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Your Body is already doing everything
that needs to be done. By the time you are several months
pregnant, you're ready to make milk and your breasts contain colostrum,
the "pre-milk" that your baby gets in the first few days after
birth. "Toughening" your nipples won't help soreness. Learning
how to hold your baby for nursing will. Nipples are
nothing more than a "target" to help a baby know where to nurse;
all shapes and sizes work. If your nipples are the kind that never
stand out, they may be a bit confusing for your baby at first,
so ask about ways to encourage "shy" nipples. Other than
that, treat your breasts and nipples just the way you treat the
backs of your knees, but without the soap. The little bumps
on the darker area around your nipple produce a cleanser/moisturizer
that does all the work for you. If you have very dry skin,
Lansinoh®, a very pure lanolin especially for nipples, may
be helpful.
Your Mind needs
more preparation than your body. Nursing is learned, not
instinctive, and most mothers in this country have had little chance
to learn. Try to go to at least one La Leche League meeting
before your baby is born. You'll see how other mothers handle
their nurslings, have a chance to hear and ask questions, and meet
local breastfeeding specialists. Some good books on breastfeeding
are:
- Dr. Jack Newman's Guide to Breastfeeding (available
through most bookstores)
- The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding (available through
La Leche League and most bookstores)
- Bestfeeding: Getting Breastfeeding Right for You (La
Leche League and most bookstores)
- The Nursing Mother's Companion (most bookstores).
| Buy or borrow one of them, and become
familiar with it. Avoid all formula company information!
It may sound supportive, but it's designed to help breastfeeding
fail.
Your Childbirth Classes are
important. Breastfeeding is a basic, powerful biological
system, and you can nurse no matter what kind of start you and
your baby have. But it's easiest when your baby is born
without drugs in her system, and when she has unbroken contact
with you until after her first nursing. Most alert babies
nurse within the first hour, and that first nursing may be a
very long one. Take your time and enjoy each other. There's
plenty of time for weighing and measuring afterwards.
Your Wardrobe already
exists. Most mothers just wear their regular two-piece
outfits and pull the top up on one side to nurse. The baby's
body covers everything that the top doesn't cover. A T-shirt
or button-front nightgown works well at night. A bra is
optional at all times of your life, and doesn't prevent sagging. If
you want to wear one, make it comfortably loose so that it gives
you easy access for nursing. Some stretchy ones simply
pull up. Others have a nursing flap. If you're an
unusual size, call La Leche League for good sources. In
all bras and tops, you'll find cotton far more comfortable than
synthetics. Sections of cloth diaper or diaper liners folded
around layered toilet paper make inexpensive breast pads for
the early weeks, although most women never use pads at all.
Other Equipment isn't
necessary. You've got what it takes!
©2001 Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC
136 Ellis
Hollow Creek Road Ithaca, NY 14850
Used with permission
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