The Consultant’s Corner
Introducing a new feature on The
Breastfeeding Café – the Consultant’s Corner! Diane Weissinger, a renowned
international board certified lactation consultant with 15 years of
experience, offers tips, thoughts, and common-sense explanations on some of
the more technical and mechanical aspects of breastfeeding. New information
will be added periodically, so check back from time to time to see what’s
new.
Diane's Articles
Nursing, in a Nutshell:
Ten practical pointers to
help put your mind at ease.
"He
Can’t be Hungry. He Just Ate!”: Insights into
babies' nursing habits
Solids?
Wait a Bit...
Common sense guidelines on when to introduce solid foods.
The
Formula Decision. Diane offers some food for thought as you
think about how to feed your baby.
Breast or Bottle? Diane offers an
interesting
comparison of facts between breast milk and breastfeeding on the one
hand, and formula and bottle-feeding on the other.
A Three-Course Meal
and a Dance. Diane’s explanation of how the content of breast milk
changes as a baby nurses. As Allison discovered, the information can help
you know when your baby is not merely full, but satisfied.
Allison’s story:
One Breast at a Time
I’m positively
giddy after my first full night’s sleep in nearly six weeks! Annika, five
weeks-old, has been nursing fine, gaining weight easily, having plenty of
wet and poopy diapers. But it seemed she was never quite satisfied when she
nursed. Whenever I would put her to my breast, she would fuss and pull
away. She would take a few gulps, cry and look just plain miserable.
Yesterday, I
went to the La Leche League website and there I stumbled across a wonderful
article, “Finish the First Breast First.” The author described Annika and
me perfectly! She explained that while the foremilk is initially filling,
it doesn’t have the staying power of that rich and creamy hindmilk that
babies get only after they’ve nursed for several minutes. I was letting
Annika fill up on the foremilk, pulling her off, then putting her on the
second breast where she’d fill up on more foremilk and not want to finish
it. Two hours later she’d be hungry again, but not for that foremilk which
was what she was going to get when I nursed her again.
The author had a
radical proposal: let the baby nurse fully on one breast. Let her get all
the milk in that breast, empty it out and end nursing on her own. Then, and
only then, offer her the second breast. If she’s not interested in it, let
it go.
I did that
starting around 4:00 p.m. yesterday and the difference was immediate and
amazing. I had a different baby! I let her nurse as long as she wanted on
my right breast, until she fell asleep and off the nipple. She was so cute,
drunk on breast milk! She didn’t want the second breast and fell sound
asleep. Three hours later we did it again. Same result - a happy,
satisfied baby. No rooting, no evening fussiness. She was happy and alert
for the rest of the night. I nursed her at 10:30 p.m., put her to bed all
sleepy and full of fat, rich hindmilk, and she slept until 5:30
a.m.!!!!!!!!!!!!!! She nursed on both breast for 15 minutes each, then
slept for another four hours! I slept and slept and life is sooooooooo
good!
This from a baby
who had been nursing every two hours during the night! I’m amazed! In all
the nursing books I’ve read, never once has anyone suggested that it’s okay
not to nurse from both breasts at a sitting.
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