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Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Breastfeeding is HARD: From Low Supply to Freezer Stash


I could be wrong, but I would say that majority of women who breastfeed would agree with me when I say that it is extremely difficult. While there are plenty of women out there that have no issues when it comes to breastfeeding and providing their baby with more that enough breast milk to keep them satisfied, I was not, and sometimes am still not, one of those women. This is my breastfeeding journey (so far).

If you’ve read my Labor and Delivery blog post, you know that I had Preeclampsia, had to induce, and almost 48 hours later ended up having a C-section followed by severe postpartum hemorrhaging. After about an hour of skin to skin and attempting to nurse Landen, I was wheeled into the emergency operating room to remove a softball sized blood clot that was preventing my uterus from closing. That early separation from my baby is what I believe started everything. We were reunited hours later and then moved into the mother-baby unit for the next 5 days. 

Landen was born 2 weeks early at a teeny 5 lbs 8 oz. I was so determined and just knew that I wanted to breastfeed, but things got off to an unfortunate and rocky start. It is my belief that the nurses truly wanted my baby to stay above 5 pounds, so he would be able to go home with me. Because of this, they were quick to push formula on him and I, since I wasn’t producing anything yet. Sad to say that at that time I didn’t even know that donor breast milk could be an option, and even more sad that the hospital didn’t recommend or offer it to me. Looking back today, I am glad my baby was fed at the hospital instead of starving and losing a lot of weight (we left the hospital with a 5lbs 3oz baby), but I still wish they had offered donor milk over formula. So in between attempting to nurse on both sides for 15 minutes each and pumping for 15 minutes, he was given about 10ml of formula. This was taking place every two hours. On top of that, I was being checked constantly by nurses to make sure that I wasn’t still hemorrhaging. Checked vitals constantly. Extreme back pain from the epidural (scoliosis). Postpartum Headaches. Pain from my incision. Visitors that I certainly wasn’t up for, stopping in continuously. I won’t go on, but the time I spent in the hospital wasn’t fun. I was over the moon in love with my baby boy but things just weren’t going good for me. Childbirth is HARD y’all! 

So Lactation visited me several times while we were there. They explained that one cause of my ZERO production, even with all the nursing and pumping, was due to the hemorrhaging. My body needed to heal itself before it would be able to provide. Next cause of my issues, PCOS. Yes, I know some women with PCOS have no issues with breastfeeding. Again, I was not one of those women. But I just felt like EVENTUALLY something would come out if I just kept trying. The day we were to be discharged, I finally was able to get some colostrum to give to Landen. How glorious those two tiny syringes seemed at the time, and they truly were! I was finally giving my baby the liquid gold! 


After my first night at home, the next morning my boobs finally felt hot and hard. My milk came in! This was at 6 days postpartum. So that day was the first time that I was able to pump and get anything. It was so little, but it was something. We continued try to breastfeed, give a bottle of pumped milk (how little it may have been) then supplement with formula after. Every two hours. 

Landen had issues latching, so we used a nipple shield at the hospital and at home. But I felt like it was such a pain to have to use it, I wanted badly to toss it. So I’d start with it, remove it halfway through and then try to put him back on. Sometimes he could get it, sometimes he couldn’t. He was still so tiny, and soooo sleepy. He would fall asleep constantly. I’ll just say that everything felt so very hard. My baby blues was kicking into high gear. I was still in pain from my C-section and trying to give up the medication they sent me home with. And the ready-to-feed formula bottles, while they were feeding my baby, made me so sad and depressed. I tried over and over again to not use the formula, but my baby was so hungry and breastfeeding for hours on end was not helping him. I felt like a failure, even though I was continuing to give it my all. I not once let myself skip a pumping session. I was getting burnt out.


I was doing all the tricks you hear to try to increase my supply. Which most the time in those first days may have been about 10ml (one third of an ounce) each pumping session. I took fenugreek. I ate the oatmeal, the Boobie Bars, the brownies, the Lactation Cookies... so many cookies. I drank the Ovaltine and the MilkFlow, the Body Armor drinks and the blue Gatorade. I power pumped. I massaged. I used the warming bead things that you put on your breasts. I felt like I tried everything, and saw very little difference.


Those first couple of weeks home with Landen, we went to 3 Lactation Consultations. Each time we discussed what we were doing for feedings (breastfeed, bottle feed breast milk, bottle feed formula, pump, repeat). One of the ladies I met with made me feel really good during our conversation. She said I was doing 3x the work that a mom without issues would be doing. Not to pat my own back, but really it just justified all of the emotions I was feeling. I was really struggling emotionally. She said it is a fine line to whether or not I would want to make the decision to continue at the same pace I had been going. But it was my decision alone. I decided to continue doing everything the same. Two weeks at a time I would reevaluate and decide if I could keep going at that rate. Breastfeed, Bottlefeed, Pump, Repeat. My husband, who couldn’t really understand, continued to go back and forth between being super supportive one moment, to trying to convince me to just switch to formula the next. He was having a hard time with my constant tears and not being able to help. It also bothered him that I was obsessed with googling everything nonstop! (He sees the error of his ways now and is so proud of me for standing my ground.) 

Lactation recommended just for a few days cut back to just breastfeeding twice a day to let him stay used to trying and pump the rest of the time just to give myself a little break. (I did do this for a few days so I could kind of get my bearings back.) After each discussion we would do a weight check on a special scale, breastfeed, and weigh again so we could see what he was getting. At our third appointment (3 weeks old), we found out that Landen was inefficient at transferring milk. There was no lip or tongue ties, but he just wasn’t very good at getting the milk out. After 30 minutes he had gotten right under an ounce. This discouraged me, but the consultant reassured me that “He’s just a little guy, he will get better at it.” So instead of only nursing him twice a day, I went back to trying to breastfeed all day long. I figured he wouldn’t get any better at it or more efficient if we weren't practicing all day. And from everything I read online, it was the best way to get my supply to increase. 

We finally gave up the nipple shield, and I tried a different position (football hold) to help him attempt a deeper latch. This is when my nipples went through the “painful period.” While I had experienced some pain, it wasn’t until I had really set my mind to nursing constantly that they really started hurting. The biggest bother I had was vasospasms. A short while after nursing (and pumping), my nipples would start burning and would turn white. It was so uncomfortable and it would come and go out of nowhere. I had to wear nipple shells for about a week straight to keep anything from touching them. This eventually did stop, I would say it happened regularly until about 6 weeks, then slowly tapered off on the frequency that it happened. I was religious about keeping my nipples moisturized. I didn’t like the greasy feeling of lanolin that I tried, or the stain it left on one of my favorite nursing tank tops. I found that I really liked the Earth Mama Organic Nipple Butter. 


Another thing that I began doing was combining my breastmilk with formula. This eliminated me having to make two bottles. I hated to waste any breastmilk if he didn't eat it all, since in the beginning because I got so little. This is why I had kept them separate for so long. Combining the two truly was a huge time saver and cut my daily bottle washing chores in half. One of my girlfriends really cheered me on and shared with me some tips and how things were going for her (exclusively pumping) and her son who is a couple months older. With her encouragement, I hit a huge turning point when I stopped looking at formula as something that was bad or poisonous and looked at it from the viewpoint of, my baby is fed and satisfied and not crying. This is nice! The amount of breastmilk I made was still behind what he needed. I would maybe pump close to an ounce when he was wanting 2. And when he started needing 3, I was only making 2. So we continued supplementing. I came to the realization that I was only able to provide what my body allowed and I would be glad that I could at least give him some breastmilk. We continued regular supplementing while my supply very slowly began to increase. Little by little, every few days, I would get a little more out when pumping. Eventually I was able to give more breastmilk than formula. Things were going better. At 8 weeks, I will say that we finally got the hang of breastfeeding. I was able to make it the whole first half of the day by breastfeeding only. He was satisfied by what he was getting. And what an amazing feeling that was! August 17th was the first time I was able to put two ounces in a bag to begin my freezer stash.


Slowly still, my supply continued to increase. It seems likes a lifetime ago that I was so sad and even depressed about my little one ounce pump sessions to get where I am today. But really, its only been 3.5 months. We went from so little, to now being able to satisfy my baby for much of the day. Like I've said times before, I am the kind of person that when I put my mind to accomplishing something, I get it done. This was the first time I wasn't sure that I would be able to. I was so close to giving up on multiple occasions, because breastfeeding (for some) is really truly that hard. I am very blessed in the sense that I was able to give up my full time job to stay at home. If returning to work was necessary, my story might have been a lot different. I know I would have tried my best to pump while at work and breastfeed anytime we were together, but I am not sure it would've worked in the long run. Mad props to all you Mama's that go back to work and still make it all work!



 My supply still seems to tank in the afternoons so we breastfeed until around 5pm and after that Landen gets bottles of pumped breastmilk the remainder of the day. He still eats every 2 to 3 hours during the day. Before bed I feel like he fuels up to sleep good, eating a bottle at 6:30-7, 8ish, and last one around 9 is combined with two ounces of formula. This seems a little frequent compared to others, but really it’s not about what others are doing, it’s what works for us. I’m only pumping twice a day now, which is what gives us our bottles and freezer stash. I pump before going to bed, and I pump around 5am. I decided that 5:30/6am feeding would be a bottle, because when I would/do breastfeed, sleepiness prevents him from getting enough to keep him satisfied long enough for me to go back to sleep. Also, at that pump session I am able to get way more that he would eat. Hello freezer stash! This twenty minute pump session now gets me between 6-8oz. Now this isn’t a 100% way I always do things. Sometimes I’m super sleepy so I just pull him in bed and breastfeed instead. Which means we will be awake again quicker because he doesn’t eat as much. Sometimes he wakes up before my pump session, so I’ll bottle feed and pump after. 



Clearly my right boob is the slacker boob, haha!


Landen's last bottle before bed is always two ounces of formula + one/1.5 ounces of breastmilk. He’s sleeping though the night almost every night, so I have no desire to drop that little bit of formula he gets once a day now. It helps him and myself both sleep. And formula ISN’T bad! That’s what I had to learn to understand. Breastmilk is of course the best, but formula is not going to hurt my baby. 

Current supplements I am using to help supply are from Milky Mama. I am using their Lady Leche and Dairy Dutchess Herbal Supplements, every couple of days. And I occasionally still drink an Upspring MilkFlow supplement. I’ve stopped using the cookies and brownies because I’m not sure if they helped, but they certainly did not help with weight loss. Scale actually started to go back in the wrong direction for a while. Lastly, I drink as much water as I can possibly stand.






While I know 3.5 months in, my breastfeeding journey is still only in the beginning stages. I’ve been lucky so far to not have any clogged ducts, thrush or mastitis. We still have a teething battle ahead of us, nursing strikes, his first stuffy nose and many more battles ahead. But I am so glad so say that we won the battle of getting breastfeeding established. I've continued to set small goals for myself as things go, 1 day at time, 2 weeks at a time, then one month at a time. My current goal is 6 months, with hopes we may continue longer. My little ~80 ounce freezer stash may not look like much to some, but for someone who struggled with supply issues and fought so hard for every single ounce, it seems like an amazing feat. I am proud of myself for sticking with it because it is something that means so much to me. While for me getting pregnant was hard, being pregnant was hard, childbirth was hard, becoming a mama is hard...Breastfeeding has also been hard! But I am so grateful for all of it. 

Uncrustables Boxes, because they are a good size and because Mama needs a snack during those late night/early morning pumping sessions. 


I really hope that this has encouraged other mama's that may be struggling with their own breastfeeding battle to not give up. I know I would have had much sadness and regret if I had decided I couldn't push through as I did. Don't let yourself give up unless you know you are 100% ready to do so. Take it 2 weeks at a time. I really feel that every two weeks, things got a little better. But this will be HARD WORK! And I know it is. Just tell yourself that every time you pump after breastfeeding, your are telling your body that more is needed. And if you come to the decision that you cannot do it any longer, and you are just mentally ready to switch to formula to feel like you can breath again, that is okay too! Formula feeds millions of babies all over the world! There is such a stigma about Breastfeeding vs Formula that it almost seems like a woman should feel guilty if she doesn't breastfeed. Which is so not the case! But one more time, breastfeeding is hard. If you are able to do so, that's great. If you are not or choose not to, that's great too. Because there is no trophy for breastfeeding or bottle-feeding. There is no trophy if you cloth diaper. There is no trophy if you go back to work, or if you stay home. A Facebook post I recently read shared this little fun fact of "There is no trophy" and it is the God's honest TRUTH! Do not forget it, and remind yourself again and again. 

For me, I chose to breastfeed and I am so glad that with consistency and determination we have made it work so far. I know my experience may not be the way it works out for everyone, but I believe that for most if you just keep on working hard at it and push through, give yourself grace where it is needed, you will eventually (hopefully) increase your milk production enough to satisfy your baby and even start your own little freezer stash.

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Landen's Nursery

So very proud of how Landen's nursery turned out. It is absolutely my favorite room in the entire house. From tearing up the floors and tearing down the drop ceiling, ripping the panelling off the walls down to the studs...



















Wall Color: Latitude - Sherwin Williams
Accent Wall: Hampton Surf - Valspar
Chair was my Great Grandmother's, Landen's Great Great Grandma
Tins "Garage" Signs - Amazon
Cube Storage and Closet Organization - Target

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Birth to 3 Months

Landen is now 3 months old and I’ve wanted to get up a little post to document these first 3 precious months with my boy. As 3 months has gone by so incredibly fast, I’ll try my best to keep this post short and sweet. 


Those first 2 weeks at home with him were so very difficult. I truly went through what I consider to be extreme baby blues. Crying all the time. Not wanting visitors. Arguing with my husband, who wanted nothing more that for me to be okay. I cried when he scratched himself. I cried when his cord fell off. I cried when I splashed out little breast milk when pouring what I pumped. I cried, a lot. I did fill a prescription for Zoloft at the 2 week mark, but decided with Jonathan that I would give it one more week before taking it. I am so glad I did, because it was like a light switch. I still had weepy moments but felt so much more like myself. I feel so fortunate that things turned around for me when they did. I know so many women struggle for much longer and way harder. I can definitely see what people mean when they talk about postpartum depression because just the little bit I went through felt so extreme. It is real and it is hard, so check in on all your new mama friends, and then check on them again. They need you, even if they don’t act like it. 



My blues, while it stemmed from multiple things, was mostly as a result of breastfeeding. Breastfeeding was so hard because my supply was so low. Order of events went a little like this... breast feed on each breast 15 minutes each. Bottle feed what very little pumped milk I had. Supplement with an ounce of formula. Pump for 15 minutes. Repeat 45 minutes later. I was getting so burnt out. Not getting enough sleep. Hormones had me so upset that I was failing and not able to provide for my baby. I was charting every little detail, sleep, wet/dirty diapers, milk, how much, how long per breast, pumping time, how much, how long, what color was the poo, every little nap no matter how long. All on the Glow app. Which I felt good about at first... and then it became all too much. He had surpassed birth weight, so I stopped tracking. And it made such a difference in my mood and stress levels. Still was really struggling with breastfeeding though, and then I decided, with lots of talking with a friend who was also supplementing, that I can only do what my body allows. And I have to accept the fact that right then in that moment, my baby needed more than I could provide. And once I stopped looking at the formula like it was poison or something to be ashamed of and decided seeing my baby full and satisfied was a good thing, that stress melted away as well. 

We went to 3 different lactation consultations in his first 2 weeks. Each time they brought up my PCOS and postpartum hemorrhaging. My body was going to have to take care of me before it would start making what he needed. At one appointment, we discovered that he was inefficient at transferring milk. But he didn’t have any tongue or lip ties. Half an hour of breastfeeding and he only transferred a little over an ounce. They told me “he’s just a little guy, he will get better at it.” So we just kept on trying. 



So once we reached one month, I finally felt more comfortable getting out. I met a girlfriend for lunch. I had a little bit of company. I went to a family function. And Jonathan and I made the difficult but greatest decision. We decided I would not be going back to work my full time job. And I feel so fortunate and blessed that we are in the financial position for me to stay home. As scary as it was to give up my career and income, I knew it was the right decision for us as soon as I finished giving my employer notice and packing up all of my belongings. It was like yet again, another huge weight was lifted from my shoulders. 

7lbs 15oz



Then at 6 weeks, I was given the clear to resume regular activity. I went to my moms pool and floated in the sun while Landen napped a few times. I went to the park and walked around the pond. I finally got the hang of things. My body was used to waking up in the early AM hours to feed Landen a bottle and pump. 



At 8 Weeks, I can honestly say that we got that hang of breastfeeding. My supply was finally able to keep up and satisfy him. The only supplementing we did, and still do today, is two ounces of formula mixed with breastmilk before he goes down for the night. At a little over 2 months old, he slept through the night for the first time! Hallelujah! It blew my mind when I woke up at 5:45am and he was STILL ASLEEP! I pumped 8 whopping ounces and then waited until about 6:30 before deciding to wake him to feed him. I definitely don’t do that anymore and just let him wake on his own, but that first time had me nervous. Since he started sleeping through the night, which for us is approximately 9:30/10-6/7, we have only had two or three nights where he woke up around 3am. I feel so lucky that he sleeps! I know so many momma’s don’t have a sleeper like me. (I also know that this could change at any time, so enjoying it while I can.)

11lbs 13oz





We ventured to the drag strip for the first time, and he did so good! I was nervous the sounds would upset him but he does just fine. Of course I keep ear protection on him at all times, which he doesn’t mind either. And cool enough, Jonathan won the race and he was officially the 2019 Modified Champion at Richmond Dragway.




This past month has been such a difference in myself. I think getting more sleep and just overall confidence in myself has made a world of difference. I’m much calmer about letting people hold him, give him a bottle, etc. It honestly feels like a break when I can let someone else entertain him for a short bit. Jonathan and I are starting to find our groove as parents. When we are out together, Jonathan helps a lot. We alternate who gives him a bath (every other night). At home, I am mainly the one to do everything. Which was difficult at first on my attitude but as things have progressed, I’ve been able to feel better about things. I know now Landen relies on me for comfort. A lot of times, it’s only me that can calm him down. Mama’s milk does the trick quite often. But there are those evenings when I feel so overwhelmed when he’s been fussy, and Jonathan swoops in and saves the day by playing with him or taking him for a walk outside. Once he gets bigger and a couple years from now, can easily communicate his needs, Jonathan will feel much more comfortable and able to care for him for longer periods without my help. But for now, mama’s got this! And it is such an amazing feeling knowing I can and am able to care for my baby. Kinda of miraculous what a woman is capable of. Not to say men aren’t able to... but they cannot grow a human inside of them and have their lives completely changed in a single moment, the way a woman can. 





Since little man is still so young, we don’t have/have not established a routine or schedule as of yet. He still sleeps in his bassinet in my room. He naps in his crib. 


Most days currently look like this. 

Wake 6:30, bottle feed 3.5oz breastmilk.
Back to sleep. Wake 9/9:30. Breastfeed. Play. Breastfeed 11:30-12. Nap 12:30-2:30/3. Breastfeed. Play. Breastfeed 5/6. Short nap anytime after this meal. 8/8:30 Bottle feed 3.5oz breastmilk. Bath time. Play. 9/9:30 Bottle feed 2oz formula + 1oz breast milk. Bed by 10.

Now this is an extremely loose schedule. Obviously going out during the day changes things because the car automatically puts him to sleep still. Sometimes I try to offer 4oz, very rare he will take it all. We have found that bottle feeding in the evening works best for us, as my supply tanks and he just gets frustrated. And Jonathan can help feed in the evenings. I always pump before going to bed 10:30-11 where I may get 5-6oz. And I pump around 5:30am most nights and get about 8oz. If Landen sleeps in later and I don’t wake up to pump, I just breastfeed as soon as we wake up. I prefer to bottle feed at that time though because he’s still so sleepy, he won’t nurse long enough to fill up and go back to sleep long enough for me to actually go back to sleep also. All in all, we are starting to develop a routine/schedule but I don’t stress too much if things don’t stick to certain times. 



In other news, we finally just bought a motorhome, Landen and I can start going to the drag strip more often, instead of me feeling alone at home every weekend. I will say that Jonathan has had on heck of a year racing. So I guess all the wins he’s had has made it kinda worth it for him to be spending so much time away. I still have a hard time coping with that at times, but I’ve had a couple other racing wives that I am friends with both say to me, “They are the ones missing out being gone all the time.” Which couldn’t be more true! Every time I feel a little bit of resentment or jealousy of him just being so quick and willing to leave every weekend, I just remind myself that I am the one getting all the good stuff. Landen and I already have such an incredible bond that is only going to get stronger as time goes on. This mama bear is crazy about her boy and I am so grateful for these first 3 months we’ve had together. He is my greatest blessing and watching him grow is my greatest joy. 



14lbs 3oz