Friday, May 25, 2012

Updates and a story :)

So we took it back to basics for awhile with tube, syringe and cup feeding (hint: need to cup feed? Lids from bottles are a perfect size :) didn't work to get her back to breast. So I bought a couple big nipped (not as wide of a base as id like but oh well) 97cent bottles from walmart. She "latches" on to them great and loves them. Of all the bottles I bought I love these the best and they really are "slow flow"! It takes her the normal 15 ish minutes to eat where the other more expensive bottles take only a few minutes for her to gulp! And the clincher...the other day she ate for ten whole mminutes....a whole feed. At the breast. Nothing since but there's hope!

I had a breastfeeding friend of mine try to nurse her, to see if her aversion was to my breast, maybe my smell or the way I held her. She rejected hers too which did make me feel a bit better.

I'm considering trying a mimijumi bottle which is shaped just like a breast....seriously....ill post a pic soon.
I have hope for my girl. Regardless I'm not giving up miss!

Registered for summer term. Medical terminology, psychology, sociology :) I feel closer to my goal just seeing my schedule! :)

Also...amazing thing. While shopping at walmart for those new bottles, a man approached me. Just a kid really, maybe early twenties and he asked me if I was breastfeeding. (I applaud this man for being so invested he would approach a stranger in such a way) he then began to tell me his concerns....his fiance was in pain from her nipples, baby not latching correctly and sliding off on the nipple, milk not having come in (she was 3days pp), baby lost weight, etc. The normal concerns for a new baby and new breastfeeding relationship.
It was sweet. As my husband put it "could you need any more of a sign that this is your career?". I took this opportunity to ask some questions, learn enough to tell him its common and she and he both were doing amazing. He had already scheduled a lactation appt at the same clinic I go to. I praised him. How invested he is!! I recommended lanolin for her nips and a little icing against them before a feed and stressed his decision for lactation consulting is perfect because they can help her latch, sooner the better. I told him to hold out longer and keep her motivated and to tell her she is doing everything right. The first few weeks can be trying but his girls are both learning. I really only played the supportive psychological side of the lc coin and encouraged his help from an ibclc, but it felt right. I was so amazed at his dedication and how comfortable he felt talking to someone just for support. They are gonna do great if they keep that attitude. Wish I could check up on them :(

How wonderful its going to be to help new parents! :)

Not gonna lie...I'm proud of myself :)

Baby slept for longer than I thought she would! Nearly twelve hours which put me at 8 hours without pumping! Yielded 3 whole feeds worth at 4.5 ounces each :) 13.5 ounces isn't too bad. :)

Friday, May 18, 2012

back to breast: what NOT to do

so i am a firm believer in a strong support system when it comes to nursing. see, nowadays you may not have a mother that breastfed or a sister or grandmother. so you need ladies to help you with the basics (and a good lactation consultant too!)
for me, one of those support systems comes in the form of an internet group.
i asked them how they would recommend getting a baby back to breast.
to my surprise many women said "simply dont give the bottle...the baby wont starve itself...itll eat when its hungry."

while this may have worked for these women, and im grateful that it may have, its a dangerous experiment that i can not condone or recommend. a baby can get confused. it can get nervous or uncomfortable or just prefer something different...but it doesnt know its as easy as "oh...yeah...theres milk in this here breast." its about training them that its where it comes from, even if it means leaving a frustrating taste for the bottle by switcing to cup feeding or syringe feeding for a couple feeds. im excited to learn more in the coming years as i continue to study. but right now i have scheduled an appt with the lactation consultant at the Pedi office (and i get to see the pretty pediatrician :) and i will get her weighed, make sure she is doing well and get some hints to get her back.
my breasts miss her but ive been SO grateful for what ive been able to do.

more good news? i donated another 120 ounces to another mommy having trouble with her daughters bowel movements. had been constipated for 8 weeks with painful bowel movements while on formula. this woman was inspiring. she wanted SO badly to breastfeed despite problems with PCOS and a pituitary growth issue, that she nursed and pumped round the clock every hour for 8 weeks, took all the supplements one can take, and couldnt make enough for even a half a feed a day :( she tried so hard. but she turned to me! within 24 hours on my milk, baby had THREE movements. :) its a good feeling for SURE!

anyhow. ill update after my appt. dont lose hope my friends. if youre struggling, find another mom or 8 to help you through...but always make sure your baby is well fed, gaining weight with enough wet dipes and dirty ones too. and like i said, find a good LC. some problems can not be fixed by experienced mothers and need some special attentions!

much love and mothers milks,


Me.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

:(

having a rough time. 
today is one of the hard days. 
the days where i put my girl to the breast and keep trying to gently coax her back and she flat out refuses. she no longer nurses a little at night, she will refuse even in sleep. 
she refuses even when i use the nipple shields. 
im struggling to keep my head at rational thinking. 

its not the method its the milk. 

but lets be real. breastfeeding has lots of benefits when shared at the breast. the temperature is right, the hormones are aflowing, and the baby can see into your soul :)
i was watching a tv show today and saw 2 women breastfeeding easily. in their sleep even, and i was overcome with sadness and jealousy :(

i miss her at the breast. i feel like we never stood a fighting chance and i want it back. times a wasting for her. she is three months old and as she gets older it will only be harder. 
its as if she forgot where milk comes from. 

sigh. 

in other news, my deep freezer stopped deep freezing and due to lack of space in my freezer, i happily gave away 120 oz of frozen milk for other mommies to use. 

im a healthy girl and the milk is going to good use. 
its a personal decision that i find to be somewhat therapeutic. 

i was incredibly happy to find that it has helped one baby already. 
i gave 90 oz to a woman with a baby who was getting about 1oz too little per nursing session, about 7-9 oz too few per day and was supplementing with formula for a couple days until my milk was picked up. she had reported to me that the baby had not had a bowel movement in 18 days. 
within 24 hours of supplementing with my milk, the baby passed a bowel movement. 

i was SO happy to hear! what great relief for the baby and her mummy and for me too, that my sadness has helped another. while my baby is not at the breast and im sad for it, my milk has provided nourishment for another child as well as my own!
anyhow. 
just an update. ive been studying and ill be registering for summer term next week. things are crazy here. we might be moving, husband may lose his job all while i have a couple years left before a possible career. im nervous and scared, but we have faith. 

its all only temporary. 

thank goodness breast milk is free :) if only my body produced diapers.... :)

Friday, May 11, 2012

Time Magazine cover

forgive me if this isnt in logical structure. my thoughts are erratic but pressing. and i need to let it out.

a controversial picture...correction, a picture of a breastfeeding mother and child met controversy today when TIME published a photo of a beautiful mother nursing her three year old child who was standing on a chair nursing. clearly a posed photo.

its been met with a LOT of comments and opinions, and i have done my best to not get wrapped up in the breastfeeding backlash that ensued.

the article is on attachment parenting: extended breastfeeding, co-sleeping, and babywearing.
all of these things fit into my life and i hardly find them "out of the norm".

the big debate is, for the most part, on the photo itself, and this spurred comments and controversy over breastfeeding older children. while some experts say that its recommended to breastfeed upwards of age 7, of course this is not the widely accepted age in western civilization.
in other countries, this may not even cause one to bat an eye, but here? well cows milk is the norm (regrettably) and breastfeeding is not treated as natural.

i wanted a place to put MY opinions. i dont want to scoff in someones face or point out ignorance and the uneducated. but truly, those people who are against breastfeeding: be it breastfeeding and older child or just breastfeeding in public...they only have one real argument; to them it is "gross".

so on this note, i must rant.

i believe that cows milk has its place in the lives of humans. it has become the norm, and certainly not even experts believe an adult should mow down on breastmilk. the benefits to children of breastmilk can not be denied, but adults have benefits from the milk meant for a baby cow. but our milk is here for a reason. our bodies create a substance intended for its offspring that is capable of being the SOLE source of nourishment for quite a large chunk of the first year, and still provide ever evolving nutrients to a child as it grows from newborn to infancy to toddlerdom. additionally, our bodies create this substance allowing it to nourish more than one child! its not a completely understood science, but the knowledge is there. what our bodies do, is not wrong.
it is also, NOT gross. it is not disgusting. it is not foul. and it should not be met with disdain or judgement.
as someone who does not have personal experience breastfeeding an older child, i do not want to comment on that as though i have experience, as i have seen so many ignorantly do. i will say what i know, that i have a toddler. a three year old, just as the photo. and i choose to give my son breastmilk that i have expressed. my choice does not make it the choice that EVERYONE should choose. though i do not nurse my son from my breast, im not saying it is how another mother should. as a mother who is met with breastfeeding challenges i have a mantra. a mantra that has helped me through months and months of struggles with my son and breastfeeding and now all of my young daughters 3 months of life.

it is the milk that matters, not the method.

a woman is choosing to give her child what her body has created. there are many arguments about continuing that relationship with an older child.
so many "self proclaimed experts"have stated " sure, its beneficial, but once they hit 1 why not just pump?"
lets be real. if youre pumping as often and as long as you nurse. you are pumping about 20 minutes average 6-12x a day depending on your childs eating habits. 240 minutes a day. not counting feeding the child the bottle you expressed. thats twice as long as just nursing. thats organizing your whole day around a pump. thats excusing yourself from company, from your kids, your husband. to pump. when you could nurse and be done with it.
women arent breastfeeding for personal pleasure. yes there is huge satisfaction in looking at your child and knowing your milk has completely satisfied your baby, and is the sole reason for its growth. its not selfish. if anything, it is selfless. and dont think for a moment that a woman who is nursing an older child hasnt weighed the pros and cons of nursing at that age. science has shown that babies, or children, wean when they are ready to wean. some wean at 24 months. some later. that decision, that experience is that of the mothers and childs.

on another note, a mother who's baby gets hungry in public, has no choice but to nurse. would it be fair for her to turn her child down and leave them hungry until they can be at home? a nursing mother nurses, knowing that she will be met with stares, or unwelcome comments from those who dont see the benefits and the importance of nursing.
ive always believed a baby has gotta eat, and the first choice should always be the most nutritious and safest method: a mothers milk. and science has shown that there are HUGE benefits to that coming straight from the tap. comfort nursing, body temp regulation, helping with overstimulation and sleepiness on top of the benefits of the milk itself.
 i am very modest personally, and for me, i understand the need to feed your child while respecting men and women and children in your vicinity. i do not find a need for mothers to use covers (though i personally do for my own reasons), and i feel if any other alternatives to public nursing are available, such as a private comfortable nursing area, most mothers will choose it. a woman who is discreetly nursing their child with minimal skin exposed should not be met with grief. just because a person KNOWS what is happening when they glance over, doesnt make it dirty or disgusting.
a new friend of mine was recently asked to cover up as she discreetly nursed her child, under 2 mind you, not that it matters, inside of a museum of art. she was literally in the presence of nude sculptures and paintings, and was asked to cover. as she was not exposed, they could not have been asking her to cover her breast (again not that it matters) but instead she would be covering her child. the physical thought if the action of breastfeeding itself had offended someone.

this hurts me.

that someone feels they have a right to ask a woman to feel shame in breastfeeding because the thought of the action disgusts somebody.

the laws of the state protected her. it is legal to nurse your child anywhere in her state (and in most) without a cover. and she is exempt from indecent exposure laws. yet people still find this to be gross?
its just a shame to me. im ashamed of our society sometimes.

that baby wearing (which sounds hippier than it is) and co sleeping are "out of the norm"?
there are HUNDREDS of carriers on the market to carry your child while you walk around fairs and vacation...yet choosing to use something that is slightly snug-er is out of the norm? and weird? funny enough...watch a colicky  child fall immediately to sleep in a moby and you WILL be a believer.
additionally, co sleeping? who here has ever had a child have a nightmare? and they let them in bed? or had a sick baby and slept sitting up in bed with them because you needed to keep them safe? its the same concept.

what i would like to accomplish is for people to realize its not a competition. its not up for debate. a person will raise their children the best ways they know how. the ONLY time a person should be given any grief over parenting is if they know a mother is intentionally making choices that arent the best for her child. dangerous choices. and when it comes down to it, those who wear their babies to soothe them, lay with them at night for however long, nurse them within reasonable ranges as per medical research shows benefits...why is this so out of the norm?
i just dont get it.

i hope as time goes on we can see the benefits.
i think the only way that will happen is if we stop putting people under fire. it gets so defensive!
EVERY decision you make as a parent has Pros and Cons.
and those pros and cons apply differently to certain people differently than others.
only by shutting up and learning will we gain understanding.
the kids are whats important.
truly.