This woman is being held hostage by her breasts. Please, can’t somebody do something?
My boobs don’t like you. They don’t want to be here right now with you drinking wine. In fact, my boobs would rather be at home with my kids.
I’d love to stay, really I would, but my boobs are being very insistent and making things awkward for everyone. No, I did not spill on my shirt. That’s just my boobs letting me know it’s time to go home.
I had a baby eight months ago. The day after his birth, I woke up feeling like someone had dropped two cement blocks on my chest — two cement blocks that shot milk like a maternal cannon. Overnight, my boobs had become sentient. Like a robot out of control, they were hell-bent on destruction. The first night my baby slept longer than five hours, I woke up in a pool of liquid. I shook my husband awake.
These beasts had to be tamed.Another time, after indulging in a long nap, which is a luxury for any mother, I got up to find my boobs angry at me. When I went to change my shirt, they sprayed the room with a fine mist of milk. I ran into the bathroom and stood over the sink, shouting for my husband to bring me a bottle -- I couldn't let that liquid gold go to waste. But apparently, shouting, "Help! My boobs are making a mess!" in my house doesn't have the urgency it once did. My husband arrived several minutes later carrying the baby with the 2-year-old in tow. And we all watched my milk go down the drain as a family. I could almost hear my boobs whispering, "That will teach you to take a nap."
My boobs have calmed down since then. They no longer rise up to smack me in the face when a baby (any baby) cries, and they no longer send me threatening notes demanding that they feed something every two hours or else the nursing bra gets it. But they're still unwieldy, unmanageable hydras that are growing from my chest.