The first week of breastfeeding

Information | Diary

Breast feeding, the first days: between birth and when your milk comes in

Diary - the first week

Tom was born by c-section, so it was aboujt 45 minutes before I got to hold him for the first time. That was an extremely long 45 minutes, waiting to be sewn up, rolled back to our room. In felt like I only got to hold him for a minute before the nurse took him to bathe him, but that was when I started falling in love with him. That night is a little bit of a blur, but at some point the lactation consultant came in and helped me latch Tom on. He was a tiny little bundle, looking so vulnerable and instinctive, but he was not that good at latching on, and I had no idea what to do. The lactation consultant told me that because Tom was premature he was not ready yet to need to breastfeed, and would need extra help figuring it out.

Shortly after we got back to the room the nurse washed Tom and neglected to put him under the warming light, his vitals all dropped and he had to go upstairs for observation. His dad went with him, and came back a couple times to let me know what was going on. While he was up there they gave him some formula and a passifier, both of which I later learned can cause nipple confusion but soothed Tom which I would have wanted (if I'd had the choice).

About four hours later Tom was warmed up and back down with me. He sleapt on the crook of my arm. Once every hour and a half my husband and I would wake Tom up and put him in the eating position and I would try to entice him to eat. To protect my stomach Tom was laid on a pillow stack next to me, the "football hold". It was extremely awkward, frustrating and a little scarry. If I could not get him to latch on, which I usually couldn't, I would push the button for the nurse and ask her to send the lactation consultant. I started getting concerned that I would not be able to figure out nursing when we were home from the hospital.

To make sure my milk production was adequate the lactation consultant brought in a breast pump and I started pumping every hour and a half and then we would put the tiny amount of milk into a syringe and put that in Tom's mouth next to my nipple, or put it in his mouth next to a finger, to make sure he got the food. This was a lot of work, but was actually a relief to know for sure that he was getting food and exactly how much.

The lactation consultant told me that for the first 5 days, roughly, there is just a tiny amount of milk, but that this milk is increadibly rich in nutrients and in antibodies against all of the illnesses I had ever had, so this was really important to Tom's immune system.

After we got home I could not get Tom latched on, so we finger-fed him most of the time. We woke up every hour and a half, I would pump, then we would wake him up and feed him. At night when he was fast asleap it would take 15 minutes to pump, 20 minutes to wake him up by taking off his clothes, talking to him, touching him, and another 25 minutes to finger-feed him. Needless to say, there was not a lot of sleep for us.

Commentary

Breastfeeding is not intuitive. In my new parent class they announce that over 75% of moms give up by 6 months. But you do not need to be one of those women. Almost all women are capable of breastfeeding, given the right information, help, support, and confidence. And after you get the hang of it, it becomes one of the most emotionally rewarding activities of your life.

I was not expecting to have to learn to breastfeed, and I was certainly not expecting to have to teach our new baby to eat, but that is what we had to do. I was also taken by surprise to have to fight for the ability to breastfeed, given some very unhelpful things that our hospital, and later, our pediatrician did and recommended.

Because my baby was premature, he was not ready to have to eat. This seems common, as a lot of new parents from our new parent classes have had the finger-feeding experience.

He was hungry, but developmentally he was still expecting that ambilical cord to be there. In the hospital I pushed the button to have the lactation consultant come show me how to breastfeed over and over again. She showed me how to get Tom latched on, which was difficult because of his lack of interest, my c-section that we had to avoid, and the surprisingly unintuitive nature of breastfeeding. We ended up pumping - every 1 1/2 - 2 hours and then finger-feeding our baby with a syringe for the first week. This was, needless to say, exhausting. But slowly Tom got better at latching on and I got more confident.

In the first days after birth the mom's body produces only a small amount of milk, which contains vitally important nutrients for your baby. I would pump for 20 minutes and get a tiny quantity of milk, which the lactation consultant would congratulate me on. We were told that our baby would lose weight, it was just a matter of making sure it was not too much weight. (Recently I listened to a great interview on the Le Leche site which explained that newborn baby's stomachs do not expand, so they can not consume more than about a marble's size amount of milk at a time...)

Some hospitals will automatically give newborns formula and pasifiers. For some babies this causes nipple confusion which makes breastfeeding extremely difficult if not impossible. Our hospital actually did both these things, and we were extremely lucky that Tom took the breast anyways. I do wonder if some of the huge 2 week struggle spent convincing him to take the breast was caused by the pacifier and bottle that the nurses gave him.

It takes several days for your milk to "come in". Pumping can help to increase production before and after your milk comes in.



Linking information

Title: The first week of breastfeeding
URL: http://helpwithbreastfeeding.com
Description: Breastfeeding help and information for new and expecting moms.

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