13 Celebrities Who Have Empowered Moms to Breastfeed in Public

Too many women feel guilty about breastfeeding or, on the contrary, feel pressured to do it without difficulty.

Comments often judge how long a baby should nurse or whether a woman is maternal enough. Many celebrities, however, are challenging these prejudices by openly defending their choices.

Miranda Kerr proudly credited breastfeeding for helping her regain energy and fitness after giving birth to her son in 2011. She nursed for a year and a half, pumping while working, and often shared photos that celebrated her joy in motherhood.

By contrast, Hilary Duff struggled to balance breastfeeding and work. Pumping on set was exhausting, her supply dropped, and she felt guilt and sadness. She eventually stopped to protect her mental health, encouraging other moms not to feel pressured into impossible expectations.

Olivia Wilde has long defended breastfeeding as natural and beautiful, while also recognizing the pressure it can create. She insists it should be a free choice, without guilt or stigma. Though messy and difficult at times, she described her own experience as deeply rewarding.

Singer Alanis Morissette strongly advocates for extended breastfeeding, letting her children self-wean. She argues that formula companies pressure mothers to stop nursing for profit. Through her documentary The Milky Way, she highlights breastfeeding as both natural and empowering.

Alyssa Milano also used her platform to defend mothers’ rights to breastfeed anywhere. She criticized the idea that women should hide, comparing it to being told to eat lunch in a bathroom. Sharing her own nursing photos, she worked to normalize the experience.

Model Nicole Trunfio posed breastfeeding her child for a magazine, later revealing the pain, fevers, and struggles she endured. Despite difficulties, she emphasized her commitment and denounced the stigma surrounding breastfeeding in public.

Together, these women show the wide spectrum of experiences—easy or hard, long or brief—while sending the same message: breastfeeding is a personal decision, and mothers deserve support, not judgment.

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