HI ladies,
I;ve been EBF for the past 12 weeks, and its been going very well. My husband wants me to pump so he can start giving him bottles, but I don't want to do it. He wants some reasons as to why EBF is better for our son than combo of breast and bottle (with pumped breast milk). Other than the convenience, and the fact that I'd still have to pump while he drank from the bottle to keep my supply up, any other reasons I can use to my advantage? I know he wants to feed baby so he can have that time with him, but there really is so much more that he can do for our baby. Breastfeeding is the only thing that I can do that he can't, and I may be selfish, but I don't want to share.
Thanks!
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Re: Hubby wants me to pump
This is true, and a good reason to continue EBF'ing. Also, baby's saliva on your nipple is what signals your body to change the fat content, etc. of your milk as baby grows.
That being said, I don't think it's a terrible idea for you to pump an occasional bottle for your DH to give. What if you had a sudden illness or had to go out of town for a night? It's not a bad idea to know that baby can/will take a bottle. We started out with two bottles a week when LO was around 5 weeks. (I had to go back to work at 10 weeks, so we chose to start pretty early.)
Why don't you just pump a few bottles, once every other day or so....my guess is that after a few tries at bottle feeding the novelty will wear off for your husband.
He's trying to feel connected to your baby too...which is really important for all. Could be worse, he could be pressuring you to let him give formula bottles etc.
Once you have one bottle to let your husband feed while he's feeding pump another bottle for the next feed (a day or 2 later). It won't be that much extra work, aside from the first bottle. Oh, and make your husband clean all the bottles HA.
That being said, a lot of the breast feeding benefits (immunity, decrease in childhood obesity, etc.) do come directly from the breast and not from the breastmilk.
I breastfeed two sons for two years each and didn't use one bottle, it's possible. It's up to you if you want to use a bottle or not and it's not better one way or the other. It just depends on what works for you.
EDIT I want to add. I wouldn't want to fight over this but I wouldn't be pushed in to it either. I would talk to him and show him all the other things he can do.
I would not die on this hill.
Married Bio * BFP Charts
DS born 6/2013
http://balletandbabies.blogspot.com
@kelly422 I'm pretty sure I read the info about saliva and antibodies on either kellymom or in "The Womanly Art of BF'ing" book. Unfortunately I'm at work right now. The IT department at work has classified kellymom as a site we can't get to. (It actually came up as "access denied due to reference to illegal drugs! wild huh?) But I did find these two articles from google.
https://nativemothering.com/2012/04/are-there-differences-between-breastfeeding-directly-and-bottle-feeding-expressed-milk/
https://nativemothering.com/2010/08/an-explanation-of-the-enteromammary-secretory-host-immune-system/
Also from what I'm reading, the changing fat and nutrient content comes more from how often baby is emptying the breast rather than baby's saliva. So I think as you pump less often as baby gets older you might end up with a changing fat/nutriend content too!
Kudos by the way for EP'ing and doing your research about! That's hard work & I'm in awe of your dedication!