My experience, from having had one child already (2nd child now 3.5 months), is that trying to hard to 'avoid bad habits' can be FAR more problematical than just dealing with the habits when they crop up. I *know* that isn't what any of the baby books say, but it really is what I've found. So if the only reason you don't want to do something that's working well is because you're afraid it might become a problem in the future, then it's worth thinking about whether it might be easier just to go ahead and do things that way, if you see what I mean. (Bear in mind that the people who write baby books see everything from the perspective of parents who are having real problems, and so they put a lot of emphasis on avoiding these problems, under the assumption that that's going to be easier - I think they sometimes don't consider the possibility that the things you do to avoid the problems can potentially be more difficult than just solving the problems!)
With regard to your baby's feeding pattern, I think the problem may well be simply that her stomach is so small that when she needs to take in a lot of milk (which she will first thing in the morning after sleeping several hours at night) she really does need to take it by installments, so to speak - those short feeds fill her stomach and then she has to wait until the milk has gone down a bit so that she can fit the next lot in! And these frequent feeds are doing a really good job of building your supply in these important early days.
So, my advice would be - Go along with this for the time being. (I don't mean that you have to sit there feeding every minute if you really need to put her off for ten minutes so that you can get your own breakfast or whatever - just don't worry about the 'bad habit' thing.) As time goes by and she becomes able to last a bit longer between feeds, you can get her into a bit more of a routine. But, as my mother told me when I was pregnant with my first child - don't solve the problem until it happens.