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Parenting

21st Nov 2016

The First Ever Breastfeeding Emoji Is (Almost) Here And It Is Perfection

Trine Jensen-Burke

If you, like us, do a lot of your communication through texts and social media these days, you will more than likely be as excited as we were to find out that there are more how-did-we-ever-live-without-them little emojis on the way.

In fact, Unicode Consortium – the international group that regulates emojis – has approved a list of the 51 candidates for Unicode 10, as part of an effort to make emojis more representative of a wide and diverse user base.

new-emoji-choices-unicode-release-2017-ios-android-718078

Insert hand-clapping emoji here.

The new set of illustrations includes a woman in a hijab and a woman breastfeeding, as well as a starry-eyed face, a genie and a zombie. Not to mention the pretzel, the pie and the T-Rex one.

Seriously, we can’t decide which one we love the most (we have dreamed of a coconut emoji for so long now!), but the breastfeeding one is right up there.

It was UK nurse Rachel Lee who noticed a gap in Unicode’s emoji offerings and decided to do something about it.

In a new proposal to the company that oversees the creation of emoji, Lee has designed a breastfeeding character to complement the existing baby bottle.

“The lack of a breastfeeding emoji represents a gap in the Unicode Standard given the prevalence of breastfeeding in cultures around the world, and throughout history,” she argued in her proposal.

When asked by the Huffington Post how she came up with the idea, Lee said it stemmed from her job as a nurse at University College of London Hospital, where neonatal nurses are constantly educating and supporting new mothers who never knew breastfeeding could be so challenging.

“I just don’t think we are exposed to it enough in society and sometimes we forget how important it is developmentally in all areas to mothers and their babies,” she said.

The issue really stuck with her, and compounded when she realized there was a baby bottle emoji in the standard set but no breastfeeding baby, even though it’s been voted as one of the top 30 most-requested characters of the past year. A breastfeeding baby option, she said, could help unite parents “with a little badge of honor on social media, be used for quick communication with friends and family or even just as a sign that society supports them for their hard work.”

In her proposal, Lee also pointed out the absurdity of trying to use a baby bottle emoji as a substitute for a breastfeeding one. She wrote:

“Using a Baby Bottle emoji as a substitute for a breastfeeding emoji would be like using a car emoji as a substitute for a bike. Both are forms of transport which achieve many of the same goals, but are clearly not interchangeable, and give a different message than intended.”

Unicode will consider the breastfeeding emoji at a company meeting in November, a time at which new characters including almond, coconut, climber, mermaid, person meditating and pie will also be reviewed.

If accepted, Unicode said the breastfeeding character would likely come available in varying skin tones. The earliest the emoji could hit a text near you would be the summer of 2017.

“I am under no delusion that creating a small emoji to exist in this society may not be the real push to normalize breastfeeding in public forums,” Lee added. “But if it helps just get the message out there by creating discussion and gathering support, then it’s all worth it.”

AMEN TO THAT.