I spent my lunch break today touring a daycare that is literally 5 minutes from my work. It's $355 a week, but they're all either around there or above that amount. I am lucky enough to have a few wonderful daycares in my town to choose from, but I am currently leaning toward the one so close to my work for one main reason. There is NO place to pump at work unless I want to sit in a damp, dark room in the back of the building that is just creepy and may have people walking into it on accident while I'm pumping. I get a one-hour lunch break that I can take at any point during the day...I haven't talked to my boss about this, but I am thinking that instead of pumping, I could just zoom over to the daycare during the day (splitting up my one-hour break into bits) and just breastfeed and zoom back to work. Is this wishful thinking? How many times would I have to do this working 8-5? My work has to give me extra time to pump AND my one-hour lunch break, right? So, what do they care if I go breastfeed instead of pump in the back room. Any advice/feedback welcome and thank you in advance
Re: Daycare/Breastfeeding Question
BFP: 8/11/18 Due: 4/26/18
I really enjoyed that time. I missed him less during the day and it was a nice break from coworkers. Breastfeeding did weird things to my appetite so I didn't really miss that dedicated food hour since I snacked pretty frequently throughout the day.
Awkward Family Fun
Theres a whole thread you could run regarding demand feeding vs scheduled feeding.
Maybe if you pump at work on a break mid morning and afternoon - and nurse during lunch break it will be a good combo. Even if baby isn't hungry when you head over at lunch, you can still interact.
Its awesome you found a place so close to work!! Even if day nursing doesn't work out all the time, the shorter commute will be great
Piper, 4/10/10
Connor, 3/16/15
Morgan, EDD 9/22/16
Before I had DD and became a SAHM, I was an infant teacher. We had several moms (and in some cases, dads) that stopped by almost daily to visit, or more often, nurse. It was always welcome to me, and I was often closer with those parents than the ones that never stopped in. Sometimes the baby's schedule didn't line up with mom's, so calling in beforehand to check was beneficial to the moms. If nothing else, it let them know to pump during lunch instead of counting on being able to nurse. I don't see coming in every feeding time to nurse being feasible, but once a day certainly is.
FORMER USERNAME: @runningisrad
I think you should be able to speak with your boss and find a good solution to pumping in a private area. You could also consider pumping in your car during the day, there are adapters to work in your car.
And depending on your schedule you may be able to pump on your way to work or early morning before leaving, pump at lunch and pump on your way home so you only have to pump once during the actual work day.
When I worked at a daycare moms would always pop in and breastfeed there babies. Usually only once a day though but it wasn't looked down upon at all if they came more! I breastfed my son there as well. You should probably bring extra milk just in case you're not able to make it. If your daycare has a way to communicate with you perfectly I would just inform them that you're going to pop in to feed him so they don't, and they can tell you if the baby is awake or not!
I wouldn't discount lunch nursing just yet. Every baby is different, but with both of mine, if I went any longer than 45 minutes away from them they would be ready to nurse whether they'd just fed from the bottle or not. Tiny tummies fill and empty quickly. They'd probably nurse in a box, upside-down, or dangling above a volcano if I were to offer in any of those scenarios.
Awkward Family Fun
I would talk to your work. They have to provide a private place to pump that is not a bathroom.
https://www.dol.gov/whd/nursingmothers/faqbtnm.htm