| Wholesome Mamma Evolutionary Parenting, Nutrition, Breastfeeding, Baby Wearing |
What I Wish I Knew About Breastfeeding Before I Became A Mom https://wholesomemamma.in/wish-knew-breastfeeding-became-mom/ |

Breastfeeding is natural. It’s also one of the toughest tasks a new mom has to face. Why is something so natural so dam hard?
The science and the evidence and clearly the physiological truth is that breasts are meant to feed babies. Our bodies are designed so and so are our babies. Why then do so many women stop breastfeeding because they find it so hard? Why does something so natural end up giving heartache, nipple pain, plugged ducts, and other painful contraptions?
Many of the initial breastfeeding problems stem from the baby being (almost) the same as he was for 100’s and 1000’s of years with the same primal needs, where as the mom is a woman of today with a lifestyle and schedule that is alien to the baby. Stone age baby, modern mom. Kind of like how all modern health problems stem from our bodies not evolving fast enough for the modern pace of life. (Paleo anyone?) But that’s of course for another discussion.
Coupled with birth- undoubtedly one of the most natural and beautiful occurrences on this planet – occurring in an unnatural setting, and then the baby being whisked away from the mother for ‘check ups’ for no apparent reason. In a natural habitat (ie. when placed on the mother where she belongs) a newborn will initiate breastfeeding herself. Puppies do it as do all other mammalian young, as long as they are in the right habitat ie. on the mom, they will latch on.
Then there are the myths surrounding breastfeeding. People around the mother are convinced she is not making enough milk if the baby whimpers even after a feed. For the baby the breast is his home. He wants to be at the breast all the time not because he is hungry and you’re not making enough milk, but because that’s where he feels safe and loved. The breast is never empty and the breast is constantly making milk. It’s not a bottle that gets empty. The more the baby suckles or the more you pump the more milk there is.
Note: I’ve said many of the problems relate to the list mentioned above not all. Many times moms don’t manage to breastfeed for very long thanks to these reasons but sometimes moms can’t make enough milk genuinely. Hormonal issues play a role and poor nutrition in the perinatal period also has its place but that’s for another post.
But for the majority of moms, here are some thoughts that can help a new mom breastfeed and some if these things I wish I knew earlier so that the journey could have been smoother:
I wouldn’t change a second of my nearly 20 months and still going strong nursing relationship in spite of initial screw ups and I hope this post helps new moms out there establish one too.
Thanks for reading. Chime in with thoughts/ comments.