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Picture this: Your pet dog is in labor. Instead of leaving
her in the quiet corner she has chosen, you bundle her into the
car and take her to a strange, brightly lit house bustling with
strangers who keep poking and peering at her. As each puppy
is born, it is positioned at one of her teats for a few minutes
to see if it will latch on. If it doesn't, it's washed, wrapped,
and put in a separate box until later.
When your watch tells you the puppies
are hungry, you take them from their little boxes and put them
with their mother. Some are too sleepy or too frantic to
nurse at first, but most of them finally settle in. After
5 minutes, you remove them from the teats (not an easy task; they
don't want to let go) and rearrange them on different teats, where
they may or may not reattach. When your watch tells you they
are full, you remove them (still not an easy job), wrap them well,
and return them to their separate boxes. If they cry before
it's time to be hungry again, you jiggle them, distract them, or
try to get them to suck on a pretend teat. At night, you
listen to them cry in their separate boxes while they learn to
self-comfort.
Do you think your dog will have an easy
labor and birth? Will the puppies have any trouble learning
to nurse? Will the mother and puppies feel relaxed and comfortable
together? Have you found the simplest way to keep the puppies
warm and content? Are you the best one to judge when the
puppies need to nurse? Do you have the feeling you're
putting a lot of unnecessary energy into this project? | We
were mammals long before we were intellectuals. We can use
our intellect to overcome birth and breastfeeding problems, but
it's much easier if those problems aren't there in the first place. Birth
goes more smoothly and quickly for any mammal with quiet and privacy. Keep
that in mind when you choose your birth place, and pull the blanket
over your head if you must, to find your own private space. Give
your baby time to get used to breathing, seeing, and hearing before
expecting her to nurse, but keep her with you until she does. There's
plenty of time for cleaning and measuring later. Interrupting
that first hour interferes with your instincts and hers, and can
make nursing more complicated for both of you.
"Wear" your baby. Her heart rate,
breathing, and temperature are most stable in your arms. Share
sleep with her, as her ancestors always did. Nurse her
before she cries, and don't ask her for a reason. If she's
nursing contentedly on one side, let her stay there. The
other side will keep. You'll find your baby cries least
if you treat her like the baby mammal that she is. Your
instincts to keep her close and content are the instincts that
have always helped babies thrive, and you'll both be less stressed
if you follow them. Best of all, you'll have more energy
for living and loving if you put less energy into separating. Why
make a simple job complicated?
(Oh, and by the way, do take the puppies
out of those silly little boxes!)
©2001 Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC
136 Ellis
Hollow Creek Road Ithaca, NY 14850
Used with permission
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