I am totally exhausted from breastfeeding so often at night. Sometimes I want to give up and try formula to see if it holds him off longer for my sanity but when it comes down to it I really don't want to, so I push through another night.
Anyone else going bonkers with maybe 3-4hrs sleep at night and frequent feedings? Any tips on how you are dealing?
Re: Anyone else exhausted with BF'ing?
I don't know how to judge if he is full exactly. He will typically fall asleep after one breast. If I wake him up and offer the second he may latch on, but not for very long which leads me to believe he is satisfied. He is hard to keep awake while feeding and I have tried undressing him, tickling him, stimulating his jaw, breast compressions. If anything I get one or two more sucks from that and he's out again. My breast feels soft after he is done and I hear swallowing sounds. Does this sound like he should be full?
I'll love you forever,
I'll like you for always,
As long as I'm living my baby you'll be.
- Robert Munsch
I feel like nobody ever says how hard BFing is going to be. It's not easy, but for me it was very worth it. I will also say that I have many friends that gave up breastfeeding because of the nights only to find that getting up to make a bottle several times a night is so much worse than just nursing.
I do the clean up, burp, and wait to see if he roots around for more as well.
I am attempting to pump when I can to get a head start on a stash for when I return to work in 4 weeks. I find it difficult to find the time to pump and get a decent amount of milk. I am not on a pumping schedule yet by any means.
What I have been doing since DS will typically eat from one side, is pump the other side right after a feeding. This usually only works though if he falls asleep after a feeding as I am home alone all day.
I will say this time around has been so much easier for me than it was with DD. I feel like I am getting more sleep even though DS is eating every 3 hours. One thing that has helped me a lot is side lying in bed and nursing. That way I can doze off while DS is eating and then when he is done I put him back to bed. It might only give me 10-15 minutes per side but it helps.
Once DS is back at birth weight I wont be waking him up every three hours and will just let him wake me up to eat.
If he is only nursing from one side you could try to pump while nursing, so you don't have to do it after. Nurse on one side using the football hold, and then you have a hand free to use the pump.
My Sophia is the same way. I feel really blessed to be able to sleep 6 hours at a stretch. Of course, he "witching hour" starts at midnight with the crying and need to be held for about an hour. Sleep after that goes well, though.
Good idea! Thanks!
My daughter's a month old and still up every 3 hours. Maybe once or twice she's slept 4 hours. But for her first two weeks she had lots of nights where she's only go 1.5 hours. After experiencing that, consistently getting 3 hour sleeps is manageable.
BFing IS exhausting, and there's days I want to quit. But like PP said, mixing formula and making/cleaning bottles is also a lot of work, and formula is a big expense, so I think I'd just be trading one set of issues for another.
Are you using a paci? Some babies just have a strong urge to suck and aren't relaly hungry, they just want to suck on something. I give DD a full feed (15-20 minutes, or until she falls asleep on the boob), and then if I try to put her down and she fusses I offer teh paci for a while until she settles.
Also, your LO may be falling asleep before he's full. Try taking his PJ off so he's a little cold to keep him away, or changing his diaper half-way through a feed to get him to perk up.
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