Bella Maternal Adjustable Bra |
Our bodies are miraculous, they really are. Not only are they able to give life, they are able to sustain new life with the most absolutely perfect nutrition a baby could need - breast milk. While sharing this milk with our babies we get to experience a bonding that is absolutely profound.
It never crossed my mind that I would do anything other than breast feed my children. I had after-all grown up surrounded by lactating mammals on a dairy farm and had a mother who was an adamant and sometimes defiant breast feeder during the 70's when nursing in public wasn't considered appropriate.
I didn't expect that something so incredibly natural wouldn't come naturally to me or my son. We tried very hard. At the hospital, rather than the skin to skin contact I longed for with my baby, I was quite literally strapped to an industrial pump to get milk that was then finger fed to him. (If you don't know what finger feeding is, I hope you never have to go through it. If you have gone through finger feeding, we might want to start a support group for survivors of it!)
When we were discharged from the hospital I left armed with a list of lactation consultants. I made an appointment with the first one who answered the phone. She arrived in a whirlwind of glamor and efficiency when what I really needed though was nurturing and support. If this had happened in my pre-parent life I would have confidently told the woman she wasn't a good match and found someone else. But in my new life as an amateur and vulnerable new mother I was quietly submissive. I tried for another few days to get my son to latch on but in the end I simply couldn't take him arching his back and screaming every time he got near my engorged breasts so I gave up. I continued to pump, my son continued to grow, and life moved on.
To be perfectly honest though it wasn't something I will ever be able to fully move on from. Not being able to breast feed my son was, and still is, one of my biggest regrets. It is something I still haven't 'forgiven' myself for. I know I did the best I could in a difficult situation, but I wish we could have had a different outcome.
When I was pregnant for the second time I did everything I could to avoid it from happening again. I read the breast feeding sections in all my old baby books. The one that resonated the most was from "The New Basics" by Michel Cohen M.D. (I should add that I often find this book frustratingly blasé especially as an anxious new parent, however it is also often completely spot on). Dr. Cohen suggests that rather than hiring a lactation consultant you spend time with a close family member or friend who has nursing experience.
I think there is a lot of value in that advice, but there are a lot of women like me who aren't fortunately enough to have that person, so did some research (thank you once again A Child Grows in Brooklyn) and contacted the wonderful lactation consultant Katherine Lilleskov prior to delivering.
I would never go as far as to say it was easy. Even with a child who breast fed instinctively, there was cracked nipples, duct infections and production issues to deal with, but I was able to finally have a mothering experience I have learned never to take for granted.
So pep talk aside, the one thing I will say that is good about bottle feeding your baby, as long as you can tolerate the judgmental looks of some when you pull our a bottle rather than your boobs, is that you can avoid nursing clothes. In my opinion it is much easier to dress around a pregnant body than it is a nursing body. However since opened Bump almost 4 years ago there have been enormous improvements in nursing fashion. I have often loved maternity pieces so much that I've happily worn them while not pregnant, and now for the first time we have nursing pieces that I would happily wear not nursing.
We recently added a beautiful collection at Bump by Australian designer Stephanie Schell. Very few designers have been able to fuse fashion, comfort and nursing access together so seamlessly. I read once that Donna Karan said the only part of a woman's body that didn't gain weight is her shoulders, so I particularly appreciate this detail in the dress. Nursing access for all of her pieces is through an invisible zipper under the arm.
Split Shoulder Dre |
Dote Harlow Dress |
I am really excited to see how nursing designs continue to improve. Our tag line for Bump is give up wine, coffee, sushi - not fashion. Now the goal is to find fashion when wine, coffee and sushi have once again been reintroduced.
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