I will be breastfeeding and working full time after 6 weeks also. I plan to get my milk production on a schedule similar to my breaks at work so I'll be able to pump out a few bottles throughout the day while working to send to daycare the following day. Hopefully it all works out as planned and I won't have to switch to formula.
Breastfeeding is definitely something I want to try to do, and if I am able to I will breastfeed until the baby self-weans. However, it is not something I will beat myself up over. My best friend had serious supply issues and could only BF for a few weeks, and she had serious guilt over it, which isn't fair to her or baby.
If you are a 1099 contractor then the company generally isn't responsible for paying time to breastfeed. For regular employees a company does not need to pay for breaks for breast feeding/pumping that are longer than 20 minutes. I hope this helps!
I am a FTM and I plan I breast feeding as well. Although I am a little nervous of how painful it will actually be :-/
If you are a 1099 contractor then the company generally isn't responsible for paying time to breastfeed. For regular employees a company does not need to pay for breaks for breast feeding/pumping that are longer than 20 minutes. I hope this helps!
I am a FTM and I plan I breast feeding as well. Although I am a little nervous of how painful it will actually be :-/
If the baby is latched correctly, it isn't painful at all. If it hurts, that means the latch is incorrect.
I definitely plan on breastfeeding again. It's cheaper and easier (once baby gets the hang of it). There's the comforting and bonding aspect too, but I imagine that bottle feeding would be the same.
I luckily was very milky the first time around, and able to pump twice a day at work for 10 minutes each and get 12 or 14 ounces of milk total. Even so, I hated pumping. It's just a hassle, but worthwhile so I kept it up. I pumped in a supply closet. They put a lock on the door and I dragged 2 chairs in there, one to sit on and the other was my table. It worked fine, although one time the terminex guy picked the lock and walked it on me. Awkward!
Anyway, it comes down to what works best for your family. Breastfeeding worked for us. Hopefully it does this time as well.
Also, at the risk of being a PW, can I just say that I am insanely jealous of those of you who were able to pump large amounts and build up a freezer stash? I was never even able to come close to keeping up with demand, but I would love to manage it this time around if I can.
I built up a huge freeze stash this time. Actually stopped pumping in december and I'm Down to one week of freezer milk at this point. Plus I donated 500 ounces.
With my first I had a small stash from maternity leave but was really always pumping for the next day.
My point is, it can be differnt with every baby!
I barely kept up with what I needed last time. I pumped about 18oz a day at work which was exactly what DS needed for daycare.
This time around I plan to pump throughout my 12 week maternity leave to hopefully get a decent jump start on a freezer supply. I had a huge over supply in the begining last time and leaked thru breast pads like crazy the first 8ish weeks but didn't pump at all so by the time I went back to work I was only producing what DS needed.
Pumping is usually less efficent than baby so even though you may be making enough for baby when you are actually feeding them yourself it might not be enough when you are pumping.
I thought BFing was no big deal, a little uncomfortable at first and after a three day NICU stay where DS was fed donor milk I spent a week BFing him and then pumping to build up my production, plus all the herbs, etc. when my milk came in it came IN!
After that DS would not take a bottle, so I pumped, but it was a waste in the end cuz he wanted boob or nothing. We started offering him food at five months and I nursed him til 14months. One day he didn't nurse at all and after that I called it quits. I was ready to be done.
I BFed with DD, but my supply tanked around 4 months (confirmed by weighing baby before and after feedings). Fenugreek and pumping round the clock (in addition to feeding DD) didn't increase supply. After a very frustrating month, we started supplementing with formula. (Oh, and all that milk I had pumped when I had over supply in the early months? Turns out I have an enzyme that makes milk smell like vomit - even when frozen - so it was all trashed).
I felt terrible about this, I think even more so because everyone tells new moms that breastfeeding is natural and easy. Sometimes it's not.
Given hormones and PPD, I almost threw in the towel entirely. Luckily, my husband was more level headed and told me that we could just do both as long as I wanted. I ended up BFing until she was almost a year. Funnily enough, I continued to produce a small amount of milk/colostrum until just a couple months ago. Go figure!
This time around, I plan on starting to BF exclusively, but may start supplementing around 4 months. Formula is nice in that it means that someone else can take over and give you a break. (I guess pumping would lead to the same advantages if not for the whole vomit-milk thing I had going on).
I BFed with DD, but my supply tanked around 4 months (confirmed by weighing baby before and after feedings). Fenugreek and pumping round the clock (in addition to feeding DD) didn't increase supply. After a very frustrating month, we started supplementing with formula. (Oh, and all that milk I had pumped when I had over supply in the early months? Turns out I have an enzyme that makes milk smell like vomit - even when frozen - so it was all trashed).
I felt terrible about this, I think even more so because everyone tells new moms that breastfeeding is natural and easy. Sometimes it's not.
Given hormones and PPD, I almost threw in the towel entirely. Luckily, my husband was more level headed and told me that we could just do both as long as I wanted. I ended up BFing until she was almost a year. Funnily enough, I continued to produce a small amount of milk/colostrum until just a couple months ago. Go figure!
This time around, I plan on starting to BF exclusively, but may start supplementing around 4 months. Formula is nice in that it means that someone else can take over and give you a break. (I guess pumping would lead to the same advantages if not for the whole vomit-milk thing I had going on).
Excess lipase isn't an issue unless your lo won't drink it. It won't harm them.
@mrsodonnell12 How is it not that simple? My sister does both.
Many women who supplement with formula end up with supply issues. You should research it extensively before making the decision. Just trying to be helpful.
I am still nursing my first, but I hope to wean her soon since I would like a break and I also don't want to nurse three at once. It will be difficult learning to nurse twins let alone add a toddler in the mix. When I needed to pump an office was provided. I just put a note on the door.
I will BF this LO for as long as s/he allows. I exclusively BF'd DS until 9 months, but my supply tanked when AF returned. I completely dried up when I got my BFP.
I'm planning to bf. I go into it with an open mind though bc my daughter couldn't latch on her own for about 2 months and my supply took a hit because of it, so I had to supplement from day one with her. I'd love to try to BF almost exclusively this time but I have no issues at all with adding in formula if needed.
BFP #1- 4/2011; DD Brynn born 12/2011
BFP #2- 7/13; EDD- 4/2/14; Lost DS at 20 weeks (11/16/13) due to cord accident
BFP #3- 3/14; EDD- 11/28/14; Lost DD at 15 weeks (6/7/14)- cause unknown
To my angels- I held you every second of your lives and I'll love you every second of mine.
I BFed DD for a year and she pretty much weaned her self. It was a struggle at first...she was an emergency c-section and my milk didn't come in for a week. Lots of pumping the first couple weeks and for 2 days had to supplement formula but we got through! I can't wait to do it again!
@lissydee thank you! I am going to start researching the whole pumping thing. My commute is only twenty minutes but I can take a break every two hours at work. I figure I have six weeks to figure it out before I have to go back.
Nov. '14 January Siggy : Work Sucks!
Me 32-DH 38
Married July 14, 2007 ----- TTC # 1 October 1, 2013 BFP March 7, 2014 ----- EDD November 17, 2014 ---- Baby boy born November 16, 2014
I am hoping to as long as I'm able to! Can anyone comment on breastfeeding with small breasts? I know they say the size of the breast doesn't matter, but I keep looking down at my A cups and wonder "how??"
I was so sick last time I was pregnant my body didnt produce enough cells in my breasts. I gave it absolutely every I had but nothing would increase my supply. I was able to get a few OZs a day but N self weaned at 3 months and I had a really hard time pumping so formula it is! This time I hope and pray I get to EBF! Fingers crossed!
I BFed with DD, but my supply tanked around 4 months (confirmed by weighing baby before and after feedings). Fenugreek and pumping round the clock (in addition to feeding DD) didn't increase supply. After a very frustrating month, we started supplementing with formula. (Oh, and all that milk I had pumped when I had over supply in the early months? Turns out I have an enzyme that makes milk smell like vomit - even when frozen - so it was all trashed).
I felt terrible about this, I think even more so because everyone tells new moms that breastfeeding is natural and easy. Sometimes it's not.
Given hormones and PPD, I almost threw in the towel entirely. Luckily, my husband was more level headed and told me that we could just do both as long as I wanted. I ended up BFing until she was almost a year. Funnily enough, I continued to produce a small amount of milk/colostrum until just a couple months ago. Go figure!
This time around, I plan on starting to BF exclusively, but may start supplementing around 4 months. Formula is nice in that it means that someone else can take over and give you a break. (I guess pumping would lead to the same advantages if not for the whole vomit-milk thing I had going on).
Excess lipase isn't an issue unless your lo won't drink it. It won't harm them.
I know. I did the research. LO wouldn't drink it, and I couldn't blame her. That's actually how we realized what was going on. I had thawed some of my stash when we were had planned a trip about an hour away where there would be drinking. DH was going to drink, then feed her in the backseat if needed while I drove us home. She refused to take the bottle. Seriously, it smelled like vomit. We experimented for about a week and the milk I pumped ended up realizing that my milk only lasted a day before the vomit smell, which precluded storing it. We could have also boiled it, but this would take away all the nutritional advantages associated with breast milk. It only really became and issue when my supply tanked.
@missnacholover...I am going to assume since you are a gov't employee you should be okay. Most states have pretty good breastfeeding laws (which includes needing to express breast milk). What state are you in?
I'm in North Carolina. I googled but I didn't find much. I'll have to dig deeper!
@missnacholover...I am going to assume since you are a gov't employee you should be okay. Most states have pretty good breastfeeding laws (which includes needing to express breast milk). What state are you in?
I'm in North Carolina. I googled but I didn't find much. I'll have to dig deeper!
eh, NC doesnt have as comprehensive of bfing laws as other states unfortunately. Here is a break down of each state's bfing laws
I'd like to try, but won't beat myself up if it doesn't work out. Like others mentioned, I'm not sure how pumping at work will work out, but I'll cross that bridge when the time comes.
I was able to make it to just under a year with DS. We had no problems with latching or painful nursing (after the first week). But that's where it stopped being easy. I had supply issues and he had a dairy intolerance (I ended up cutting out all dairy in my diet). I took fenugreek to help supply and ate oatmeal every day. But I still ended up having to supplement and it was such a stressful time. He did a lot of comfort nursing (oh, did I mention he had extreme colic on top of all that? ) which is what kept us going. I have a lot more knowledge this time around and hope to be able to EBF this LO.
The plan is to BF. Like lots of you said, I'm going to give it my absolute best effort, but if it's too stressful or not working for us, I have no problem throwing in the towel. I really want to be able to BF because of the health and financial benefits, though.
Part of what I consider to be my best effort is to start now educating myself so I know what the potential hurdles can be. I bought The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding the other day, but haven't opened it yet.
Any STM BF-ers (hehehe. BF-ers.) have any other resources they would suggest?
Sorry I just totally messed up that reply and the quoting. I wanted to suggest taking a breastfeeding class when your around 8 months pregnant. My husband and I did with the LCS at my hospital and other really helped.
For me, I needed that time after baby was born to learn how to hold them. The LC were good, but almost to pushy. When baby was first born just getting in warm shower with baby, or bath and letting baby nurse was always nice. I also loved my boppy. Life saver.
I was unable to exclusively breastfeed with my daughter. My milk never fully came in with her. The LC and my OB feel it was due to stress. She was born 2 days late on the day of my daddy's funeral and then she ended up in the NICU for 8 days. She was basically formula fed and supplemented with breast milk. I will be trying to EBF with this LO.
Did you notice any reduction in supply? Jad is still breastfeeding in the morning, taking frozen during the day and a bottle of WCM at night because I am only producing in the morn. I hope it last long enough that he won't forget the suck. I stopped pumping at work recently because I just couldnt' trigger a let down so my stash is almost twindled.
Ladies, know your rights. Your employer must provide a clean, private area for pumping and the bathroom stall is not an okay option. Don't make this your problem or a reason not to BF.
" Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (P.L. 111-148, known as the “Affordable Care Act”) amended section 7 of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) to require employers to provide “reasonable break time for an employee to express breast milk for her nursing child for 1 year after the child’s birth each time such employee has need to express the milk.” Employers are also required to provide “a place, other than a bathroom, that is shielded from view and free from intrusion from coworkers and the public, which may be used by an employee to express breast milk.” See 29 U.S.C. 207(r). The break time requirement became effective when the Affordable Care Act was signed into law on March 23, 2010. The Fact Sheet and the Frequently Asked Questions below provide basic information about the law."
IVF #1 - DD born 2011
FET #1-3 all BFN
IVF#2- BFP! EDD Nov. 3, 2014
1st US - March 28
I am in the VAST minority (I seriously know like 1 other person in real life who didn't), but I will not & did not last time. Personal and work related reasons...formula is best for my family. I don't think it makes me a worse Mom for my decision & I refuse to feel bad about it this time around! My son is perfectly healthy & has only been sick a handful of times in his 5 year old life! I applaud anyone who does breastfeed though & I think it's great if you can!
Is it totally selfish of me to say I'm not because I just don't want to? I want DH to be able to feed baby without my help. I don't want chapped sore nipples/boobs. I don't want deflated boobs after bf. I don't want to pump at work or anywhere for that matter. My mom didn't bf and I turned out just fine.
Im not prejudice against people that DO bf. I just honestly do not want to.
I am in the VAST minority (I seriously know like 1 other person in real life who didn't), but I will not & did not last time. Personal and work related reasons...formula is best for my family. I don't think it makes me a worse Mom for my decision & I refuse to feel bad about it this time around! My son is perfectly healthy & has only been sick a handful of times in his 5 year old life! I applaud anyone who does breastfeed though & I think it's great if you can!
Is it totally selfish of me to say I'm not because I just don't want to? I want DH to be able to feed baby without my help. I don't want chapped sore nipples/boobs. I don't want deflated boobs after bf. I don't want to pump at work or anywhere for that matter. My mom didn't bf and I turned out just fine.
Im not prejudice against people that DO bf. I just honestly do not want to.
Re: I may be jumping the gun, but are you planning to breastfeed?
I am a FTM and I plan I breast feeding as well. Although I am a little nervous of how painful it will actually be :-/
I luckily was very milky the first time around, and able to pump twice a day at work for 10 minutes each and get 12 or 14 ounces of milk total. Even so, I hated pumping. It's just a hassle, but worthwhile so I kept it up. I pumped in a supply closet. They put a lock on the door and I dragged 2 chairs in there, one to sit on and the other was my table. It worked fine, although one time the terminex guy picked the lock and walked it on me. Awkward!
Anyway, it comes down to what works best for your family. Breastfeeding worked for us. Hopefully it does this time as well.
This time around I plan to pump throughout my 12 week maternity leave to hopefully get a decent jump start on a freezer supply. I had a huge over supply in the begining last time and leaked thru breast pads like crazy the first 8ish weeks but didn't pump at all so by the time I went back to work I was only producing what DS needed.
Pumping is usually less efficent than baby so even though you may be making enough for baby when you are actually feeding them yourself it might not be enough when you are pumping.
After that DS would not take a bottle, so I pumped, but it was a waste in the end cuz he wanted boob or nothing. We started offering him food at five months and I nursed him til 14months. One day he didn't nurse at all and after that I called it quits. I was ready to be done.
Nursing + bed sharing = sleeping. I win!
my happy boy
TTC #1 since August 2012
BFP 7/5/13 ~EDD 3/17/14 - MC 7/22/13
DX PCOS 9/17/13 - Cyst on left ovary benched on BCP
10/12/13 Cyst is gone starting cycle #1 Femara - U/S shows no response
11/19/13 Large cyst on right ovary. Benched again.
12/18/13 2 cm cyst still on my right ovary. Back to BCP.
1/10/14 start femara 5mg for 10 days
BFP #1- 4/2011; DD Brynn born 12/2011
BFP #2- 7/13; EDD- 4/2/14; Lost DS at 20 weeks (11/16/13) due to cord accident
BFP #3- 3/14; EDD- 11/28/14; Lost DD at 15 weeks (6/7/14)- cause unknown
To my angels- I held you every second of your lives and I'll love you every second of mine.
I figure I have six weeks to figure it out before I have to go back.
Nov. '14 January Siggy : Work Sucks!
Me 32-DH 38
Married July 14, 2007 ----- TTC # 1 October 1, 2013
BFP March 7, 2014 ----- EDD November 17, 2014 ---- Baby boy born November 16, 2014
I'm in North Carolina. I googled but I didn't find much. I'll have to dig deeper!
Is it totally selfish of me to say I'm not because I just don't want to? I want DH to be able to feed baby without my help. I don't want chapped sore nipples/boobs. I don't want deflated boobs after bf. I don't want to pump at work or anywhere for that matter. My mom didn't bf and I turned out just fine.
Im not prejudice against people that DO bf. I just honestly do not want to.