I am in a terrible mood and have been feeling crappy all day (FTM here). This afternoon I mentioned to DH about how I read about bottle feeding and since I have to go back to work 8 weeks PP I am thinking to BF for a week or so and then transition to bottle feeding. I expected some supportive words and we move on. Turned into a huge fight - he is totally pro-BFing and said "no". After an hour of me crying it seems really he just wants me to BF until the day I go back to work, where I think this should be primarily my decision since I'm the one that has to do it.
Have any of you ladies had issues with your spouse over feeding style??
Please spare me any convincing about BFing while working - I am a emotional mess today already.
Thank you
Re: Fight with DH about BF vs bottle *rant*
Please tell your husband to try and understand your side and point. You are going through so much and he really needs to focus on compromising and not arguing a point. Sit snf have a productive talk and ask that it not turn into an argument. You want to weigh the pros and cons together and come up with the best laid plans as two parents working for the same goal.
Good luck!!!
Fred Rogers
Bringing them both home...UPDATE...The girls are home!!! 1/7/15 after 20 days in the NICU!
Edited bc mobile bumping is hard
It's easy to say and hard to do, especially once postpartum hormones come into the picture, but it's absolutely the #1 thing I plan on doing differently this time around -- to be much easier on myself if: nursing/sleeping/pumping/tummy time/bottle transitioning/a million other things don't work out how I hope. It's important for your partner to be on that same page too -- there's nothing wrong with going in with the best hopes and even expectations... as long as you give yourself lots of leeway to make mistakes and lots of props for just trying.
One thing that I think could be helpful once the time comes is to run your crazier thoughts (e.g. "I feel like if she has any formula, she'll never want breast milk again!!" <-- actual crazy-person thought I had in the throes of my baby's infancy) by a trusted friend or forum. Ideally people who have been through the new-baby-maelstrom before and have made it to the other side -- not your partner, because frankly, he's too close to the situation and is going through it too. You may need someone (I did!) to laugh and then gently tell you, "sweetie, that's ridiculous. everything will be fine."
Sorry if this is lecture-y... I've just been reflecting on our first experience since a second one is looming, and man, do I remember those high expectations I had for nursing. Letting go of those was by FAR harder for me than any physical part of nursing, and that's with a partner who was totally like "hey, you do whatever you want."
PS I also advocate starting with a bottle earlier than when you go back. We started with one feeding via bottle (with pumped breastmilk) at 4 weeks, so dad could do a feeding. It's a nice way to take at least a small part of the feeding burden off you.
That being said - Leaking was never an issue for me, but I did wear those bra liners just in case. I exclusively pumped for 11 months (my son never learned how to latch) even while at work. Work places are required to have a place for Moms to pump in privacy. Then DS was bottle fed breastmilk even when I wasn't around - win win for everyone!
I'm going to quote chicagojackie from a previous thread:
[This study has] many limitations and I don't think you can use it as a blanket statement to say conclusively that there are not long term positive effects from breastfeeding.
Main limitations to the Ohio State University Study:
-Cohort of patients were 4 years old and above and not followed for long enough yet. The mean age for getting most of the diseases that WHO and AAP and ACOG says that breastfeeding decreases the incidence of is much older. Also the incidence of these diseases is too small to be detected in such a small sample size.
-Small sample size
-Families self-reported data
-Comparing two non-identical siblings is not the same genetic risk for developing disease later in life
I'm not trying to say that you shouldn't consider FF - I just want to make sure that the ladies reading this thread understand the limitations of the study.
Fred Rogers
cwd626 - First of all, please don't let yourself get too worked up about this. Even the best made plans before baby arrives can change quickly with what you and your child need later. No matter how you feed your baby, as long as he or she is getting the nutrition and the love than that's perfect. I really struggled with this with my first pregnancy and I will not put myself through it again.
I planned to breastfeed and when it didn't work I tried to pump, literally exhausting myself for no reason. It was such an emotional thing that I really made myself very stressed needlessly. I was a better mom once I switched to the bottle and let myself relax. Anyway, I felt so much pressure from other people - nurses at the hospital, family members and my husband. They made me feel like BF was the only option. My husband, who later apologized, made a comment about me giving up too early and so I kept pushing myself to do something that was not working for either me or my daughter. This time around, I will try breastfeeding but if it does not work I will have no guilt giving my child a bottle because I know that he/she will be getting what they need, along with a mother who can relax and enjoy her new baby.
In a nutshell, you have to do what works for you. Your husband means well but he doesn't understand the time, the effort and the emotion that goes into these choices. If bottle feeding after a week or two is what's best for you and your baby, than go for it!
I also agree with prior posters that while your opinion should have greater weight since it is your body, you should still take dad's thoughts into consideration.
Feb'15 November Siggy Challenge:
Pregnancy #2 Natural Miscarriage at 6 weeks 03/2014 Due date 11/9/2014
Pregnancy #3 DS 02.23.2015
Pregnancy #4 Missed Miscarriage at 11 weeks 11/2018 Due date 5/22/2019
Pregnancy #5 Positive test 12/11/2019 Due Date 8/17/2020