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I was concerned about breastfeeding and prepared to try it, but figured I’d quickly switch to formula as it seemed painful, uncomfortable, annoying.
It is now one of my favorite times of day, when I have to feed him. It isn’t only for feeding, it’s a bonding moment. We share little giggles and smiles at each other. And it’s much easier than when I occasionally bottle feed - I can be on my phone while breastfeeding, and he quickly learned (by 5 weeks) to eat efficiently so only about 13 min. With a bottle, I have to clean everything and then hold it the whole time and he usually takes at least 30min. Then I have to wash everything. Well, DH supports but either way it’s more work. Bottom line, you can’t be sure what kind of baby or breastfeeding experience you’ll have, so try it with full intention and then you can always cut back or switch to formula when it feels right |
NP. I supple resented with formula and was grateful for it when I went back to work. But as both an experienced breastfeed we abd bottle feeder, ***my experience*** is that breastfeeding was, by far, the easiest way for me to feed my baby. DH helped plenty by giving bottles of pumped milk or formula, cleaning bottles, and even preparing the bottles of pumped milk or formula for daycare. In the middle of the nightm he changed the baby while I went to the bathroom and then settled in the rocker to feed, if I wanted. So I wasn't doing nights alone. BF/FF combo was right for us. It was a good division of labor, for us. Your mileage may very. But there was nothing easier, for me, than picking up my daughters, sitting down with them, and having them latch on for a feed. No bottles, no mixing, no warming, no clean-up. Do not dismiss the experience of others because it differs from yours. |
^^supplemented, not "supple resented"
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I think it's really weird that you say that, because honestly this board to me is REALLY anti-breastfeeding and very pro-formula. Anyone who likes breastfeeding or sees value in it is mocked mercilessly, and every breastfeeding question is answered with a parade of "just do formula" responses. Just like this particular thread! I'm not saying it's bad but... no, dcum to me is not pro-breastfeeding AT ALL. |
I don't really know what to say to this. I actually feel like you were the one who was dismissing the experience of others. You didn't talk at all in your post about how BF was the easy choice. Your point appeared to be that every part of being a parent takes time and she should suck it up and do what is best for her baby. And I believe that sentiment is damaging to the mental health of new moms. I believe that people who say it are more interested in feeling good about themselves than in helping the person they are responding to. I have no problems with breastfeeding and think it should be 100% normalized and supported, but I don't believe in forcing a new mom to do or even to try anything she doesn't want to that isn't essential to the health and safety of her child. For me, formula feeding was incredibly simple. I had a baby brezza and it was as simple as pushing a button and I put all the bottles into the dishwasher at night. I didn't individually scrub every piece, I didn't struggle with warming, I didn't get sticky formula on my hands in the middle of the night. And I didn't have to use my body in a way I didn't want to. And again, that is just me, I know many women get great joy and fulfillment from breastfeeding and just because I did not doesn't mean I think negatively about them in any way shape or form. I do believe that breastfeeding creates a natural divergence in labor between mom and dad that should be actively addressed and combatted by the couple to avoid the lifelong disparity in workload that tends to emerge from the first year of a baby's life. That doesn't mean that a woman cannot breastfeed and have a supportive partner, I think we just need to be open in talking about it because when you talk about it you can ensure you're compensating in other areas ie dad is doing laundry or handling the pediatrician or whatever, another set of equal tasks. But again, only one of us is dismissing the experiences of others, and that is you. |
I don't expect my newborn to be slotted into my existing life. I just don't want my relationship with my baby to be sullied by stress or resentment for breastfeeding/pumping when there are alternatives. I do have a lot of family around, and my husband works unusual hours in medicine. I will absolutely be taking advantage of an odd hour to run an errand by myself. No one would beseech my husband that simple freedom, so I don't know why it's even a conversation. I know myself, and I need that. If breastfeeding is easy and natural for us, I will do it until a reasonable transition period before I return to work. If it isn't, I am going to let it go. I am not going to fight through multiple mastitis hospitalizations, tongue ties, etc. and make us all miserable in a quest to breastfeed. I read what you're saying in one paragraph and then see you talking about crying in the pumping room in the next. I just can't see pushing through that. I'm glad that it worked for your family, but I'm afraid of the psychological impact and on my ability to mother in that state. I'm sorry you went through that. |
OP I don’t think you’re really understanding what’s coming. You cannot strategize yourself out of the difficulties of parenthood. Choosing formula doesn’t guarantee you freedom from guilt or sadness when you return to work. The freedom of a Target run isn’t an antidote For the challenges ahead. Formula won’t inoculate you from strong emotions, like if your baby refuses the formula, or won’t take it, or will only take it from a certain person, or — like my first —‘spit it out every darn time I tried to give it her. Fighting through a tongue tie and getting it revised, or mastitis, or missing baby while I pumped are all just part of parenting. It’s full of tough and emotional moments. The responsibility can feel overwhelming but so does the love. Your baby is going to bring up all sorts of feelings and they will be an individual with their own thoughts and preferences for how they are fed. Breastfeed or don’t - it’s your choice - but I think it’s silly to make up your mind ahead of time instead of being open to what feels right and works for you. Stop painting formula and nursing as binary choices where one is easy and the other is hard because it’s just not accurate. |
I kind of see what you are saying but there are absolutely ways to make choices that are good for mom and baby and I think wanting to set yourself up for success (as mom) by knowing limits and having some expectations is reasonable and in fact wise. Many of the emotional labor we take on in the first year is not necessary but imposed on us by 'society'. I just had a friend who is pregnant say she cried trying to pick out diapers worried she would make the wrong choice. Being able to frame these million choices and struggles we go through in early parenthood appropriately on the 'is this a big deal' scale 100% can make those early months more manageable. -not OP |
I identified myself as a NEW POSTER, I am NOT the one before that. I said NP = new poster, stop lumping me in. How many more times can I say "for me" and "your mileage may vary," etc? My personal experience stands and it is as valid as yours or anyone else's. |
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I tried to breastfeed my two daughters but was unable to. Both breastfeeding and formula feeding is difficult. I feel that a newborn, once breastfeeding is established it is actually easier because you don’t have to prep formula in the middle of the night. Also you don’t have to worry about the formula being the right temperature. Also washing bottles is super-annoying. But establishing breastfeeding is difficult for some women (it ended up being impossible for me!). Once a baby is sleeping through the night(maybe 6 months) formula can give you more freedom. There is also pumping which is easy for some women but difficult for others. Exclusively pumping seems to be the most difficult of all.
I would keep an open mind and see how it goes! I was one of those ppl who adamant about breastfeeding. I didn’t even consider not doing it and felt like a failure when I couldn’t. Even the lactation consultants where telling me that i should just switch to formula. I eventually did and learned that not everything goes according to plan. A friend of mine was anti-breastfeeding but ended up loving it and breastfed all three of her kids until each was around 12 months. I’ve had friends who combination feed and friends who exclusively breastfeed but then switch to formula at 6 months or when they go to work. Keep an open mind and see what happens. |
Oh and of course I have friends who exclusively formula fed. Most tried breastfeeding and it just didn’t work out. 3 had insufficient breast milk and one of them had this shooting pain everytime she breastfed or pumped. |
I think it's really weird that you say that, because honestly this board to me is REALLY anti-breastfeeding and very pro-formula. Anyone who likes breastfeeding or sees value in it is mocked mercilessly, and every breastfeeding question is answered with a parade of "just do formula" responses. Just like this particular thread! I'm not saying it's bad but... no, dcum to me is not pro-breastfeeding AT ALL. Look at all the post on this thread. Almost all of them are saying the OP needs to try breast-feeding before using formula. |
Look at all the post on this thread. Almost all of them are saying the OP needs to try breast-feeding before using formula. No, they are answering OP’s question/request for info and advice with their own experience. And basically all have said do whatever works for you, good luck, all will be well, etc. |
No. This is what op asked:
She asked for people who chose not to breastfeed to share and most people responded telling her to give it a shot. Two people I think said they Chose not to and did not regret it. She posted in a public forum so fair game of course but 100% there is a pro breastfeeding bent here. It just doesn’t seem like it because in comparison to mommy Facebook groups there is more pushback from the pro formula contingent |
| If I were you, I would consider trying to breast-feed the first two weeks you have the baby. You might be surprised how much you enjoy it, or, you might realize it truly is not for you. You can successfully nurse and formula feed, or pump exclusively and bottle or formula feed also. It does not have to be all or nothing. That said, sometimes it just does not work out and formula is what works for you. That was the case in my situation. |