Br**stfeeding someone else’s baby? For many, that’s a boundary too far. But what if the alternative is a starving, screaming infant and a mother who’s totally unreachable for hours?
That’s the dilemma one Redditor faced when she agreed to watch her sister’s 4-month-old overnight. Despite a cooler full of pumped milk, the baby had never been bottle-fed—and absolutely refused it. After trying everything, including spoon feeding and desperate calls and texts, she made a choice: she br**stfed her niece. Twice.
Now her sister isn’t speaking to her. But Reddit? Reddit has opinions. Here’s how the drama unfolded—and why some say she may have saved the night, while others still raise an eyebrow.

One Redditor found herself in a parenting pickle when her sister left her four-month-old for an overnight stay




Honestly, I didn’t know how to feel at first. The title shocked me—it’s not something you hear every day. But once I read through the situation, the judgment faded, and something else kicked in: empathy.
I imagined a tiny, red-faced baby shrieking from hunger for two whole hours. I thought about how helpless that would feel—to want to care for someone else’s child and be completely abandoned by the only person who should be reachable. Her sister didn’t just forget her phone; she forgot her responsibility. And in that vacuum, this woman did what generations of women have done before her: she nourished a baby when no one else could.
Was it unconventional? Yes. Was it wrong? Let’s check out what experts thinks!
Br**stfeeding another woman’s child—while rare today—is rooted in centuries of tradition. Wet nurses were once a common necessity. And in emergencies, milk sharing is still practiced in hospitals and families globally, under guidance and consent.
Kristen Littleton, an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, explained in a piece for the Kids Health that “babies under six months should not go longer than 3-4 hours without feeding, especially when br**stfed.” Crying for extended periods not only causes distress but may impact feeding development and emotional regulation.
Lactation consultant Carrie Dean noted, “If an infant is refusing the bottle and all other feeding options are exhausted, and the caregiver is lactating, nursing is better than starvation—especially when the biological parent cannot be reached.”
But there’s another layer—consent and trust. According to UW Medicine, “Parents have a right to decide what kind of care—including nutrition—their child receives. But in an emergency, decisions fall to the caregiver.”
And this was definitely an emergency. Her sister’s mistake wasn’t just not testing the bottle. It was assuming everything would “be fine” and ghosting the sitter during a crucial moment. If you leave your baby in someone’s care, you must remain reachable. That’s not optional—it’s parental 101.
These Redditors roasted the sister’s phone silence and lack of bottle prep, arguing her irresponsibility forced the OP’s tough call







Some cheered the OP’s quick thinking, insisting feeding the baby was the only sensible move when bottles failed










These people agreed the sister’s outrage was overblown, urging her to rethink her parenting priorities after leaving the OP in a lurch


Was br**stfeeding her niece an unusual decision? Definitely. But when you’re handed a baby who won’t eat, whose cries only escalate—and you’re completely abandoned by the baby’s own mother—it no longer feels like a choice. It becomes a matter of compassion.
Her sister may still be reeling from the surprise, but many online agree: this aunt acted in the best interest of the child. So was it instinct, or an overstep? What do you think—was this maternal magic or a boundary crossed?







