| As new mothers, we expect to
parent the way we have learned to parent - and there are
many different styles. But a baby's "expectations" are not learned.
They are the instincts and reflexes of all babies around the
world, and they are the same as they were thousands of years
ago. Babies are not helpless. They are highly skilled for the
world they "expect" to be born into. When we change their world,
we make life harder for them. You may not want to live in a cave
with your baby, but it helps to know what your baby "expects" the
start of life to be like.
DURING HER BIRTH she
expects not to have to deal with drugs. The drug that affects
you for only a few hours can cause her problems for days, making
it hard for her to nurse with normal efficiency and frequency. If
you're trying to decide about a medication, remember that your
decision can affect much more than the birth.
RIGHT AFTER HE'S BORN your
baby expects to stay with you. After he spends some time
next to your skin, getting used to breathing and seeing and hearing,
he'll begin to think about his first meal, and he can actually
crawl "commando style" right up to your breast, find your nipple,
latch on, and have a long nursing, with no help from anyone! If
he is taken away from you to be washed and measured before his
first nursing, or if he has drugs to cope with, he may not be able
to complete those first activities as well, and your own instinctive
responses to him will be changed. Breastfeeding works just
fine under all kinds of birth circumstances, but it is easiest
and most thrilling for both of you if your time together is unbroken
until after that first nursing.
| AFTER HER FIRST NURSING she
expects a long sleep at your side or in your arms. She has
heard your heart and breathing and has felt your warmth all her
life, and she will actually have a steadier heart and breathing
rate herself if she stays in touch with you. She may want
to sleep longer than the hospital staff would like her to. They
want to make sure that everyone's plumbing works before you go
home, so you may have to fight nature a bit to encourage frequent
nursings at first. But she'll soon be waking on her own,
nursing, and letting go when she's satisfied, just like any other
baby mammal.
AT HOME he
expects to stay close to you. All mammal babies have some
way to protect themselves: speed, camouflage, safety in numbers. Human
babies protect themselves by being held. He'll feel safest
and calmest when he's next to you, where the tigers can't eat him
and the ants can't crawl on him! He expects to set his own pace
- probably nursing more often than you imagined - finishing one
breast before starting the other, and perhaps not wanting both
breasts each time. He expects you to respond quickly to his
sounds, and he expects not to have to cry for what he needs. He
expects to be near you at night as well as during the day, and
will probably sleep better with you next to him.
Your baby "expects" to be in your arms and "expects" you
to listen to him, not to a clock or an instruction book. If
you meet his expectations, you'll have a happier baby. And
that means a happier life together.
©2001 Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC
136 Ellis
Hollow Creek Road Ithaca, NY 14850
Used with permission
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