I think everyone woman should make the choice that is best for them and their family. But, I do want to comment on the bolded. I understand some work circumstances might make pumping at work impossible, but working women can maintain breastfeeding. When I went back to work, full time out of the house, I continued breastfeeding at home, and in daycare my baby took bottles of pumped breastmilk until he was 1 yo. I also know some women who switched to formula when they returned to work and keep breastfeeding at home. I just don't want anyone thinking it has to be one or the other, doing both is possible.Anonymous wrote:My two very successful kids were not breastfed. It was my choice. I did not want to be tied down so much and had to return to work. You have to decide for yourself. It was something I had zero interest in. No regrets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m a schedule oriented person. It seems snowy breastfeed babies don’t through the night until much later than formula fed babies. The family and friends that breastfed has babies who could only fall asleep being nursed, never slept more than 2-3 hours at a time well past 1 year, never learned to self-soothe, etc. They were very clingy, high needs babies. Most were super cranky because they were never getting adequate sleep. The formula fed babies were great sleepers, on schedules, and always happy. I don’t want to breastfeed because I’m afraid that will lead my child to becoming clingy and never sleep. I’m not willing to co-sleep as my husband and I don’t think it’s safe at all.
Nanny again - I know that all of dcum is going to pile on me now, but in my 20 years of experience this has also been my experience. Nannies love formula babies. I want to also repeat what I said earlier, that for working moms it’s good to do a combo of formula and breast, for your bond. When I’m with your child 10-12hrs a day, it’s nice that you can come home and have a bonding experience with your baby that is only your own.
ugh, I never found breastfeeding bonding when I got home. Just one more thing I had to do on top of working and pumping and everything else. I get that it looks that way, but don’t assume.
And I loved every second of it. Don’t assume. -np
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20 year Nanny here- Breast fed babies are always easier to care for and sleep better. It’s hard for me to comfort a baby who is used to the boob when they need to soothe themselves. It’s also hard when they aren’t on a regular feeding schedule and you don’t know how much they’ve eaten. But, I will say from experience, it’s better for your bond as a working mom outside of the home to breast feed. That’s something you and only you share with your baby.
+1. Another nanny here. EBF babies are definitely harder for the nanny but, in my experience, are healthier and happier babies. I’ve never found a correlation between formula-fed/better sleepers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m a schedule oriented person. It seems snowy breastfeed babies don’t through the night until much later than formula fed babies. The family and friends that breastfed has babies who could only fall asleep being nursed, never slept more than 2-3 hours at a time well past 1 year, never learned to self-soothe, etc. They were very clingy, high needs babies. Most were super cranky because they were never getting adequate sleep. The formula fed babies were great sleepers, on schedules, and always happy. I don’t want to breastfeed because I’m afraid that will lead my child to becoming clingy and never sleep. I’m not willing to co-sleep as my husband and I don’t think it’s safe at all.
Nanny again - I know that all of dcum is going to pile on me now, but in my 20 years of experience this has also been my experience. Nannies love formula babies. I want to also repeat what I said earlier, that for working moms it’s good to do a combo of formula and breast, for your bond. When I’m with your child 10-12hrs a day, it’s nice that you can come home and have a bonding experience with your baby that is only your own.
ugh, I never found breastfeeding bonding when I got home. Just one more thing I had to do on top of working and pumping and everything else. I get that it looks that way, but don’t assume.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m a schedule oriented person. It seems snowy breastfeed babies don’t through the night until much later than formula fed babies. The family and friends that breastfed has babies who could only fall asleep being nursed, never slept more than 2-3 hours at a time well past 1 year, never learned to self-soothe, etc. They were very clingy, high needs babies. Most were super cranky because they were never getting adequate sleep. The formula fed babies were great sleepers, on schedules, and always happy. I don’t want to breastfeed because I’m afraid that will lead my child to becoming clingy and never sleep. I’m not willing to co-sleep as my husband and I don’t think it’s safe at all.
Nanny again - I know that all of dcum is going to pile on me now, but in my 20 years of experience this has also been my experience. Nannies love formula babies. I want to also repeat what I said earlier, that for working moms it’s good to do a combo of formula and breast, for your bond. When I’m with your child 10-12hrs a day, it’s nice that you can come home and have a bonding experience with your baby that is only your own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20 year Nanny here- Breast fed babies are always easier to care for and sleep better. It’s hard for me to comfort a baby who is used to the boob when they need to soothe themselves. It’s also hard when they aren’t on a regular feeding schedule and you don’t know how much they’ve eaten. But, I will say from experience, it’s better for your bond as a working mom outside of the home to breast feed. That’s something you and only you share with your baby.
You are just wrong.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’m a schedule oriented person. It seems snowy breastfeed babies don’t through the night until much later than formula fed babies. The family and friends that breastfed has babies who could only fall asleep being nursed, never slept more than 2-3 hours at a time well past 1 year, never learned to self-soothe, etc. They were very clingy, high needs babies. Most were super cranky because they were never getting adequate sleep. The formula fed babies were great sleepers, on schedules, and always happy. I don’t want to breastfeed because I’m afraid that will lead my child to becoming clingy and never sleep. I’m not willing to co-sleep as my husband and I don’t think it’s safe at all.
Anonymous wrote:20 year Nanny here- Breast fed babies are always easier to care for and sleep better. It’s hard for me to comfort a baby who is used to the boob when they need to soothe themselves. It’s also hard when they aren’t on a regular feeding schedule and you don’t know how much they’ve eaten. But, I will say from experience, it’s better for your bond as a working mom outside of the home to breast feed. That’s something you and only you share with your baby.
Anonymous wrote:20 year Nanny here- Breast fed babies are always easier to care for and sleep better. It’s hard for me to comfort a baby who is used to the boob when they need to soothe themselves. It’s also hard when they aren’t on a regular feeding schedule and you don’t know how much they’ve eaten. But, I will say from experience, it’s better for your bond as a working mom outside of the home to breast feed. That’s something you and only you share with your baby.
Anonymous wrote:What are the benefits of breastfeeding?