Great post, it has reinforced everything I learnt at the breastfeeding workshop I went to. There are a few more things I wanted to add that I was told, please correct me if I have wrong information though as I have no experience yet!
If you have LO latched on but it doesn't feel right or is more painful than when you normally feed or you just want to change position, don't try and pull LO off the boob as they will just try and feed harder and will pull on your nipples causing excruciating pain. The midwife told us to insert our little finger in LO's mouth to 'break the seal' which means you can reposition LO without any additional pain.
Leakage or nonleakage you get from your boobs during pregnancy is no indication of how much milk you will produce/how hard you will find breastfeeding in reality.
When LO is breastfeeding your nipple should be at the roof of their mouth and their lips should be around your areola. The more closed their mouth the more painful it will be as it is their mouth action around the areola that stimulates your boob to move milk from the milk sacs deep in the breast. We also got told that the milk doesn't just come from one hole at the centre of your nipple, there are multiple holes!
If you find you get a lump in the breast during feeding, you may have a blocked milkduct/mastitus. This can be unblocked with a hot flannel on the boob and massage. You should always see your doctor as they can prescribe antibiotics. Our midwife said that the doctor will probably tell you to stop breastfeeding, she said to ignore that advice and speak to your HV or midwife. She said it was very important not to stop feeding your LO!
We got advised to give our LO's one breast per feed and not to swap during a feed but to alternate each feed. If LO has one preferred boob then feed them in a normal hold on the boob they like but when getting to the less preferred boob hold them under your arm in the rugby ball position so they think they are on the preferred boob (as they'll be in the same position).
When you milk comes in on the third/fourth day, your boobs will feel really heavy, hot and sore/painful. Get a savoy cabbage in your fridge ready and put a leaf in your bra which will cool and sooth your boobs!
If you have cracked nipples, after a feed, squeeze out a little extra milk and leave it to dry on your nipples as it will help to relieve the cracked soreness.
If your LO has a blocked tearduct/sticky eye, squirt a little boob milk in their eye. It will help to sooth the eye as the milk is full of healing properties.
They did tell us loads more and it was a great workshop - if I can remember anything else I'll edit my post. The midwives in my area are very pro-breastfeeding and if LO's won't take to it they promote expressing above bottle feeding. I'm sure if I've picked up anything wrong or any of the experienced breastfeeding Mums has any evidence to the contrary, they'll correct me
