ChatterBank6 mins ago
Breastfeeding. Demand or routine?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Also, you can hire hospital style breast pumps from somewhere (I can't remember) but your hospital/midwife will know. I had one for my preemie. If baby is having breast milk in a bottle, you can feed them breast milk, be secure in the fact that they have had x ounces and shouldn't really be hungry anymore and it will be easier to establish a routine. I had to do this for my preemie because I had 4 other children and I couldn't have the baby needing a feed when I was cooking/taking them to school/ playing etc etc. it can be done.
But as I said to another mum, try and chill out. if you start out on demand and it doesn't work, you can switch to routine and viceversa. In many ways you can wait till baby is here and then just trial and error. With kids it's often the best laid plans and all that.
Hi poppy, if you are not a single parent you could try to adopt the routine my wife got into, she would put the baby on her breast and then sort of fall 90% asleep change over if required, then when the baby had finished feeding she would give it to me to finish off and go back to 100% sleep , leaving me to change nappies and get it back to sleep and in bed.
I seem to think that nobody we ever knew had actually imposed their intended routine on their baby without causing so much noise and loss of sleep for everybody concerned.
From my experience there is a compromise between demand feeding and rigid routine. The big problem with demand feeding is that the baby will often just snack rather than having a full feed because it's "on tap". I did feed on demand, but set a minimum gap of 2 1/2 - 3 hours to give my boobs time to refill if nothing else! Babies adapt very well to any routine you want to set them, even when very young. Don't be scared of the crying - a little crying doesn't hurt them at all, it's their only way of communication, and babies often have a good grizzle when falling asleep so I wouldn't automatically pick them up at the first noise. Putting a baby to bed awake so they learn to get themselves to sleep is probably the best advice I was given.
It's all tiring at first, but it just gets better and better - you've got a whole world of smiles and cuddles ahead of you.
A bit of crying does do babies good, it is in fact the only exercise they get and really gets their oxygen levels up and they heart rate going. All good after being still for 9 months.
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