So let me start by saying I know that breastfeeding doesn't have to be all or nothing. I do have experience with nursing and feel pretty knowledgeable about it, but am looking for some advice. I do attend LLL meetings and nursed my DS for 9 months. However, I had severe PPD/PPA with my son that didn't smack me in the face until he was 7 months old. It kind of triggered chronic anxiety in me still to this day. I'm doing pretty well and only need my anxiety medication on occasion...it is VERY rare that I need it. However, I do take another medication daily to help me, and it works!
Fast forward to now...I'm almost 39 weeks pregnant with a little girl and I'm super passionate about breastfeeding and want to nurse her too. I've already discussed my meds with a LC and looked things up through infant risk...I feel confident in nursing her if I still need my meds. I take my medication at night b/c my biggest problem from my anxiety is insomnia, so not sleeping is a HUGE trigger for me...so adding a newborn is pretty scary, knowing she isn't going to sleep. I'm aware of how important it is to nurse on demand and very often to establish a good milk supply, but if I start to feel I'm going off the deep end, how can I partly nurse? I would never want to quit all together, but is their is a way for me to nurse during the day (taking a year off work...so this won't be a problem) and do some supplementation at night? If I know I can take my meds....get a good solid 4-5 hours of sleep (while hubby does a bottle feeding) and wake to nurse from then on out...I'll feel golden.
Has anyone else needed to do half and half from the beginning? Did it totally screw your supply up? I had oversupply with my son...I really felt like a cow ;-) lol
PPD/PPA Mom...it has been super hard, but I'm making it! Slow steps...
Mom to Carter (6), and Calianne (1).
Proud VBAC, natural birth, breastfeeding, cloth diapering momma!
Re: Help...STM, but is it possible to do half nursing/half bottle feeding b/c of PPD :(
The moment a child is born, the mother is also born. She never existed before. The woman existed, but the mother, never. A mother is something absolutely new.