Well, honestly I didn’t think I was going to breastfeed my baby. I had not been breastfed nor had my mother, so i had no idea really what it was all about. And then when he was almost born I decided I would do it for a month. I just thought it would be healthier for the baby. I mean , yah, isnt it obvious that mothers milk would be healthier for your baby than cows milk or some concocted formula? Gosh, I knew so little before my son came. So idealistic and naive. So when my son emerged into the world he was very soon placed to my breast and the journey began. At first it seemed so foreign to me as I had not spent much time in visualizing breastfeeding the days before the birth because I was obsessed with thinking about the birth itself (when truly it would have served me better to think about feeding my baby for the long years ahead instead of focusing on the one day event of birth.) Anyways when my son was first placed at my breast it was smooth and perfect and I felt complete in nature for once in my life. The flow was divine and perfect and that strong little baby seemed to have a fierce hunger. But, then for the next three days we seemed to have trouble connecting. He was having trouble ‘latching on’ and it would seem as if we would both kinda panic, being new at all this, and then frustration and fear and stress would set on quickly. But, then as I watched my husband too watch with frustration I all of a sudden felt foolish. This is my baby darn it! I’m a mama now. I will easily provide for my baby! And with that determination and realization I felt the rhythm and angle and technique of how to do it and never had that problem again. So he is off! Let the suckling begin.
Oh and some days in the beginning it seemed he may never give me a break. They say ‘feed every three hours’. Well I think that is a general idea. He definitely wanted to eat more than that sometimes. It was hard often. The hard part was really my lack of sleep and that my whole sleep pattern of the past had to be completely disrupted. We were up every three hours for the first entire year. He was like a clock…. every three hours. Uggg, it was the 3am and 6am that really was getting to me. Sometimes I would just cry. Sometimes I would be mad as I listened to my husband snore. But, I endured. Most of the time though I felt so overwhelmed with joy that I could nurture my baby with no outside help at all. I was finally a mama and it was so fulfilling. To look down and see his eyes and his little milking mouth is just indescribable; a feeling of primal instincts would take us both over.
Breastfeeding is such an amazing responsiblity. Sometimes, in the beginning, I would have nightmares that I was lost and couldn’t get to my baby to give him milk and he was crying and there was no one there to feed him and he might starve. To realize this little life is totally and 100 percent dependent on you is a heavy thing to bare. And even though my sweet husband was so supportive in all ways, when it came to the feeding, I was on my own. Of course, within the second and third month I tried using a breast pump to get the milk so my husband could feed him and i could go work some. But, I found pumping extremely awkward and my son at times would just not even accept the pumped milk. In my opinion, the main thing that the child gets from the breastmilk is LIVE antibodies. So, I feel if the milk is pumped and left in the fridge or freezer or what not, then the milk is no longer filled with the LIVE antibodies which is the crucial ingredient. (Yet, I feel pumping is of course way better than formula and I realize most moms have to get back to work to maintain their income.)
From the start I said, ‘ok, i will do it for the first month.’ Then after completeing that first month and seeing how little and seemingly fragile he was i said, ok, i will do it three months.’ Well, three months turned into six and by six months it started to become a pattern and started to actually become easier. Still some days I would feel ‘i’m sooooo over this’. But, the alternative was to switch to bottles and/or formula and if you read the ingredients on formula it sounds pretty crappy. Especially because most of it is not organic and the organic ones are way to expensive. Another great thing about breastfeeding is it is absolutely free. Free!
I will say that for the first year I felt tired almost all the time. I did my best to continue to take pre-natal vitamins for at least 6 months after he was born to ensure we were getting what we needed (especially iron). I probably should have taken them the whole time, but I didn’t. I really just went about my normal pattern of eating… actually I was probably eating alot more than ever. But, a great thing about breastfeeding is that on average you can burn about 500 calories a day. After three months of breastfeeding I was back to my pre-baby weight! (Yipeee!) Another great reason to breastfeed.
When my son was about five months he ate his first bite of ‘real’ food. (rice cereal fortified with iron) (the organic non-gmo kind). It was an amazing contemplation to realize for five whole months of his life he lived completely on breast milk and I might add here that my son is now 26 months old and has only been sick twice. period. Both times he was sick with a cold (small fever, congestion, green muscous) (but not enough where i ever had to suction his nose or anything) and he got better very quickly. I really contribute his great health to the breastfeeding.
So, around 5 months he began eating a little here and there. Rice cereal with coconut milk and hemp seeds was his regular diet for the first few months. (5 mos. to 7mos. or so) I never once gave him cow milk or formula. I believe that 1 in 3 people are lactose intolerant. I believe cow milk is just too congestive for our bodies. (Of course, I was raised on cow milk. I started drinking it at two months old I believe. I feel now that the cow milk contributed to me being constantly sick as a child. I constantly had colds, coughs, congestion, bronchitis and pneumonia. I was sick so often before age 7 that I became immune to the antibiotics they were always giving me.) I did not want this for my son. I wanted him to have a strong immune system which I am told is one of the greatest benefits of breastfeeding your baby as long as you possibly can. I have read that a child’s immune system in not fully developed until about age four or five.
The very best thing I feel my son and I have gained from breastfeeding is bonding. Now I cannot believe my mom did not breastfeed me. I mean how could she just put me in a crib with a bottle? (I know it was doctor recommended at the time) When I think about it, it seems so unnatural. Babies need to be touched and held to develop properly. Because of breastfeeding, for the first nine months my son slept right next to me each night. I could hold him while he slept. If he woke up in the night, he could feel me there next to him. This has to provide a security in life that crib-bottle babies just don’t get. After nine months, we put a futon mattress on the floor near our bed so I could just feed him then jump to our bed when he was satisfied. I could hear him sleep. I could hear each breath, each noise. Whenever he needed me, I was there for him. As he got older, after age one, breastfeeding would be our little ‘time out’ in the day. A time to be quiet together. A time to connect and a time hold him and rub his back and his head. A time to just fill him with not only milk, but with good feelings of love and comfort. I would not trade this special and sacred time for anything in the world. This is the closest me and my son will ever be. A team; a union. Breastfeeding is a great joy of being a mother; maybe even the greatest joy. How I wish every mother and child could share this bonding. So, this worked for us; I realize there are many reasons why this might not work for other families.
In the beginning, I guess my reluctance to breastfeeding was due to the fear of such grand responsibility and the fear of it hurting or discomfort. Well, at first the uncomfortable part was when my breasts would fill up so full. But, I would remind myself that they are filling up to ensure my baby’s survival. After about three months, this feeling mellowed out and then they just produced just what the baby needed. Then the sucking part did not hurt. It felt strange and foreign (almost the whole time), but for me, it did not hurt. Then when he started to get teeth, my son just seemed to kinda know what to do with them. I could feel them sort of, but it did not hurt. Although, he did bite me twice, but that was because he was playing around. (and that hurt like hell.) But, other than that, it did not hurt in any way. The woman’s body is so amazing! Women in our current society are not worshipped even half enough for their grand creative powers!
So, now at 26 months, I feel we are done breastfeeding. I told myself after one year that I would just do it until he was two. Then when his 2nd birthday rolled around, I started setting my intention to feed less and less until at about 26 months I felt we were done. Something changed. I finally knew that it was time. And not to mention he started getting bossy and cranky about it all. So, I had a talk with him and told him that mama was done now and that he was becoming a big boy and that the milk was all gone. He understood. The next day after the talk, he didnt even ask for it. It seemed he was ready too. It was much easier than i thought to stop because I think we were both ready. So, I feel proud of myself. Of course, I could not have done it without the support of my husband. I am so thankful that he helped give me the freedom to be with my son fully the first years of his life. (As did the occasional help from our parents.) It was a struggle financially, but it was just so important to the both of us that our son have that solid foundation.
So, I write this to encourage any new moms or parents-to-be. I never thought from the start that I could do it. Then, I never thought I would do it so long. But, I did it! And now that it is finished, I know the sacrifices I had to make don’t even matter because they don’t even compare to the gifts my son and I have received from the journey. So, mamas, even if you can do it one day, or one month, or one year or even four years…. each drop is beneficial in so many ways. Blessings to you and your baby!!