What Parents.com Got Right (and Missed) About Adult Breastfeeding

When a major outlet like Parents.com takes the time to write about adult breastfeeding, I smile — not because it’s sensational, but because it’s finally being treated as something worth understanding instead of whispering about. Their recent piece did what mainstream publications rarely do: it made space for curiosity without shame. That’s a quiet milestone in how we talk about intimacy.

They did a solid job covering the basics — safety, milk supply, infection risk — all the practical things that matter. For anyone exploring this kind of closeness, clear information reduces anxiety, and that’s invaluable. But reading it, I found myself thinking, we can’t stop at safe. Safety is the doorway; meaning is the room beyond it. We also need to talk about why people find comfort in this form of connection and what it actually does for a relationship.

Beyond Safety: The Language of Calm

In my experience, adult nursing isn’t just about the act itself. It’s about what happens around it — the stillness, the surrender, the exchange of trust. When one partner rests against the other, the body releases oxytocin, that quiet little hormone that tells the nervous system, “You’re safe here.” That’s not fetish; that’s biology doing what it’s always done — rewarding care and cooperation.

It’s easy to label, but harder to listen. If you sit quietly in that moment, you realize it’s not about dominance or dependency; it’s about co-regulation. Two nervous systems syncing, two hearts remembering what softness feels like. That’s the part of the story that often gets left out of medical write-ups — the part that can’t be measured in ounces or minutes.

Meaning Matters

Where articles like the one on Parents.com stay focused on mechanics, I like to look at meaning. Because when you strip away the labels — “erotic lactation,” “adult breastfeeding,” “postpartum curiosity” — what remains is two people finding a rhythm of mutual care. Sometimes that’s sensual, sometimes it’s stress relief, and sometimes it’s just a deep exhale after a long day. The outcome isn’t always sexual; often it’s emotional. People rediscover a kind of safety that modern life rarely gives them permission to feel.

I’ve spoken with couples who say nursing became their evening meditation, a way to switch off the noise of the world and find each other again. Others describe it as their “reset button.” However it shows up, the value is the same: tenderness practiced, not assumed.

Curiosity Is Human

The other thing I wish more mainstream pieces would say outright is this: curiosity about this kind of intimacy doesn’t make you strange. It makes you human. We are wired for nurture — to give it, to receive it, to explore where comfort and closeness overlap. When that curiosity is met with openness instead of judgment, relationships often deepen in ways that surprise people.

Shame closes doors; curiosity opens them. And that’s the spirit I hope continues to grow as more people talk about adult nursing. Each open conversation reclaims a bit of the tenderness we’ve been taught to hide.

An Invitation to Explore Further

So yes, I applaud Parents.com for opening the door. I just hope more people walk through it — not only to ask “Is it safe?” but also “What does this mean for us?” Because that’s where the real discovery begins: not in the how, but in the why.

If that’s a conversation that calls to you, that’s what NURturing deSirE was written for — to explore intimacy as play, comfort, and courage all at once.

Next
Next

Oxytocin: The Love Hormone (and Why Nursing Works)