualising' young girls and saying "we don't need this".

It goes without saying that there is nothing remotely sexual about The Breast Milk Baby - the top with the sensors is just a halter top with little petal appliques where nipples would be. It's not like the plastic baps worn by Robert De Niro in Meet the Fockers or anything. But young girls are routinely sold dolls that are far more sexualised than The Breast Milk Baby anyhow, with Barbie now looking altogether wholesome next to Bratz dolls, for example.

The other thing is that we already have dolls that bottle-feed by the truckload; dolls that wet and dirty nappies and do all sorts of other realistic things. And anyone who has fed a baby around young children will know those children routinely ape breastfeeding (if that is what they see) - although the ones I've seen tend to have a fanciful notion that the milk comes through the belly button (or not so fanciful, if the unfortunate bust droopage that comes through pregnancy is any indication).

The real problem with The Breast Milk Baby is that the dolls are, quite frankly, fugly as. They may come in every ethnicity and skin colour known to man, with lovely little matching names (from Savannah to Lilyang to Cameron and Jeremiah), but they are not the lovely little cuties that many little girls or boys might think of as a new baby. Come to think of it, maybe that's a good lesson too, as newborn babies tend to be a huge disappointment to their siblings when they first arrive - sleepy, often noisy and occasionally stinky to boot.

A mushy, slurpy little alien feeding at your bosom is what breastfeeding is like, especially to begin with, and if little girls want to ape that experience then there seems little harm in it (plenty already do it, without the special sensors). That these dolls stir up quite the negative reaction they do is a sorry comment on the prevailing views of breastfeeding too often found in society at large.

By Dita De Boni
Poppy77 (New Zealand) | 09:41AM Tuesday, 13 Nov 2012
I have no issue with breastfeeding, having done it myself, but this is truly quite gross to be honest. And I aint no PC Police thats for sure. Are we running out of things for our children to paly with/do in the world? How bout going outside and playing, climb some trees join in some lolly scrambles.
Chris () | 09:58AM Tuesday, 13 Nov 2012
This is just wrong on so many levels! I don't get why anyone would want a doll for their child that does this. Children need to be kids and breastfeeding is a very adult thing. Not to mention its not easy and by making it as a game you play makes one think that it will be that easy for real. It's a great thing when all goes well but this doll is not a toy I will ever buy my daughter. I don't even think it should be sold!
Westieman (West Auckland) | 09:58AM Tuesday, 13 Nov 2012
Another item to help children to be pushed forward into "adulthood" No wonder when they arrive they are unable to cope as they haven't learnt through experience of being a child how to become an adult. Not to mention the lack of imagination and play acting that epitomises a large part of being a child- Everything is made for them- everything is given to them on a plate and it is only the makers and marketers that are making money as their prime objective always will be.
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