For those of you that have read my first two blog posts you will know I am a mum to two boys. They are now 5 and 3 years old. My boys, their daddy and our puppy are my world and I am aware of just how lucky I am. I have had two pregnancies and two “healthy” babies. (Although there have been some issues, which I wrote about in my April Blog Post) I know not everyone is so lucky. But, and there is a big but, I am grieving. I am grieving the breastfeeding relationship I won’t have again. Both boys have were breastfed. It wasn’t something I thought I would do for long when I was pregnant with Henry. I was scared about feeding in public and what my family would say. But my husband was adamant that Henry would be breastfed till 6 months. And do you know what? His insistence that we didn’t have formula in the house “just in case” was the best thing ever. There were days where I had been glued to the sofa with a feeding baby all day and simply wanted somebody else to take over. Days where I just wanted to stop. But I was once told don’t stop on a bad day and, well because there wasn’t an option, I didn’t. Henry was fed until he was 14 months old and we cut feeds down gradually from 12 months. I am immensely proud of this fact. But when he turned a year old my husband and I did start thinking about wanting him to have a brother or sister. I had lactational amenorrhea while feeding and it seemed unlikely that I could continue feeding and have second pregnancy relatively close together. Together we decided to stop. As proud as I was to reach 14 months of feeding, it still hurts that I weaned Henry (who was showing no signs of stopping himself) early. Was it the right or wrong thing to do? I am not sure, I don’t think I ever will be. I found out I was expecting again in August 2011, although we had no idea when Baby 2 would arrive as my cycle had not settled. Our ‘dating scan’ was just that. After a less than ideal pregnancy Isaac arrived 5 days passed his due date in just 18 minutes. He was a good 10 minutes old when paramedics arrived and nearly 40 minutes old when the midwife arrived. We had been booked for a home birth, I didn’t ever think we would be doing it unassisted though. Before the paramedics and midwives arrived Isaac had skin to skin and he had latched. I naively thought our journey would be easy! How wrong could I be! Over the first 72 hours of his life Isaac fed for 50 hours. He didn’t sleep and only settled in my arms (thank heavens for the slings I had at my disposable). I was exhausted and sore. But on Day 5 I thought I was super woman. He was weighed and had not lost any birth weight, he was in fact 10g heavier. As was common at time I was then left by my midwife and received a phone call on day 10. “Is he feeding?”, “Plenty of wet nappies”, “how are you feeling?”. My responses were all positive and we were discharged. I didn’t want to tell her it hurt and he was feeding all day and all night. On Day 11 – he stopped feeding! I didn’t know what to do? Did I ring the postnatal ward (Isaac was a home birth so hadn’t been in it)? I didn’t have community midwives number as it was on my notes and the…
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