J.P.
Breastfeeding Guildelines from the WHO (World Health Organization)
Over the past decades, evidence for the health advantages of breastfeeding and recommendations for practice have continued to increase. WHO can now say with full confidence that breastfeeding reduces child mortality and has health benefits that extend into adulthood. On a population basis, EXCLUSIVE BREASTFEEDING FOR THE FIRST 6 MONTHS of life is the recommended way of feeding infants, followed by continued breastfeeding with appropriate complementary foods for up to TWO YEARS OR BEYOND.
To enable mothers to establish and sustain exclusive breastfeeding for six months, WHO and UNICEF recommend:
•Initiation of breastfeeding within the first hour of life;
•Exclusive breastfeeding - that is, the infant only receives breastmilk without any additional food or drink, not even water;
•Breastfeeding on demand - that is, as often as the child wants, day and night;
•No use of bottles, teats or pacifiers.
Breastmilk is the natural first food for babies, it provides all the energy and nutrients that the infant needs for the first months of life, and it continues to provide up to half or more of a child’s nutritional needs during the second half of the first year, and up to one-third during the second year of life.
I breastfed both of my sons for 16 months since they had self-weaned to 1 charity feeding/day. My daughter was EXCLUSIVELY breastfed for 18 months - literally, no solid food, formula, etc. At 18 months, I could leave her for 8 hours, expecting her to eat something solid, but I would return and she would not have eaten anything. She would hold out for me. So, at 18 months, I left for the weekend and left her at home with her dad and brothers and she started eating. I returned to tell her the milk was all gone. She was irritated, but seemed ok with it within a few days. I might have breastfed her longer, but with her it was all or nothing....and I needed to be away longer than 8 hours and she wouldn't take a bottle either.
If you consider to continue to BF, then you need to draw lines. It sound like you are going to need them with a whole lot of ther other things as well. If she wants to BF, then it has to be in a certain spot and she can't pull on your shirt. Don't do it at the same place you want to comfort a sleepy baby. Remember, she is still a baby, not a 3 year old. Enjoy this time, but make some rules and be consistent.
PS
I weaned my 1st son completely by 16 months since I was going on vacation for 2 weeks and he was staying with my parents. My mom was freaking that he wasn't weaned 100%, but down to 1 nusring in the am and looking back, he would have been fine...since when I returned, I still had breastmilk for another 6 months and I wished I had the time with him. I didn't start back up because I didn't want to confuse him by telling him it was gone and then being a liar.
Good luck!