A smiling family of two parents and three young children sitting together on the grass

In Their Own Words

Family Stories

Twenty-four families wrote these themselves. We didn’t edit them. The hard parts are still in.

Where we’d start

Two parents smiling closely with their baby between them.

Niki & Lily·Six weeks·Lip & tongue tie, low supply, dairy intolerance

I was adopted as a baby, and so to me, breastfeeding would be my bond with the first blood-related family member I have ever known.

 

My name is Niki, and from the moment my husband and I started trying to get pregnant, I knew that I wanted to breastfeed. I was adopted as a baby, and so to me, breastfeeding would be my bond with the first blood-related family member I have ever known.

We went through many ups and downs on the road to get pregnant, but almost exactly a year ago, we found out we would finally get to be parents! The pregnancy seemed to go extremely well, until about four weeks before Lily’s due date. That weekend, I started to feel ill, and by Tuesday, we found ourselves in the hospital. That was also the day we were supposed to go to our breastfeeding class. The doctor told us we had to have an emergency C-section because I had HELLP syndrome and I would have to be put completely under in case of complications. Instead of learning how to feed my baby, I was being sedated. Everything went well, but I missed out on that moment of initial skin-to-skin, and having her feed for the first time right after birth – I didn’t get to see her or hold her for almost three hours after she was delivered. We didn’t try breastfeeding until the next day when a nurse showed me how, and I only had about 5-10 minutes with the lactation consultant in the hospital later that day. There were other mothers who were exclusive breastfeeders, and since Lily was born early, they had started her on formula to get her weight and sugar in the right place. She seemed to latch well enough, though it didn’t seem like she was really getting anything. I was told my milk should come in around days 5-10 after birth, and to pump more than anything. After three days, we were released from the hospital – I had seen the two different consultants maybe a total of 30 minutes the whole stay.

Once we were home, she didn’t really latch. We were triple feeding, and it was exhausting. I would cry on my husband’s shoulder and to my mom, feeling like I had failed. I researched online whatever I could about breastfeeding, but nothing seemed to provide any help. My supply hit about two to three ounces a day, pumping around the clock. I went through many blood panels, all showing that nothing seemed to be wrong. There didn’t seem to be an answer. We relied more and more on formula, and I pumped as often as I could. I started to feel like I was closer to my pump than to my newborn. After about a month and a half of this, I was about ready to give up and move to formula only. I finally called the hospital, and the consultant put me in touch with Bayou City Breastfeeding. My husband and I talked, and we both agreed that a visit couldn’t hurt – we would see if there’s anything that could help. I spoke with Suzanne, and she set me up with a home visit from Melissa.

Melissa saved our breastfeeding journey, and in some ways, she saved me. She taught us how to get a proper latch, and helped me find supplements that increased my supply so that we only had to supplement about 1/3 of my daughter’s daily intake. Without her, we never would have found out that Lily had both tongue & lip ties – we were able to get them both revised, which helped with her latch significantly. With her assistance, we’ve discovered that the cause of Lily’s gas is linked to cow’s milk, and now I’ve cut dairy completely from my diet. I was encouraged to do what I can for my little girl, and reminded that I had worked so hard to be where we are now, and that no one can or should make me feel like I’m not doing enough because I can’t exclusively breastfeed. Sometimes, it’s just not that easy.

Lily is now four months old, and feeding her has become so much more of the love and bond that I had hoped for in the beginning, rather than the stress and heartbreak I had for the first few weeks. While it isn’t necessarily the “cheaper” or the easiest option thus far, I wouldn’t trade any of the time I have with her when she feeds. Holding her to me and knowing that I can give her whatever I can makes every sacrifice, every tear, every moment worth it. I only wish I would have reached out sooner.

11 stories

Tongue tie and oral function

Most tongue tie stories end at the revision. Ours don’t. The harder work usually starts after: latch retraining, exercises, the slow rebuilding.

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4 stories

Slow weight gain

Few moments are more frightening than a one-week visit where the scale goes the wrong way. These are stories about what came next.

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Two doctors and a lactation specialist all said the latch was great.

Breastfeeding was all I had left.

4 stories

Supply concerns

Supply problems come from both directions. Too little. Too much. These stories include both ends, plus the things we found alongside: dairy intolerance, mastitis, lost rhythms.

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1 story

Return to work

Most return-to-work lactation help is logistics: pump schedules, storage, supply. Here’s one family’s, in full.

A mother lying on a bed gazing at her newborn beside her.

Brittany & Nixon·Day two·Storage, pumping rhythm, return to teaching

I would have full on meltdowns. One time the pump just stopped working…que another melt down.

 

Hands down, my breastfeeding journey was one of the most humbling and delicate experiences I have ever had. Nixon is my first baby, and as a typical first-time mom I was overly concerned about every little detail, and breastfeeding was one of them. From how to store my breast milk, to when and how to pump. Do I need to dump? I always wondered if he was eating enough, how do I know? What should I be eating! The questions were endless. I would stay up all night researching and asking my lactation consultant Tessa for all the help she could give. I found that having a lactation coach was very necessary and I was grateful to have Tessa. She came the second day I was home after giving birth and the timing was perfect. She set me up to be successful at the beginning and throughout my breastfeeding journey. One of the major things she did for me was build my confidence, which as most new moms know, can be very low right after having a newborn.

It was not until about month 3 that I felt like I had a good rhythm going. However, just as soon as I was getting the hang of things it was time to return to work. I was beyond nervous to go back to work because I was not sure how I would pump and continue to give my baby all the milk he needed. I am a teacher and finding personal time is a challenge. Fortunately, I worked with a team of all women and every day we had to have team meetings, so that is when and where I pumped. Yep, right there in the back of the room amongst coworkers! Occasionally we would have random (male) visitors that would pop in unexpected, but I had my nursing blanket over me, and this mama kept on pumping! There were times I spilled milk in the meetings, and I would have full on meltdowns. One time the pump just stopped working…que another melt down. I am very thankful that the women I worked with were very caring and understanding so I never felt uncomfortable, for the most part. I had a steady schedule planned while at work and then after work would bring its own challenges at times.

It was exactly 11 months when Nixon decided he was over nursing, and I cried like the baby. I continued to pump but I just could not produce enough milk. I took fenugreek and tried various teas and techniques, but it was as if my body just knew it was time to stop. I supplemented with a European brand of formula and Nixon loved it. My goal was always to nurse/pump for 12 months, so I was very disappointed in myself that I came up a month shy. I kept telling myself that it was ok, we had a long run, I did my best, but the time I spent nursing my baby was very precious to me and I longed for it when it was over. Now he is 16 months and healthy and happy. I have learned to trust my body and my baby for we both are in sync with one another.

6 stories

Beyond the first weeks

Most lactation relationships end after the first six weeks. Many of these families kept coming back. Well-visits, second babies, transitions we didn’t predict at the start.

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