After researching my earlier postabout breastfeeding, I thought I would write a post about my own experience.
S was born 5 weeks early, and
didn’t have the suck/swallow instinct that full term babies have. That first
night, a nurse came down to the post natal ward from NICU and put a feeding
tube up her nose and started feeding her formula. I agreed to it because I had
no idea what was going on and didn’t want my baby to starve. They had a
timetable for how much formula they would give her, increasing over the days so
that her stomach expanded. Meanwhile, I was given an electric pump to keep by
my bed, shown how to use it, and told I absolutely must use it for 20 minutes
on each boob, every time S was fed.
The first day I don’t think I
even touched the pump; it was kind of scary, and I was kind of shell-shocked. A
lovely nurse came down from NICU and told me I should strip S down to her nappy
and put her under my shirt, on my chest, as much as possible as it would help
her in all sorts of ways, and it would help to get my milk flowing. For the next
few days, a nurse from NICU would come down every 3 hours to feed S formula via
her nasal tube. At the same time I would hold her to my breast so that she
associated my boobs with her tummy being full. Then I would spend the better
part of an hour trying to pump with this industrial-strength pump. What nobody
tells you is that if your milk hasn’t come in, using a pump for 20 minutes at a
time, 8 times a day, really makes your nipples hurt. You have to do it though,
to make your body wake up and realise it’s meant to be producing milk.
When S was 3 days old, she was
jaundiced and so they took her up to NICU to spend some time under lights. Although
it was horrible, and I cried and felt awful, it was probably one of the better
things to happen to me in hospital. As I sat by her little fish tank feeling a
bit lost but not wanting to leave her side, one of the nurses sent me to go for
a little walk and get something to eat. When I came back the shift had changed
over and the new nurse asked what I was planning to do. When I looked at her
with a blank expression, she got a paper towel from the dispenser and wrote me
what she referred to as “a magic tissue” – a timetable for when S would be fed
over the next few days, and what I was to do. Then she sent me back to the
ward, telling me to get some sleep, and that if I happened to be awake at any
of the overnight feeding times to come up and sit with S, and otherwise she
would see me in the morning. Over the next few days while S was in NICU, I sat
in a chair next to her and at feed time we would try to get her feeding. And then
she would go back into her little UV-lit fish bowl, and I would pump.
When they finally let S come back
down to the ward to be with me, she was still being tube fed and I was still
struggling with the pumping. I don’t think anyone mentioned to me that because
I was so traumatised from giving birth 5 weeks early, it was probably delaying
my milk coming in. As it was, that concept never occurred to me, and I spent a
few days convinced I was clearly not meant to be a mother and had made a
terrible mistake in bringing this poor child into the world. I think my milk finally came in when she was
just over a week old, and the relief I felt was not something I will ever be
able to describe. She still had issues with latching, and staying awake long enough
to drink enough milk though, so the tube feeding continued – but now that I was
actually producing some milk, we could stop the formula and start putting my
milk into the tube, which I felt a lot better about. The ward staff were very
supportive, if a little hands-on with my boobs, and would come in and try to
help me position S in the best way and hold her properly to ensure she latched
on correctly. The NICU nurses continued to come down to the ward ever three
hours to feed her via tube – each time they feed through a nasal tube they have
to check first that the tube is going into the stomach and not the lungs. The
good thing about a baby being fed through a tube is that they remove all the
air from the belly with the syringe, so S never had any wind, and was rarely
sick. One evening after shift change the night-shift nurse came down to help feed
S. It was a lady we’d met a few times before, and who had been really good to
me when S was in NICU. I went off to the fridge to fetch some milk to put into
the tube, and when I came back and handed her a bottle of my milk rather than
formula, she was genuinely thrilled. We soon switched S’s feeds over so that
she fed from me, and then had a small “top-up” via tube to make sure she was
getting enough and wouldn’t lose weight.
Shortly after that, S pulled her
feeding tube out. It was the second time she’d done it, and as she was starting
to get the hang of the breastfeeding, they suggested we leave the tube out, and
top up her feeds with a cup instead. We tried that a few times; it was very
messy, and she didn’t seem interested in the milk. We hoped this was because
she was getting enough milk from me already. When, a couple of days later, she
had put on 50g in one day, we decided she was definitely getting enough milk
from me, and they finally let us come home. Because she was tiny, and had been
jaundiced (which makes a baby very sleepy and they may not wake up for feeds),
they let us leave with very strict instructions to never, ever let S go more
than 3 hours between feeds.
With this in mind, I took S home,
horribly paranoid that she would lose weight and they would take her back into
hospital again. The morning before we left the hospital, a midwife asked how my
nipples were, and I said they were sore – so she gave me some little packets of
a thing called Jelonet. This is like a little mesh that you put over your
nipple, and it’s meant to make it feel a little better. I was not overly
impressed, but it did make a little difference and so I took what I was given.
For the first few days, I was
setting an alarm for every 3 hours to ensure I didn’t miss a feed. Any time we
went even slightly over that 3 hour mark I would go into a panic, convinced I
was a terrible mother and S would lose weight and then they’d take her away and
I would have failed at motherhood. Night times were the worst – I would put her
to sleep in her Moses basket and pass out myself, only to wake up half an hour
later in a complete panic, thinking I’d slept through the next alarm, worried
because I couldn’t remember putting S back into her basket and panicking
because I must have fallen asleep and rolled over on her or dropped her or something.
After a couple of days the midwife discharged us and the health visitor came
round. She took one look at us and told me that since S was putting on weight
fine, we could just leave her overnight and just feed her when she woke. Even
though she was still waking every 3 hours or so, it was a massive relief to me
that the health visitor thought we were doing ok! On that visit she also saw
the way I was sitting to feed S and said, you’re going to be doing this several
times a day for a long time… if you do it like that every time it’s going to
hurt and you’ll get fed up. She showed me how to sit more comfortably, using
every cushion we had available as well as a pillow off my bed (which has only
just gone back upstairs), and I’ve not looked back since.
Meanwhile, my nipples were more
and more painful. It got to the point that the times between feeds were spent
largely dreading the next feed. Every time S latched on I would cry out in
pain, and if she slipped or moved in any way whilst feeding it was agony. Quite
often my crying out in pain was what caused her to move in shock. As soon as I
was able to get out of the house, I went to Boots and bought some Lansinoh. It
worked almost instantly, and for a week or so I carried it everywhere with me.
In fact, I still have two half-empty tubes lurking around the house somewhere,
and can definitely vouch for its magical healing abilities when you burn
yourself on the oven because you’ve crossed the line into drunk-tiredness and
should really not have been near anything hot.
One thing that didn’t help the
nipples was the growth spurts – I had no idea such a thing really existed until
they happened. There were a good few evenings where S would start to feed
around 4pm, and between then and maybe 10 or 11pm I could put her down only to
change her nappy or to quickly run to the toilet. This was a really testing
time for me, being on my own in a poorly furnished flat, with nobody I could
call to bring me something to eat or drink was a nightmare. I felt so alone and
miserable, but luckily it didn’t last too long.
I am lucky in that I live fairly
close to town; back when we were still sticking rigidly to the 3-hourly feeding
schedule (even after the nights were relaxed a little) I would go out and then
just rush home when it was feeding time. The first time I ever fed S in public
I was with her father and we decided to be brave and get some lunch in town. We
went into the Slug & Lettuce, which has a little section at the back which
is usually empty, but when we got there a screen was pulled across. The manager
came over and I said I’d been hoping to use the relative privacy to feed my
baby. He said he had a party coming in and needed to set up, but that we could
go and sit down there so long as we were gone by 5pm. He even helped carry the
push chair down the steps for me, pulled the screen across behind us, and sent
a female staff member to take our food order. It was still a bit daunting, but
after that I had a little more confidence. The next time we went in there and S
was due for a feed I was sitting there thinking that perhaps we could just eat
quickly and head home, and then I peered over and noticed that the lady on the
next table hadn’t just pulled a scarf around her because she was cold; she’d
been feeding her baby for the last ten minutes and nobody had noticed. I have
to say that since these two episodes, even if I’m visiting another town, I will
generally try to seek out a Slug & Lettuce if I need to feed S. I’ve fed her in other places, including
sitting on a picnic blanket in a park one sunny day, and I’ve never had anyone
say anything negative about it, but I do still feel a bit funny about it, and
more often than not she is fed at home on the sofa.
S still feeds through the night.
On a good night it may only be once, and then an early morning wake-up. On a
bad night, when she’s not feeling so well for whatever reason, it can be 4 or 5
times. At first I would sit up, switch a lamp on and read a book while I fed
her. Then I thought I’d just try feeding her lying down and see what happened. Now
she sleeps in a grobag next to me in bed, and night feeds are really no big
deal; I barely even wake up for them.
I have shared my story in the
hope that other people can see how a situation that seemed quite hopeless and
depressing to start with can be turned around and actually become a success
story. By the time S was 6 weeks old her feeding was fully established and she
was doing really well. I really think I was lucky to have stayed in the
hospital for so long (even though it nearly finished me off mentally), to have
so many people around with so much experience; whenever I tried to feed S, if
she couldn’t latch on or kept falling asleep or we just weren’t getting on too
well I could press a button and one of the ward staff would come and help me.
The NICU nurses were truly amazing and helped in ways you couldn’t even
imagine. I remember one day when we’d just been told yet again we couldn’t go
home and I was in floods of tears when a lady came down from NICU for feeding
time. I don’t remember everything that she said, but I know she made me feel so
much better about my situation and helped me to learn to feed S laying down so
that we could both get some rest together.
At first, when people would ask
if I was still breastfeeding, and when I said yes they would say “oh well done!”
I would think what are you on about, it’s not some major achievement; I’m just
feeding my baby. While I was writing this week’s posts though, I went back and
thought about my own experience, and also looked into other people’s
experiences, and actually I do feel quite proud of myself, and proud of S. And
we did it on our own; her father left when she was 3 weeks old, but even before
then he wasn’t really around enough to make a difference. S will be 6 months
old next week, and I couldn’t be more pleased with the way things are going.
Breastfeeding has given me a massive sense of accomplishment that I don’t think
I would have if she’d been formula fed, or if I’d changed her over to formula
when things became difficult. I am so lucky not to have had to deal with things
like mastitis or blocked milk ducts, or this may well be an entirely different
story.
If you've enjoyed this post, you may also enjoy this post: 10 Reasons Breastfeeding Is Better Than Formula
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If you've enjoyed this post, you may also enjoy this post: 10 Reasons Breastfeeding Is Better Than Formula
Thank you for reading. If you liked this, please share it with your friends using the buttons below.
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