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  • The Milk Production Factory

    The first time around, breastfeeding was hard.  The first four months were rocky.  Axel couldn't latch without the aid of a handy-dandy piece of silicone.  I thought he was wasting away and took frantic trips to see a lactation consultant.  Then he wanted nothing more than to be attached to my boob for hours on end every evening, and we both wailed in frustration.  I wore a groove in the couch, sitting and nursing and watching constant reruns of America's Next Top Model.  Even when we finally got the kinks worked out, when Axel and I were both pros, I rarely had peaceful, beatific, earth mother moments of joy while a wriggling body sucked fluids out of me.  Honestly, I kept at it for ten months because I didn't want to shell out hundreds of dollars on formula, and I'd worked so hard to figure it all out that I couldn't give up too soon. 

     

    This time around, I'd been too overwhelmed by the chaos and busy trying to keep all of us alive to notice that breastfeeding is going pretty well.   Sure, Jonas has times when he decides he's ravenously hungry an hour after he just ate.  Yes, he's a moderately cranky puker.  And he does that zombie baby thing where he ferociously wags his head and tries to latch on to anything - the nursing pillow, his hand, his sleeve, my arm - and gets more and more angry that he's not getting any milk when the milk deploying equipment is literally smushed up against his nose. 

     

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    Posted Jul 28 2009, 01:29 PM by knockedup with | with 12 comment(s)
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  • Weaning

    Ouch.  Double ouch.  Over the last few weeks, we gradually replaced nursing or pumping sessions with formula.  After nine months of 99% mama's milk, the challenges of pumping for an hour a day while still getting work done, combined with other factors, made me decide to move Axel from the boob to the bottle and sippy cup.  On Monday morning, Axel nursed for the last time.  It's been 48 hours without milke expression and damn does my chest hurt. 

     

    I admire - and envy - those mothers who are able to stick with it.  Just 36% of mothers make it to six months.  I was lucky enough to have the support of family, a great lacation consultant, a private place to use the dreaded pump at work, and a body/baby that could make it work, with some guidance and training.   If I were at home with Axel, I think we'd still be nursing.  I've got mixed feelings about it all - the working, the mothering, staying at home, boobs and bottles and babies.  Formula is seriously expensive.  Thought I hated nursing in public, and could never get comfortable with the possibility of showing that much skin to strangers even if it was for the nourishment of my child, it (after lots of work in the first four months) was easy to roll out of bed, wander sleepily down to Axel's room, scoop him up and bring him back to bed with me for an early morning nursing/cat napping session.  But it's also easy to hand Axel a sippy cup to drink from/bang on the floor while I make dinner.  He doesn't seem to miss nursing. 

     

    As I said, it hurts.  Seriously. 

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  • Food and Fears

    My son is in danger of starving.  He's going to waste away to nothing but a set of big blue-to-hazel eyes and wild light blond hair.  Yesterday, at childcare, he only drank two ounces of milk.  Today, he cut that to an ounce and a half.  He spent the days showing off, crawling around the room by putting down his right hand, then left, then pushing off his left foot.  Hand, hand, foot, repeat, until he'd criss-crossed the soft mat and the not so soft carpet.  I think he's trying to dig a groove in the shape of a 747 around the exersaucers and bouncy seats.  He has no time for nourishment - he's got important tricks to practice, a substitute teacher to seduce with his big grin and drool, and a roomfull of babies to impress.  Soon he'll lose a few of the slow-to-come pounds he's put on.  If it keeps up, he won't just crawl out of his pants, as he often does now; they'll fall off him the minute I pull them up.  

     

    Perhaps I'm overreacting. 

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  • Milkmaid

    I've been milk production, distribution, and supply for the 194 days of Axel's life - six and a half months.  Six months of nothing but mama's milk was my goal and, now that we're there, I'm deciding what's next.  Nursing has been rocky, with latching challenges and weeks when I felt like I had a ten pound leech latched to my boob for eight hours each day - not to mention the night.  There are parts of nursing that I like, now that we've both figured out how to do this.  When Axel's not testing out his claws of death grip on my nipple or yelling at the boob because he's full or full of gas, it's warm and cozy.  I like cradling Axel against me, and the mutual adoration fest we have sometimes, and the chance I get to catch up on reading The New Yorker.   But that's only sometimes.  I've never gotten comfortable with public nursing, and, as much as I try to supress it, the selfish part of me dislikes cutting short lunches or long runs because I have to pump.  I would characterize my overall experience with breastfeeding as work - and not the dream job sort of work, but the waiting tables at Village Inn to save up for college sort of work.  It's been hard.  Worthwhile, certainly, but hard.

     

    The direct-to-baby method is by far my preferred channel for milk expression.  The breast pump is a fabulous invention - it's the reason I can got to work four days a week and still send my milk along with my baby to daycare - but it's also a loud, clunky machine.  I don't think anyone likes being hooked up to machines, whether they're the sort that are dripping fluids into us to combat dehydration or the sort that suck fluids out of us.  Sometimes I wonder if it's taking just a little bit of my soul along with the milk.  It's exhausting - setting up the pump three times a day, and then pumping for up to thirty minutes at a time to end up with a max of 16 ounces a day.  That's over an hour and a half each work day of pumping and pumping-related activity - and, since I spend so much time pumping during work, there's work I have to catch up on when I'm at home and Axel's asleep for the night.  While I've gotten pretty good at one handed typing and catching up on reading, there are only so many reports I need to read and terse emails I can send and meetings I can leave early or go to late.   I know I'm incredibly lucky that I have the flexibility at work to have devoted so much time to pumping so far, and to have a private office with a door I can close to pump, even if it does have a huge window with see-through blinds.  Fifteen ounces just covers the three five-ounce bottles I send along to daycare with Axel (he's a light eater).  Getting up to that mark is stressful - and, as I feel my stress growing, I remind myself to calm down, close my eyes, and do deep belly breaths (you know, the sort that are supposed to help you with the pain in the early parts of labor and just made me, asthmatic that I am, feel like my lungs were shrinking up).  After the deep breaths, I gaze at my photos of Axel and think of tropical waterfalls, and then I try to type a reply to an email with just my right hand, and I'm right back in the stressed out, milk-inhibiting mode.  It's a negative cycle of stress impacting milk flow, which then stresses me out more and further affects milk making and release. 

     

    Part of what's kept me pumping and nursing thus far is my inner Scrooge - I'm cheap.  Formula is expensive.  Why buy it when I can make something of a higher quality for free?  And, the longer I nurse, the more brownies I get to eat - at least, that's how my logic goes.   Well, I'm going to have to cut back on brownies and shell out some cash.   Some days I can't keep up with Axel's needs, and I've been tapping in to the freezer stash to make up for my body's shortfall.  It's going to run out soon, at about the same time that I'm going to switch to pumping twice per day - and that means Axel will start having some formula.  Formula, solid foods, the ability to cram two pairs of socks into his mouth at once - he's moving on from getting everything from his mama.   I'll keep doing breastmilk and formula for as long as I can.   My son's worth enduring more hours hooked up to the dreaded pump.   

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


  • Boob Fiend

    I used to think I had a pretty good understanding of my body, including my chest.  I know my way around a Victoria's Secret catalogue; I've got a drawer full of bras of various colors, fabrics, and functions, from a pair of useless stick-on bra cups for strapless, backless tops to industrial bounce-proof running bras.  Breastfeeding has shown me that I understood my boobs about as well as I understand the functioning of my spleen - not at all.  Breastfeeding is natural, and so we assume it should come to us naturally.  Natural should not be understood as a synonym for easy or painless or fast.  Hangnails are natural.  So are wicked flu viruses and zitty adolescent angst.  After Axel was born, the two of us didn't immediately snap in to a perfect, symbiotic breastfeeding relationship - it's been a struggle.

     

    Apparently, I have flat nipples.  I'd never given them much thought prior to trying to breastfeed so, when the nurse first told me this, I wasn't surprised, exactly, but I didn't know how to react.  Was that a good thing?  A bad thing?  A freakishly rare thing that could land me in the Guinness Book of World Records?  In my case, combined with Axel's overall wee-ness, it's a challenging thing that meant we've been using plastic doo hickies called nipple shields to help him latch on.  I've now had three visits with lactation consultants, and I am getting very comfortable having strange women grab my breasts and squeeze them into an aereola sandwich.   Modesty ceased to be a concern when all that water was gushing out of me in the delivery room. 

     

    My baby seeks out something to latch his mouth on to like a mad zombie (only without the foaming and blood at the mouth), wildly wagging his head with a gaping mouth.  Anything close to his mouth will do - his hands or sleeve, my husband's non-functioning nipples, my cheek or shoulder.  What he wants, of course, is my breast (preferably with the shield, not without), and he often goes from placildly sleeping and letting out adorable squeeks and moans to sudden, ravenous hunger.  Hungry babies must have been the source of inspiration for a whole cast of zombie-playing actors. 

     

    Between pumping to bank away some milk and Axel's recent frequency feedings, during which he'll eat and then, 30 minutes after finishing, want to eat again, clustering three feedings into four hours, chaining me to the nursing chair and Boppy, I feel like a soul-less buffet.  Maybe I'm delicious, and have an array of fantastic delicacies to offer babies, but I'm exhausted.  Sure, there are moments while breastfeeding that I caress his fuzzy head and smother him with kisses, feeling that all is right with the world, even if there is a piece of plastic between my breast and my baby's mouth.  But there are other moments where my neck aches and it's three a.m. and I'm overcome with unbearable thirst, and I just want him to hurry up already and finish eating.  Unfortunately, babies are not reasonable.  Axel doesn't understand when I explain to him that he just ate, and that I want to eat, or sleep, or shower, and couldn't he please wait just an hour or so to eat again?   Of course, I give in to him.  He's the baby.  He's much cuter than me, and he cries a lot louder.  He's clearly in charge. 

     

    While nannying for a three and a six year old during graduate school, I took the kids on a trip to a working farm, where we watched a cow, moaning because of its bloated udders, get hooked up to a milking machine.  The cow rolled her eyes back in her head, and her groans changed to sound relieved.  I feel like that cow and I could really bond with one another, if she ever gains the ability to speak. 

     

    As soon as Axel's tiny belly is full (temporarily), he lapses in to a luxurious food coma, slowly stretching his arms and wiggling his fingers, a secret sleepy grin crawling across his face.  "You'll never guess what I just had," he seems to be thinking, "And it's all mine.  All mine!"  

     

     

     

    Sometimes he's then awakened by what seems to be gas pains worse than anything the world has ever seen, judging by his writhing and squawks of protest.  I don't eat any cow's milk products (another reason the cow above would like me), and I haven't been going on broccoli binges, so I'm not quite sure what's at the root of his pain.  I'm considering tracking everything I eat, which will make me feel even more like nothing but a milk factory, but it might help get to the cause of his violent burps.  As soon as the burps explode out of him, he lapses back into his full-bellied sleep, only to awaken 30 minutes or three and a half hours later, zombie mouth ready again to eat.  We're getting the hang of this breastfeeding thing, slowly, unnaturally working at it. 

     

     

     

     



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About the Blogger

Oz Spies

Oz Spies in Denver

Oz Spies lives in Denver, Colorado with her husband, a firefighter; their son, Axel; and a slightly obese dog and cat. She has a MFA in Creative Writing from Colorado State University.

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