nicejuicypear
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I'm planning to breastfeed when I give birth, hopefully until the baby starts to wean. I had a visit from a maternity support worker who gave me some tips but I was hoping that some of you experienced BFing mums could share the benefit of your experience.
The MSW was fairly good, though I felt she brushed over some of the likely difficulties. When I asked her what made women give up breastfeeding, she said it was usually the women who weren't committed to it that gave up early. I felt that was a bit simplistic, given that I've read of women who have tried to BF and feel really bad about not being able to continue.
She recommended Lansinoh, which I'd already bought, but said not to use it until I'm sore and need it because it's so expensive. Now, I'm usually tight with money, but I've read that it's good to use it anyway to help prevent soreness from happening or getting too bad, so if that's the case, I'd rather spend the money using it.
It also concerned me that she said they don't check for tongue-tie in the hospital routinely but they wait until you're having problems latching on before they look into it. I'd rather they just did a quick check to start with, to me it seems more sensible to catch the problem before it starts?
So with some of these things, I'm starting to think that the advice I get might not be the most supportive or practical, particularly the glossing over of reasons why women stop BFing.
I want to know what is the best way to start out positively to maximise my chances of BF working in the long term for me? What did you do that worked, or wish that you did differently?
The MSW was fairly good, though I felt she brushed over some of the likely difficulties. When I asked her what made women give up breastfeeding, she said it was usually the women who weren't committed to it that gave up early. I felt that was a bit simplistic, given that I've read of women who have tried to BF and feel really bad about not being able to continue.
She recommended Lansinoh, which I'd already bought, but said not to use it until I'm sore and need it because it's so expensive. Now, I'm usually tight with money, but I've read that it's good to use it anyway to help prevent soreness from happening or getting too bad, so if that's the case, I'd rather spend the money using it.
It also concerned me that she said they don't check for tongue-tie in the hospital routinely but they wait until you're having problems latching on before they look into it. I'd rather they just did a quick check to start with, to me it seems more sensible to catch the problem before it starts?
So with some of these things, I'm starting to think that the advice I get might not be the most supportive or practical, particularly the glossing over of reasons why women stop BFing.
I want to know what is the best way to start out positively to maximise my chances of BF working in the long term for me? What did you do that worked, or wish that you did differently?