This is only slightly relevant, but it does make me laugh!In the Smith house, October 5th means more than just birthday cake.  It  means a  transition to whole milk and sippy cups.  It means Mac's  bottles are put  away and my trusty Medela pump, and all of the  delightful gear that  goes with it, is packed up.  It means I have  accomplished even more than  I set out to do: I breastfed my son for a  year.
I don't speak publicly about nursing often, as it's a pretty  personal topic and I don't want to be found by keywords that bring out the crazies.  (Remember when  boys typed 58008 in their calculators and giggled while reading it upside  down? Some haven't outgrown that instinct.)
That  said, I remember googling "breastfeeding encouragement" at 4am last   October.  I recall reading and rereading a list of 101 reasons to nurse   - it was all that got me through a particularly trying day.  I slept   with ice packs and heating pads and Advil by my side, scrounging the internet looking for ways to make a go of this nursing thing.  I'd  love to encourage even one woman who comes across this blog.
Late  last summer, when asked, I said I'd try  breastfeeding and see how it  went - no pressure.  If it worked, great.   If it didn't, we'd try  formula.  (But, and I remember this 
so clearly, I'd never breastfeed "for a full year" or anything.  I knew so few women who had done that; it almost seemed odd.)
What  I didn't account for in my lackadaisical "we'll see how this  goes"  attitude is myself; I'm far from laidback when it comes to even  the  most vague commitments.  I put tremendous pressure on myself to make  it  work in the early  weeks, when I hit almost every bump in the  book.  I couldn't  quit unless it was on my terms; I knew my problems  were only  superficial, not the "my baby isn't getting enough food" or  "my body  physically can't do this" kind.  I felt bound to make this  work until I 
really knew I couldn't anymore.
My first goal was two weeks, which I considered a legitimate try, but I really wanted to make it to six.  For a hundred reasons, exhaustion not the least  of which, those  were some of the most challenging weeks I've ever lived  through - but I  did survive, and even enjoy the overall experience.   Just not every last  moment.
There were nights when Mac and I  both cried out of frustration.  There  were prayers said about my  inability to do anything  right and about, shall we say, my 58008.  I  laughed with a neighbor that I  hadn't prayed about my bust for 15  years, since I wanted  desperately just to 
have one.  My neighbor  was right - those  moments are humbling in the extreme, but they serve to  give us  perspective, to make us entirely reliant on the Lord and  thankful for those who support us.
The early weeks of  breastfeeding felt harder than labor because they were a choice.  Labor  was  definite; it was going to happen whether I got on board or not.    Breastfeeding was a choice I made eight times a day; it was  taxing  physically and emotionally.
After I made it to six  weeks, a weight lifted and things got much, much easier.  I wanted to  nurse for the remainder of my maternity leave (12 weeks) and see how  things went when I was back in the office.
Had I  remained at my full time job, I would not have been able to  continue  breastfeeding.  I was fortunate to have a "mothers' room" on site, but  pumping four times a day was not working out  well for me; I dipped into  my frozen stash more than I liked.  I 
might have  made it  to my (big, shiny, overall, please let me get there!) six month  goal  if I'd stayed at my job, but it would have been a stretch.
After  reaching that "far off but finally here" six month mark in April, I really 
did commit   to see how it goes.  We'd stop nursing when it stopped working for us.   It never did, especially when I thought of the money I  was  saving, of the ease, benefits and convenience for both me and Mac.
Being home with Mac more made breastfeeding much easier than  the ordeal it  felt like at the start.  The irony is that once you're  more rested,  once the baby sleeps longer and you know him more and  understand more  about nursing, he starts eating less often. And you start feeling more sane, a funny side effect of longer stretches of sleep.
Once those stars align, it's all downhill.  Meals take  less time.  You  fumble less and succeed without nearly as much effort.  You feel more  confident and prepared and know what to expect.  The  beginning is a  perfect storm of exhaustion, hormones, ignorance,  confusion and panic.   Once I pushed through the rough start we had,  though, things got  easier.  Enjoyable, even.
Many react with surprise when they find out Mac has nursed  this first year  of his life.  Truth be told, I'm surprised, too.   Surprised that our  difficulties last fall went away.  Surprised that I  chose to do  something for a full year that caused me moments of  heartache and  discomfort early on; I'm a person who tends to run from  such things.   Most of all, I'm surprised at how sad I am to see this part of my life  come to a close.
We're phasing out nursing times and praying  that Mac  learns to drink from, not just chew on, sippy cups.  By his first birthday, we will be done with  breastfeeding.
Mac nurses less in a week now than he did each day  of his early months.   (Eight times a day x mom and baby who are new at  breast  feeding = a lot of time getting the hang of things.  In his  twelfth  month, Mac's three mom-based meals a day totaled less than 30  minutes daily.)
Many days, mealtimes are the only moments I get to  hold a still, silent Mac, when he's not  pushing off to get something he wants.  They're fleeting, sweet  times - and they're almost  over.
I know some women choose to nurse past twelve months, but  for us now is  the time to wean.  It's the start of a new chapter and  the end of a  bittersweet one.
It's another milestone in a wonderful year.  Eleven   months ago you could have knocked me over with a feather to hear that   I'd be 
sad to give up what was such a difficult part of motherhood.  And yet I am.
If  Bradley and I are blessed with another baby one day, my   goal (again) would be to nurse for six months.  In the beginning,   this goal will seem impossible, but I'm armed with experience and   hopeful that I can be successful again. I hope I can  start with small mini-goals and give myself the time and freedom to truly see what works for us.  I know every situation must be different.
For now, I'm trying not to feel nuts for wistfully ending  something that  has had its ups and downs.  How can I miss  what was once 
so hard for me?  Maybe that's the magic of motherhood - it's hard to explain, but even the tough stuff can be sweet.
 
10 comments:
I can honestly say that I know how you feel. I was there once and your story sounds just like mine. My daughter is 15 months now and the transition was nothing but great. I'm sure Mac will do just fine during this transition period and I know you will, too!
Anne - what you did was a wonderful, special gift to little Mac! Although I quit nursing at 6 weeks, but pumped until 7 months and had enough milk to last til 11 months, this is one thing in my life that I can say I set a goal and actually accomplished it. I am not a boastful person but love to brag about this one...and you should too!!
Anne, what a sweet post!
I must say, I will not be sad to pack away all the Medela stuff when that day comes!
Way to Go, Anne! And Happy Birthday to Sweet Mac!
I have a niece on the way - due in february! my sister is new to whole breastfeeding and if she should. What would you recommend and for how long? This is her first child. oh and happy birthday to MAC ! I wish my niece would be here sooner than later but then again im afraid once she's here time will fly by and ill be wishing she was still in my sisters tummy ! anyway, have a great monday :)
Congratulations!!! What a wonderful gift you gave Mac, and what an amazing sacrifice of your body and your time that you gave to your sweet boy. I nursed all three of my kiddos (for 5, 12, and 7 months), although Emma Claire was the only one who made it to a year, and I know how bittersweet it is to wean, especially after making it for that long. Proud of you, mama! :)
Congratulations on such a huge accomplishment!! That is something you should be truly proud of, especially since extended breastfeeders seem few and far between these days. My goal is a year as well, currently on month 5!
I feel like you just read that entire post out of my mind...can I borrow that whenever Mills turns a year old? Haha! :) I'm hanging in until a year, too (that's my goal, of course), and I just know I will have the same bittersweet feeling!
Way to go, momma! Such a precious accomplishment!
Anne, I just now read this post for the first time, coincidentally as I was nursing C! She's 13 months now, with no intentions of giving it up...although I'm trying to slowly cut back. Like you, it's about the only "still" time I get to spend with her...and I am so surprised (and proud of myself) I've made it this long! Pat yourself on the back :)
This is a really old post of yours, but I am reading it for the first time and felt compelled to comment because I am almost 7 months into breastfeeding my son and am hoping to make it at least the full year. I agree with you entirely that the small goals and a determined spirit are what it takes because it truly is hard and trying at first. I'll be curious to hear your experience now with Mary Brooks and whether there is again that difficult learning curve. I still have a love/hate relationship with my trusty Medela pump and love the weekends, when I can put it away till Monday. But I know I'm doing something great for my son and really special for our relationship (agreed on the only quiet, still time with him), and that makes it all worth it. Well done!
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