This past weekend I was at Olive Garden. When I was seated it was off to the side in my own little room that had eight tables. When I finally got settled in, I was seated right next to a table that had a Mom, Dad and a little baby.

Now I will tell you exactly what I saw without any stretching of the truth and without any jokes.

The baby was perfectly fine during the whole lunch; she wasn't screaming or acting up, just sitting in her high chair enjoying life. Toward the end of the lunch, the baby was getting a little fussy, so the Mom got up and grabbed the baby and a napkin and sat back down.

Now, if you have seen the napkins at Olive Garden they are the size of a bandanna. Then, the lady lifted up her t-shirt and started to feed the baby.

I looked around to see if any other people were seeing this. There was a table of three women that looked like a grandma, mother and daughter, a family of four that had a 12-year-old son and then it was me.

So as we all sat there eating our lunch or finishing, the table of ladies really didn't pay attention to the breastfeeding. The table with the young boy? Now, I spent a lot of the time watching him and his reactions to the scene while he was trying to eat. I can only imagine seeing him going to school the next morning and telling all of his friends what he saw this weekend.

After we were done, I paid for our lunch and then bailed. I don't have any kind of problem with breastfeeding in public. Do your thing for the baby and then go on about your daily routine.

What if someone was to say something to her? I don't know the rules about any of this, but I do think that when it comes to have your breast out in a very public place it is the duty of the person with said breast out to try to do whatever they can to make everyone comfortable around them, because yes, it is a public place and we all deserve to be there.

Now, the lady was wearing a T-shirt and she pulled up the shirt and attempted to cover up the baby with a napkin that wasn't bigger than a bandanna and it was on the floor before she could get started.

Could there have been other options? I'm sure. Like using a blanket to cover up so the 12-year-old boy wasn't trying to jockie for position to get a better view. It is very simple and the responsibility of the parents that if you breastfeed in public to make everyone around you the most comfortable possible. Why you ask?

Because it is the nice thing to do.

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