Horny breast milk fetish loser guys who have surpassed the taste of cows milk and now must
order women's breast milk online to get their rocks off.
I once was at a party where I showed up at the tail end of a drunken guy bragging about
taking shots of breast milk.I was disgusted but glad I didn't witness such grossness.
Full ArticleAnna Corral started selling her breast milk because she needed the
extra cash. Since she produces twice the milk her baby needs, Corral
says her freezer is filled with sterile bags of it.
By selling her milk for $1.50 an ounce online, the former nanny from Milwaukee made $500 in a month and a half.
“At first the whole idea sounded weird," said Corral, who has
shipped both frozen and fresh milk to Nebraska, Texas and North
Carolina. "But the more you think about it, the more normal it seems to
be. Years ago, there were wet nurses.”
Mothers began selling breast milk online in 2005, and there are now
hundreds of offers on the Web. In this unregulated market, a new
clientele has appeared: men with a breast milk fetish. While some women
refuse to sell the milk to men, others don’t mind.
Customers also include women who are unable to breastfeed their own
babies and mothers who can’t afford the cost of milk sold at one of the
country’s 11 certified human milk banks, which are usually located in
hospitals and supervised by the Food and Drug Administration.
Lactation organizations discourage the unregulated sale of breast milk because viruses can be transmitted by human milk.
Corral’s best customers so far are a mother who is unable to
breastfeed and a man who enjoys drinking breast milk. She doesn’t mind
selling to men and chose the online nickname of “hot mama milk” to
attract attention.
“I think it’s gross,” she said about men who drink her breast milk, “but if they enjoy it, fine.”
Steve, who lives in Kentucky and who declined to give his real name
because he doesn’t want his wife to know about his fetish, has twice
bought milk online. He pours the liquid into a glass and drinks it. “I
just like the taste of it, and it turns me on,” he wrote in an e-mail
message.
On radioball.net, the main Web site where women sell milk, some men
ask for photos or promise large sums of money to mothers willing to
nurse them.
Relationships in which women nurse adults are called “adult
nursing.” An online forum was created last November for fans of the
practice. It has 600 members, both men and women whose fantasy is to
breastfeed or be breastfed.
But not everyone wants to satisfy this craving. Sarah Scott posted
an ad online to sell her milk but got discouraged after getting eight
e-mail messages from men in two days. The 28-year-old from
Murfreesboro, Tenn., didn’t want to sell her milk to men, so she ended
up sharing it with a woman who lives near her town.
Those looking to give their breast milk to babies in need say it can
be hard to tell who will ultimately use the milk. Some men lie to
obtain breast milk for themselves.
Amy Horton was willing to give away her milk free but said 10 men
contacted her shortly after she posted her ad. One said he needed milk
because he had a baby and his wife had just died. But when Horton asked
for proof, the man declined to answer.
“The stories got kind of creative,” she said. “I just know that there are a lot of sick people out there.”
Buying breast milk online--especially to give to babies--can be
dangerous. Mary Rose Tully, who works for the Human Milk Banking
Association of North America, said two to three women a week call her
to ask whether it is safe to buy milk online. She tells them not to do
it. Human milk can transmit all sorts of diseases, including HIV.
“If these people depend on selling milk to make money, they might not be very careful,” Tully said.
Sellers often offer medical test results, but the screening can
never be as thorough as in licensed milk banks, she added. In certified
milk banks, donors are thoroughly screened and given lengthy
questionnaires. Then the milk is pasteurized and repeatedly controlled
for bacteriological growth. Tully said this level of control can't be
matched by private sellers.
Kathy Lebbing, a lactation consultant and volunteer for La Leche League, agrees the risks are high.
“Who knows what they are selling?" she said. "It’s a chancy thing. You don’t even know that you are getting human milk.���
Right now, only California and New York have restrictions against
selling breast milk. But other states are considering legislation to
ban the practice.
However, buying from official milk banks can be expensive, at $3 an
ounce, while prices online range from $1 to $2, according to a sampling
of sites.
A woman buying breast milk from an accredited milk bank would need
to pay about $93 a day to feed her baby, according to Tully, although
some insurance plans will pay for the cost.
The high cost makes buying breast milk online attractive for a number of women.
Corral took several medical tests before selling her milk but said
most of her customers didn’t ask for copies of the documents.
“I am surprised that they don’t ask,” Corral said. “I personally wouldn’t do it. I wouldn’t feel safe enough.”
By Claire Levenson