Babies are a week old tomorrow and I already feel like throwing in the towel on breast feeding. I have been tandem nursing since day one in the hospital without any problems. Now that we are home both babies are having latch issues. They cry to nurse all night long. I will nurse for hours at a time and they are not satisfied. I have been averaging about an hour of sleep a night since we have been home. On top of that I feel like I have no time for my toddler, who incidentally has coxsackie now (just something to add to it all). I BFed my daughter for a year and loved the bonding. I am so torn...
Re: Throwing in the towel...already (EBFing)
I just want to reach through this computer and give you a giant hug!! You are in the trenches mama and it WILL get better! Those first couple of weeks were the absolute worst and I didn't have another LO to run after. So give yourself a huge pat on the back for managing chaos
I'm not going to tell you you have to BF, if quitting is what's best for you and your family (and your sanity!) then I support that decision 100%! However, I am going to encourage you to not quit on a bad day! I referred back to this advice too many times to count in the beginning when I thought about quitting approximately 1003848284 times per day. You have had a successful BFing relationship so you know the benefits. If you keep powering through this time it will be SO worth it! Do you have any friends/family who could take shifts and help out with holding/soothing babies? Nurse, swaddle tight, binky, and hand off to the standby person so you can get at least a couple hours of sleep! Newborns just want to be on the boob all the time. But you can do this!!
I hope it gets better quickly for you! You are an awesome mama not matter what!
Every baby is different. My first refused, I was sick and so we gave up, 2nd came out like he knew what he was doing, 3rd had to have breast in the mouth 24/7 or she screamed, #4 would only nurse 5 minutes at a time every 2 hours even at 6 months, (he was a chunky monkey, so he was well fed), #5 had to have a chiropractor adjustment, just so he could nurse without pain, #6 refused to suck and I had to pump the first 3 months, but then went on to nurse til 24 months and #7 was easy going the whole way through. What really matters right now, is how committed you are to the task. I was determined, because several of mine had milk allergies, one had both a milk and soy allergy, so formula was a big risk for us. #6 took all my time for the first 3 months,because he even had problems sucking from a bottle. I don't know that I could have made that same commitment with twins, you really just have to do what you can live with and let that be enough. I just wish I had known what I did with #'s 5 when I had #1. Five minutes with a chiropractor and we may have been successful. I didn't know where to turn and my health made ff the best answer at the time. It may be the best for you, but at least know you have somewhere to turn if you are determined to press on.
I totally know how you feel! I have 2 other kids and then had the twins 4 months ago. I never had tandem nursing down but let me tell you what I did. I would painfully nurse one baby for 15 minutes and then give him formula right after and then feed the other baby on the other side and then supplement for him. Feedings were taking like 1.5 hrs! I went to the bf consult and we found out that both babies were tongue tied. We had that taken care of and bf became much easier because they could latch. However, because I didn't have all day to sit and nurse and build this huge supply, I had to change up the feedings.
I would nurse one baby at a feeding and supplement the other baby with formula or breast milk in a bottle that I pumped and then at the next feeding nurse the other baby and supplement the other. Always just swapping the baby at each feeding so I could still nurse both. This literally cut the time in half. I still pumped as much as I could and was able to make time for my older 2 kids. It was just impossible for me to nurse both babies all the time. If they were my only ones then maybe. I feel like with twins sometimes it's just an assembly line...feedings, diapers, baths. It's all very routine with small amounts of bonding.
I went back to work a few weeks ago and now my supply is way down. I stopped nursing and started on formula.
Don't be afraid to change it up and make things work for you. Breastfeeding is totally ideal but not always easy/convenient to make life work. Good luck.
Dx: MFI- 3% morph
IUIs: Gonal-F + Ovidrel + b2b IUI= BFNs
IVF with ICSI= BFP! EDD 11/25/11
3/18- Beta #1 452! 3/20- Beta #2 1,026!! 3/27- First u/s- TWINS!
Our twin boys arrived at 36w5d due to IUGR and a growth discordance
Be kinder than necessary, for everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.
I didn't ever attempt to nurse my twins. It was a choice I made and it worked 100% for us. But I do have a friend who did and she ff and bf and switched them up everyday so had an alternating schedule. it was important to her to nurse but she just couldn't get them both to do it. And her son was hungry all.the.time. He eventually preferred the bottle and then she just bf her daughter.
I know that bfing circles this kind of practice is not really accepted or encouraged but it worked for her. Just thought I would throw this out there if it is something that might help if bfing is really important to you.
The bf bonding I had with my singleton I loved. The bf'ing I did with my twins I loathed-simply because it was eternally time consuming. In the beginning there were even times I was angered by the monotony (not at the children) of sitting on the couch and feeding, yet again.
All I can say is...I wish you the best of luck. These are hard times.