A woman is so close with her sister she breastfeeds her baby - and says it's not "weird" or "disgusting".
Emily Boazman, 33, says it was natural to nurse her sister Katelyn Urioste's baby girl, Kyan, now six months, when the 36-year-old fell sick a month after giving birth.
She was still nursing her son, Keen, now 18 months, and producing milk and was able to breastfeed Kyan while babysitting or when Katelyn was at the hospital.
Emily - who also has daughters, Crew, eight, and Knox, five - previously nursed Katelyn’s twins, NavyKate and Grey, both six, when her sister struggled with her milk supply.
She believes it is "healthy" for a baby to have breastmilk from two women – saying it provides them with double immunity.
Emily, a stay-at-home mum, from Clovis, New Mexico, US, said: “It’s special. We’re so close.
“It’s not weird to us.
“Somebody feeding your baby a bottle seems weird.
“People will say ‘it’s disgusting’ or that it is ‘creepy as hell’.
“It was the norm hundreds of years ago - we had wet nurses.
“It’s looked at as weird when it was the most natural thing.
“It’s just feeding a baby.”
Katelyn, a stay-at-home mum, said: "I had no doubts about Emily breastfeeding - it feels completely normal to me.
"We’re sisters, we’re close, it’s like she’s breastfeeding her own child, honestly.
"Anyone who has had a baby knows how exhausting postpartum can be.
"To have someone able to step in and feed your baby and give you a little break, it’s very nice.
"Not everyone will ever be on board with any one topic, and this is no different - so comments don’t bother me at all.
"At what point did it become such a taboo subject and why? Breastfeeding is very natural, why is it considered so weird to feed someone else’s baby?"
Emily first breastfed Katelyn's twins when she struggled with her milk supply after their birth in 2017.
She said: “My sister had lost a lot of blood and she really struggled with breastfeeding.
“I nursed her twins once or twice.
“My daughter was 18 months and I was still nursing her.
“My eldest sister had already nursed my eldest daughter.
“It wasn’t weird to us.”
After Katelyn had a traumatic birth on July 4, 2023, and almost lost her life it was a no brainer for Emily to step in a help breastfeeding her daughter.
Emily said: “She nearly died during the birth. Her placenta had gone into her uterus.
“She lost three litres of blood.
“But she was OK. She was producing good. She really wanted to nurse her.”
When Kyan was a month Katelyn developed Clostridium difficile – a gut infection – and she was “exhausted” and often in and out of hospital.
Emily said: “She was exhausted so I nursed her baby a few times then.
“I’d watch the baby and all the kids and if she cried I’d just feed her.
“It easier than worrying about getting a bottle.”
Emily and her husband, Jake, 42, a chief deputy district attorney, are also currently living with her sister and her husband, Mike, 31, an electronic engineer – while they are