Good Enough Milk: How to Let Go of the Pressure and Focus on What Really Helps Your Baby Thrive (eBook)

Good Enough Milk: How to Let Go of the Pressure and Focus on What Really Helps Your Baby Thrive (eBook)

Zadie Aven
Zadie Aven
Prezzo:
€ 14,99
Compra EPUB
Prezzo:
€ 14,99
Compra EPUB

Formato

:
EPUB
Cloud: Scopri di più
Compatibilità: Tutti i dispositivi
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: D. Duke
Codice EAN: 9798231249176
Anno pubblicazione: 2025
Scopri QUI come leggere i tuoi eBook
Abbonati a Kobo Plus per avere accesso illimitato a migliaia di eBook

Note legali

NOTE LEGALI

a) Garanzia legale, Pagamenti, Consegne, Diritto di recesso
b) Informazioni sul prezzo
Il prezzo barrato corrisponde al prezzo di vendita al pubblico al lordo di IVA e al netto delle spese di spedizione
Il prezzo barrato dei libri italiani corrisponde al prezzo di copertina.
I libri in inglese di Libraccio sono di provenienza americana o inglese.
Libraccio riceve quotidianamente i prodotti dagli USA e dalla Gran Bretagna, pagandone i costi di importazione, spedizione in Italia ecc.
Il prezzo in EURO è fissato da Libraccio e, in alcuni casi, può discostarsi leggermente dal cambio dollaro/euro o sterlina/euro del giorno. Il prezzo che pagherai sarà quello in EURO al momento della conferma dell'ordine.
In ogni caso potrai verificare la convenienza dei nostri prezzi rispetto ad altri siti italiani e, in moltissimi casi, anche rispetto all'acquisto su siti americani o inglesi.
c) Disponibilità
I termini relativi alla disponibilità dei prodotti sono indicati nelle Condizioni generali di vendita.

Disponibilità immediata
L'articolo è immediatamente disponibile presso Libraccio e saremo in grado di procedere con la spedizione entro un giorno lavorativo.
Nota: La disponibilità prevista fa riferimento a singole disponibilità.

Disponibile in giorni o settimane (ad es. "3-5-10 giorni", "4-5 settimane" )
L'articolo sarà disponibile entro le tempistiche indicate, necessarie per ricevere l'articolo dai nostri fornitori e preparare la spedizione.
Nota: La disponibilità prevista fa riferimento a singole disponibilità.

Prenotazione libri scolastici
Il servizio ti permette di prenotare libri scolastici nuovi che risultano non disponibili al momento dell'acquisto.

Attualmente non disponibile
L'articolo sarà disponibile ma non sappiamo ancora quando. Inserisci la tua mail dalla scheda prodotto attivando il servizio Libraccio “avvisami” e sarai contattato quando sarà ordinabile.

Difficile reperibilità
Abbiamo dei problemi nel reperire il prodotto. Il fornitore non ci dà informazioni sulla sua reperibilità, ma se desideri comunque effettuare l'ordine, cercheremo di averlo nei tempi indicati. Se non sarà possibile, ti avvertiremo via e-mail e l'ordine verrà cancellato.
Chiudi

Descrizione

She sat on the bathroom floor with a bottle in one hand and her phone in the other, scrolling through forums filled with strangers arguing about what's "best" for a baby they'd never met. The milk was warm. The baby was fed. And still, the guilt crept in like smoke under a door. Motherhood was never supposed to be a test of purity. Yet somehow, feeding your baby has become the battlefield where love is measured in ounces, methods, and judgment. "Good Enough Milk" tears through the polite, pastel-shaded messaging and goes right to the raw truth so many parents whisper to themselves but are too afraid to say aloud: I love my child, and I am doing enough. In a culture obsessed with ideals and performance, this book stands as a deeply needed rebellion. It dissects the emotional noise—hospital pamphlets, influencer posts, mommy groups—and reveals the root of the pressure that has built a false hierarchy around how we feed babies. Breast vs. bottle. Exclusive vs. supplemental. Organic vs. whatever's on sale. All of it swirls around one central lie: that feeding a baby is a moral act, and any deviation from "best" is a personal failing. Zadie Aven's unapologetic and graceful lens doesn't scold, doesn't oversimplify, and doesn't offer false comfort. Instead, it offers deep grounding. Page by page, it affirms what exhausted, overwhelmed, and fiercely loving mothers already know in their bones: feeding is more than nutrition—it's a relationship. It's trust. It's problem-solving. And sometimes, it's just survival. You won't find rigid charts or a step-by-step plan to "optimize output" here. You'll find clarity, permission, and a powerful framework for redefining success on your own terms. Drawing from stories of women who've quietly battled the unspoken shame behind closed nursery doors, "Good Enough Milk" pulls the curtain back on how we build our identity as mothers—not through perfection, but through presence. It confronts the myth of the effortless feeder and replaces it with something far more resilient: a mother who makes informed, conscious decisions based on the needs of her baby, her body, and her life. Not Instagram. Not her pediatrician's sideways glance. Not her cousin's offhand comment. Hers. This book offers real conversations about the nuanced intersection of emotion, science, and intuition. It walks readers through the toll that pressure takes—on mental health, bonding, and postpartum recovery—and gently dismantles the systems that have convinced women that feeding struggles are private failures, instead of common experiences. You'll uncover why so many new mothers feel isolated and inadequate, and you'll walk away with a radical new awareness of what it means to nourish without apology. "Good Enough Milk" is not a passive manifesto. It's a bold reframing of what it means to show up for your child without abandoning yourself. It is soft in tone but sharp in clarity. It moves beyond platitudes and digs into the heartbeat of real-life motherhood: the everyday acts of care that shape both baby and mother, none of which require perfection to be powerful. Readers will leave this book with a lighter heart and a sharper mind. They'll gain the tools to recognize harmful messaging in their environment and the language to protect their peace. They'll learn how to evaluate advice without absorbing it, how to interpret their own baby's cues without outsourcing their confidence, and how to accept that love does not require certification from anyone else. Most importantly, this book offers a path out of the guilt maze. Not through defiance, but through truth. Not through strategy, but through surrender. And in that surrender, a strange and beautiful power begins to emerge—the kind that says, "I see you. I see your effort. And it is enough."