I've seen a lot of breastfeeding discussions of late, so I figured I'd post the tips that I wrote out while nursing my daughter to help out my friends and family who had questions. Other experienced mamas, please add to this list!!!
Sarah’s tips for nursing:
- Make sure you pump EVERY time the baby takes a bottle. As soon as possible. Don’t let your supply drop.
- Speaking of pumping, they say not to pump before 4 weeks because your supply is being established. I made this mistake, and am now having to pump 2 times for every bottle LO consumes. Pump a little each day while your supply is establishing. Better to have too much than too little! It will diminish over time.
- Pumping is WAY easier in the morning. I get 2 to 3 times as much in the morning as I do later in the day. (I start my day by pumping at 5 AM every day.)
- Pumping is also easier if you put a baby on one side and the pump on the other.
- The baby is going to cluster feed, and you are going to think something is horribly wrong with the baby. They will eat, poop, eat, poop, eat, poop every 15 minutes for five hours. You’ll call the hospital in a panic. They’ve heard it before (we called!). It’s cluster feeding.
- You will be a human pacifier for the first three months. That’s normal. Know that you are doing the best thing for your babies, and know that the dusting and cooking can wait. Babies are only babies for so long. Enjoy the nursing.
- Keep an eye on the foods you consume compared to the baby’s behavior. Babies have sensitivities to milk, soy, spicy food, caffeine, cruciferous veggies, etc. Learn the foods your baby dislikes and stop eating them for the time being.
- In public, use a blanket, not a fancy cover. It’s less noticeable, easier to manage, and doubles to keep your child warm.
- Speaking of “in public” – know your rights. You can breastfeed anywhere that you are otherwise legally allowed (in the state of Ohio - check the laws in your own state). Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t. Your baby’s needs come first. Lots of times, people don’t even notice that you’re doing it.
- Recognize that supplementation isn’t the enemy. If your freezer supply is low, pump a feeding to freeze while you feed your baby a bottle. Some babies reject formula if they haven’t had it before 5 months. If your supply dries up and they need formula, it’ll be a tough battle if they haven’t had it occasionally. (Just make sure you pump for every bottle they get!)
- You’re going to have periods of time where you wonder if you can keep going. The baby feeds constantly, you’re not pumping enough (so you’re pumping all the time), you’re sleep-deprived… It’s all for a short period of time and you CAN do it. Just power through.
- Drink plenty of water. Being dehydrated is the leading cause of low production (or so I have experienced).
- Continue to take your prenatal vitamin. The baby needs the nutrients.
- Ways to increase your supply include taking a hot shower, pumping “dry,” herbs like fenugreek and blessed thistle, and foods like oatmeal.
Re: Nursing Tips from a Mama who nursed 18 months
#8 I find really unpractical for summer babies, and my daughter would have never put up with a blanket after month 3 cause she wanted to see what was going on. If I was going to cover, I would much rather have one of the "fancy" covers that has the hard, flexible piece in the neck that makes it easier to see baby while nursing and helps keep it off the baby's face.
Also, if baby is resisting taking pumped milk when you eventually do try it, check for a lipase issue. It can cause your milk to taste soapy after sitting for a few hours. Some babies don't seem to mind, others will flat out refuse. Scalding the milk immediately after pumping gets rid of the excess lipase that causes this issue and can fix the issue for some moms.
#12 you need to pay attention to right now. I did not get enough water in the hospital and I think that effected my initial milk supply. If they don't let you drink water during labor, eat the ice! And then demand copious amounts of water after baby is born. Send your husband for refills whenever you are nursing the baby.
I'd suggest always calling lactation for help with issues. Whether it's at the hospital, your peds office, or the la leche legue. People only know about what they have experienced. Professional help is MUCH better.
Reading up on kellymom.com about newborn eating habits will help to understand the cluster feeding as well.
Also, be aware that you can have milk ducts going up under your armpits... Changing baby's feeding position can help suck the milk out from those hard-to-reach ducts. Rotate between cradling the baby in your arms to the football hold and side-lying position too.
# 7 - I didn't change my diet - my doctor said she would rather me not worry about it and nurse longer and be less stressed.
#8 - We both hated the nursing cover. I didn't use it really until we went for my brothers Marine graduation ceremony when she was about 6 months old and she got angry every time because she wanted to look around. I mostly just tried to be discreet while nursing without a cover other than that weekend.
# 10 - I never understood this. I would rather nurse my baby and maybe give her formula later on if she needs it than make sure my freezer has enough milk. Any milk that went into my freezer rarely came out. I only froze any extra because that's what they say you're supposed to do. I tossed out two grocery bags of frozen breast milk in the time I nursed. Babies are better than pumps at nursing.
I will add - Correct latch still hurts when you aren't used to a tiny piranha latching and letting go over and over again. It gets better. Lanolin and the gel nipple pads (I have no idea what they're actually called but target has them and they're worth every penny) were my good friends. By three weeks I felt comfortable nursing.
I feel like there is a lot of pressure put on pumping. I have exclusively BF'd my kids and have only ever pumped a handful of times. That said, I am a SAHM and am pretty much always there to nurse.
@hazeldagarr Nursing a newborn with a toddler around is challenging but do-able. DD1 was 18 months when DD2 was born. I put a play pack together before DD2 was born. It had some crayons, colouring book, stickers, little doll, and a board book. I would let her play with this stuff whenever I was nursing. Sometimes it would work, sometimes she just wanted to come and sit on my lap when I was nursing.
The biggest difference I noticed was that with DD1 I would nurse her and then be done. With DD2, because of the toddler, there was a lot more starting and stopping during nursing. I would have to unlatch DD2 and redirect DD1 and then continue nursing DD2. At first DD2 would be pissed when I unlatched her, but she soon figured out that it didn't mean she was done nursing, she just had to wait a minute. You will also get amazing at one handed nursing and nursing and walking at the same time
GL!