1 Jun
A new mom is struggling horribly through her first few months with her baby. She can’t seem to nap during the day. At night, when the baby awakens, her and her husband spend hours trying to soothe her down. Neither parent is getting needed rest, and everyone is at the breaking point.
I don’t actually know this woman, but a close friend of mine has been sharing her story with me and it pains me. Why? Because I remember that desperate hysteria of exhaustion from my first days as a new mom–and how impossible it was to even think of solutions.
I worried that I’d never emerge from my fatigued haze, but some wise friends were able to help me set up a feeding schedule that made a huge difference. If I could just get four hours of sleep each night, I enjoyed my baby so much more the following day and could problem-solve other challenges of early parenthood. I pumped after each feeding so that there was enough available for my husband to do the 11pm feeding. I went to sleep at 8pm and sometimes even slept for a whopping six hour stretch. It was amazing!
Can’t get enough milk pumping? If you pump just a few minutes after each feeding, your milk supply will increase over time since our bodies automatically respond to higher demand. (You can also take an herbal pill called fenugreek, which will naturally increase your milk supply while making you smell like maple syrup. Pancakes anyone?)
Are you currently in the haze of exhaustion? Do you have good solutions to offer other tired souls?
7 Responses for "Pumping Extra Milk While Breastfeeding to Get More Sleep"
I do something similar (my DD is 2 month old). I can’t fall asleep at 8 (I wish I could) but I pump before I go to sleep (around 10pm) so my husband can feed her around 10 or 11, and I don’t wake up hurting because I haven’t fed her in six hours! Previously I had been waking myself up around 12:30 or 1am, engorged and needing to feed the baby. Now I can sleep on through until 2:30 or 3 (today she slept until 4am!!).
I was wondering when mom’s have begun introducing breast milk in the bottle. I heard you need to wait until breastfeeding is well estabilished, but I was just curious on when Moms tend to feel that way? Is it gradual that you feel capable or do you just realize one day that breastfeeding is suddenly alot easier?
I know I’m going back a few years because my youngest, who is 5 obviously isn’t a bay anymore….but…I was told not to feed the baby with a bottle or use a pacifier while trying to breastfeed. I looked it up and did a lot of research, I have 3 children and breastfed all of them. It was shown that they prefer the bottle nipples and once you get started on the bottle its hard to breastfeed naturally. On thee hand maybe pumping and using the bottle is better for this situation. My data might be old by now too…Lol
Melody, I think that as soon as you feel the baby is eating well, latching easily, and your milk is in, go ahead and introduce the bottle.
I wish I hadn’t been so worried about it when my son was newborn. He has always been an eager nurser, so I wouldn’t have had any problems after about 2 weeks. By then, my milk had been in for a solid week and my son had nursing down really well.
With my next child, I will probably not even bother with pumping and just have my husband give a bottle of formula so that I can get that VERY magical 4 hours of sleep. It only took my son 5 weeks to start sleeping for a 4-5 hour stretch at a time, so he would only have been getting one bottle of formula a day for 2 or 3 weeks. In the grand scheme of things, not a big deal.
Great points! My error was that I waiting to let my daughter bottle feed and didn’t introduce it to her early. Then when I went back to work, she refused the bottle for nearly 12 hours straight and nursed all night. That continued for a few nights before my husband was able to get her to take the bottle. I think doing one bottle feeding a day while nursing is no problem, and maybe better than the route I took. Then again, every baby is different!
I didn’t have anyone to take over a feeding for me and let me sleep. My husband was deployed for the first two months of our son’s life and though I had my mother staying with me, I was the only one getting up at night to feed the baby. I struggled through it and was nearly falling apart. He’d wake up, crying hungry every two hours. I’d nurse him and he’d fall asleep just after a few minutes on the first breast. If I tried to put him back in bed, he’d wake right up and wouldn’t go back to sleep til I nursed him more. Desperate for help, I emailed the lactation consultant at our hospital. She urged me several times to just put the baby in the bed with me and side-lie nurse him and sleep while he nursed. I refused to do it because I was terrified I’d smother him or he’d die of SIDS since he was lying on his side. The LC kept telling me that mothers and babies were designed to sleep together like that and that as long as I didn’t have any pillows or blankets around him, everything would be fine. I finally gave in and did it because I was just so exhausted I couldn’t sit up anymore and I found that everthing did work out fine and I got some rest! So did my little man. He’d still fall asleep nursing but would wake up and latch back on when he needed to because I was right there. I wished I’d done it way sooner and if I have a second child, I’ll side-lie nurse him or her from the start!
Krissy,
Hurrah for co-sleeping! I did it with both my babies and found it to be a life saver, but with my daughter there came a point when she simply wanted to feed all night long. That’s when that extra feeding really came in handy. Good for you for making nursing work despite the fact your husband couldn’t be there with you. (And thank goodness for our mothers during those early days of new parenthood!)
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