She stands on the brink of motherhood, heart full of hope and anxiety, as the due date looms closer. In the quiet moments before their child arrives, a silent tension brews between her and her husband—a clash of comfort and boundaries, tradition and personal need—threatening to dim the joy of their impending new life.
Caught between the physical demands of recovery and the emotional yearning to bond through breastfeeding, she faces an unseen battle. Her husband’s insistence on hiding this intimate act from his family feels like an obstacle not just to healing, but to the very connection she craves with their baby, leaving her isolated in a moment that should be shared and celebrated.

WIBTA for telling my husband to basically F off over my breastfeed rule?







As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a significant conflict in establishing necessary boundaries during a vulnerable post-partum period. The OP is balancing the physical demands of recovery and learning to breastfeed with her husband’s protective, yet restrictive, directive regarding his family’s presence.
The husband’s motivation appears rooted in protecting his family from perceived discomfort, potentially overlooking the significant physical toll and logistical challenge of repeatedly climbing stairs every few hours while recovering from childbirth. Breastfeeding, especially in the early weeks, requires frequent, sometimes immediate, feeding sessions. Insisting the OP retreats upstairs negates her need for rest and establishes a dynamic where the comfort of extended family overrides the immediate physical needs of the birthing parent and newborn. While covering up is a reasonable compromise for some privacy, demanding full seclusion removes the OP’s autonomy over her own body and care process in her own home.
The OP’s initial stance, emphasizing recovery and the ability to see while learning, is medically and practically sound. The husband’s insistence is likely inappropriate as it imposes an unnecessary burden during a critical recovery phase. For future discussions, the OP should present this as a logistical health issue rather than just a preference. A constructive recommendation is for the couple to agree that for the first two weeks postpartum, feeding occurs wherever most convenient for recovery, with the in-laws agreeing to step out or look away if they are uncomfortable, as the OP’s health takes precedence over temporary social awkwardness.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


Ask him if he’d be willing to walk up and down the stairs every three hours if his testicles and taint had been recently ripped open. I’m going to guess not. If they’re uncomfortable they can leave the room.




You are FEEDING your CHILD in YOUR HOME. It’s not like you are throwing tassels on the girls and whipping them around in front of the family. You are feeding a child.








On the way or not, who in the heck visits a newborn baby and first time parents? He doesn’t get to make those rules.




If they are uncomfortable, they can leave. Your husband is also being unreasonable. However, and I speak from experience, it is a good excuse to give yourself some time away from your inlaws.

The original poster (OP) is facing a difficult situation where her need for post-partum rest and the practicalities of newborn feeding clash with her husband’s demand to restrict breastfeeding visibility around his visiting male relatives. Her emotional position centers on prioritizing physical recovery and natural bonding, which conflicts directly with her husband’s stated concern for his father’s and brother’s comfort.
Given the conflicting needs for recovery versus accommodating in-laws’ potential discomfort, should the OP prioritize her physical recovery and natural feeding requirements, or must she defer to her husband’s explicit boundary regarding breastfeeding in front of his family members?







