Search Results for: peer counselor

Once Upon a Time- A tale of a journey towards being an IBCLC

by Star Rodriguez

Once upon a time, I was a brand new mom-to-be and I was going to breastfeed.  I was determined and informed and ready to go.
And then I had my baby and everything went crazy.  If there was a breastfeeding complication, I felt like I was hit with it.  I had horrifically bad advice and support.  We made it 14 months, but it was a serious struggle.  In that struggle, there were a few beacons of awesomeness – my pediatrician, who was not well informed on breastfeeding but was totally willing to admit that and send me elsewhere for realistic help , and a couple of IBCLCs.  There were also a few terrible people, including nurses and an IBCLC.
At one point during the whole ordeal, I remember thinking, “You know, I’m going to look into being an IBCLC, because women need help, and if this is any indication, they’re not getting it.”  At the time, the requirements dictated what I thought was an absurd amount of contact and lactation specific education hours for me to be able to do it, so I put the thought from my mind and moved on.
Fast forward three years, and I have baby #2.  The incorrect information and bad support in the hospital persisted.  Luckily, I was no longer a novice – but even as an educated mom who had breastfed before, I found myself getting a little nervous about the scary picture the nurses painted as my daughter – delivered at 42 weeks by c-section following hours of IV fluids – lost “an excessive amount of weight in the first 24 hours.”  A simple Google search found research papers identifying IV fluids as a determining factor in inflated birth weights – however, none of the nurses at the hospital where my daughter was delivered professed to know anything about that.
It was then that my interest in promoting correct, evidence based lactation support came back to the forefront.  I was lucky to obtain a job as a Breastfeeding Peer Counselor at WIC, and I decided to use those counseling hours to take the IBCLC exam.  You know, eventually.  Like 2012.  I would take some college classes to meet the 2012 requirements for the exam (here are the official requirements, criticized by many for being slanted towards those with a medical background – ie, nurses and doctors.)
In August, a series of random events occurred that left me with ability – and a need – to spend more time at work.  What was very part time increased and I began to wonder – what if I sat the IBCLC this year?  After doing all sorts of math, I realized that getting all of my contact hours (I needed a thousand) was possible, if only just.  I talked to my boss and family, and decided to go for it.  Thus began a crash course in everything lactation related.  I felt, for quite some time, like my life revolved around working and studying.  I read everything from textbooks on lactation to research papers to statistics texts to Medications and Mother’s Milk.  I joined study groups online and made flash cards and attempted to memorize the difference in looks between a herpes blister on the breast versus poison ivy versus eczema.  There is a ridiculous amount of knowledge on breastfeeding out there, and some of it is quite different based on where you are globally.  Since the IBCLC is an international exam (so your certification can be used anywhere in the world) there were certain things that I had to condition myself to think of in a global context instead of in an American one.  I also had to fit in 45 hours of lactation specific education.
I sat the IBCLC exam on July 25th 2011.  It was probably the most daunting test of my entire life, and I quite honestly am still not certain how I did on it.   Most people who take the IBCLC exam pass; however, the exam grading process is very complex.  It’s graded on the “Nedelsky” method, which is incredibly complex.  Not only that, but during the exam, all candidates are given sheets allowing them to dispute questions that they consider unfair or incorrect.  These sheets are all taken into account and certain questions can be thrown out based on them.  Candidates do not know, going into the exam, what percentage will be passing; it varies by year and is not known until the day the results are released.  All in all, it takes the International Board of Lactation Consultant Examiners about 3 months to get the results out.  For me, this will be Friday October 28th.  Candidates can use a code sent to them to check pass/fail status on IBLCE’s website, but they do not get the full breakdown of their results until they receive them in the mail.
For those of you considering taking the test, I urge you to go for it.  It was a scary and huge endeavor, yes, but it was also so very worthwhile.  Just be certain that you are adhering to the new guidelines for 2012 and beyond, and be aware the IBLCE changes them semi-regularly.  For those of you reading this who, like me, are awaiting results, I hope you did a fantastic job, and I raise my hypothetical glass to you.  Based on my experiences, we need driven, passionate, educated people in the lactation world, making a difference for new moms and babies.

 

 
 Star is a breastfeeding peer counselor for a WIC in the Midwest.  She sat the IBCLC  exam for  the first time this summer, and is anxiously awaiting the end of October.   She also sits on the  breastfeeding task force in her town, is helping her  community’s Early Head Start redefine  their breastfeeding support, and is the  driving force behind a local breastfeeding campaign.  In  the remainder of her free  time, she chases around her nursling and preschooler.

Evenflo: Attaching shame to breastfeeding should NEVER be funny.

by Star Rodriguez

My former in-laws are fantastic people.  They are absolutely lovely, and I still maintain a positive relationship with them, despite being divorced from their son.

They were also very uncertain about breastfeeding.

My ex mother in law was a teen mother in the seventies, when there was little breastfeeding support and absolutely no support for teen mothers.  My ex father in law and his family are incredibly conservative folk with standards of modesty that are as high as they go in most of the United States.  My former sister in law nursed her first for a brief time and then stopped, choosing to not attempt with the second.  So when I had my first, there was no precedent for exclusively breastfeeding.

During the entire time I nursed my daughter, male members of the family left the room rather than be near an exposed boob.  In certain areas, I was asked to cover up (politely, I will add.)  My mother in law lamented once or twice that she never got to feed the baby.

Still, I stuck to my guns, nursing my baby on demand, anywhere that we were.  If we were at someone’s home and they wanted me to cover up, I respected their wishes, despite disagreeing that it was necessary.  My husband became a staunch supporter of breastfeeding, and if someone said something that he thought hinted at criticism, he would start recounting benefits of breastfeeding and risks of formula feeding.  When we did have some nursing issues, and I had to work to overcome them, my in-laws had become so used to breastfeeding that they were staunch supporters in my struggle to make it all work out.   For you to know what a 180 that was, you should know that when I told my mother in law in the beginning that I was nursing – and on demand – she asked me how she would possibly be able to have my daughter stay overnight with her.  This was at a few days old, and, yes, she absolutely meant In the not too distant future.

Fast forward to yesterday, when I heard about this Evenflo ad that everyone was up in arms about.  Let me first say that Evenflo has the distinct displeasure of being the worst reviewed pump company with my clients.  They constantly report things like breaking pumps, bad customer service, pain, and an inability to get milk out.  These can all significantly affect a breastfeeding relationship.  In one case, a mother using an Evenflo pump had some pretty awful nipple damage from a malfunctioning pump.  Despite the fact that their pumps were terrible, I would recommend other, decent Evenflo products like I was their marketing division, since they were one of the few WHO Code compliant companies.  (What’s the WHO code?  Here’s the official document of the World Health Organization’s Code of ethics for marketing breastmilk substitutes, another explaining it in more detail (last 2 pages are summary) and the wikipedia article on the code.)

Evenflo has since decided to abandon the WHO Code in favor of more marketing, and one of the results is this advertisement that mocks breastfeeding in public, depicting uncomfortable and pushy in-laws who claim that breastfeeding means no one else can feed and thus bond with the baby, and includes an awkward scene after the mom pumps (We wanted to be able to share the video with you but after a strong backlash it appears to have been pulled but not after millions had already viewed it.)

There are so many terrible things about this ad.  The bullying, stereotypical in-laws.  The dad who won’t speak up.  The implication that breast size is tied to milk making capacity (it isn’t.)  How long the mother in law implies that breastfeeding takes.  The idea that bonding can only come from feeding. The horrified face of the father in law after drinking the breastmilk-laced coffee.  Listen, I like low-brow humor, and even I was disgusted by this.  In fact, when I showed my husband it (who does not take violations of the Code or breastfeeding stuff as seriously as I do) he said, “Really?  Is that a joke?  They’re trying to sell pumps with that?  But it makes breastfeeding and breastmilk look terrible and disgusting!”

I work with women every day.  Women who want to breastfeed, but…  They can’t trust that their baby is getting enough.  They can’t get over societal-induced fears of public breastfeeding.  They can’t believe that their bodies can produce something that is superior to science.  And so when I watch things like this, I cringe.  You see, I was that girl.  And I had an in-law experience that could have turned bad.  We conquered it with positivity, but if I had not had a good support group and encouragement, that might not have been the case.  And so this ad disgusts me and fills me full of rage.  Who are you, Evenflo, to tell a mom to hide in the bedroom and pump instead of standing up for herself?  Who are you to undermine someone’s confidence and call it fun and games?

There is one silver lining to this terrible ad, though.  In my time on Evenflo Baby’s Twitter and Facebook and in comments on articles about this, I have seen both breast and formula feeding women standing up and calling this ad horrible.  That warms my heart.  Moms have it hard, no matter how they are feeding their baby.  Seeing the Mommy Wars put aside to focus on something that does a disservice to women as a whole is pretty awesome.

Evenflo has issued a half-apology PR statement on their Facebook and Twitter that reads, “We hear you. We appreciate how passionate you are. We are equally passionate and fully support all moms and the personal choices they make everyday.”  The video remained up until this morning.  But while this particular video is currently unavailable, the rest in the “savvy parents” series are similarly demeaning and damaging.  You can view those here.  In fact, check out their webisode of how to survive 3am feedings.  It’s served up with an (un)healthy side of parental stupidity, sexism (towards men- too stupid to deal with bottles), and really, really bad breastfeeding practices (giving even a bottle of expressed breastmilk at night could lesson a mom’s night milk making, crucial to supply!) not to mention what mother wouldn’t be in tears over all the spilled expressed breast milk!

Please join me and the countless others in letting Evenflo know that this isn’t ok.  Companies do listen to feedback, especially negative feedback.  Their Facebook and Twitter are both open for commenting, and I urge you to do so.  Let’s let Evenflo know that savvy parenting looks much different than they think.

 

Editors note:

I shared this on Facebook and I’ll share it here.  The problem I have with this video is that it perpetuates this idea that breastfeeding is weird, gross, awkward and prevents others bonding with the baby.  All myths and all ones willingly encouraged by a society that undervalues breastfeeding and dismisses the women that breastfeed. 

The commercial is obviously campy, it’s over the top, overacted, and ridiculous. Obviously intended to be funny.  However, even with recognizing those aspects it plants the idea that a mom should just run off to a room to pump to spare anyone the discomfort of seeing her breastfeed and give into the demands of someone that feels it is their right to feed her baby as well.  If a woman wants to pump and let others feed her baby a bottle of her milk, fine, her choice. If she feels forced to pump by harassing individuals it’s another matter entirely. This commercial, in all it’s camped up attempts at humor, gives onlookers “permission” to say to a breastfeeding mom “why can’t you just go pump so someone else can feed the baby” or “you should bring a bottle of pumped milk so you don’t have to breastfeed in public.”  Or worse like “you can’t do that here.”

Anything communicating that breastfeeding is wrong, gross, or something a woman should feel awkward and ashamed about just isn’t funny. Just like I will never find racist or sexist humor funny, I will never find humor that attempts to shame breastfeeding moms funny.  Period. ~Jessica

 

 Star is a breastfeeding peer counselor for a WIC in the Midwest.  She sat the IBCLC  exam for the first time this summer, and is anxiously awaiting the end of October.   She also sits on the breastfeeding task force in her town, is helping her  community’s Early Head Start redefine their breastfeeding support, and is the  driving force behind a local breastfeeding campaign.  In the remainder of her free  time, she chases around her nursling and preschooler.

Good Cop, Bad Cop- On the Breastfeeding Police

I was relieved when Anne Tegtmeier spoke up on a TLB Facebook thread that took what I thought was somewhat of a surprising turn after I shared a link asking for Leakies to go show their support to a blogger frustrated with preparing to breastfeed.  In fact, I wanted to copy and paste Anne’s comment exactly as it was here on the website and share it all over the breastfeeding advocate world.  When I asked her permission to use her comment it morphed into “or you could write a guest post.”  Lucky for us, that’s exactly what she did.  Issuing a few important reminders and challenging us all to think before we speak, Anne encourages us to keep in mind that there’s a lot we don’t know.  Anne’s thoughtful and powerful writing can also be found on her blog Dou-la-la and Dou-la-la Facebook page.

The more you know, the more you realize you DON’T know.

This principle actually has something of a formal name: the Dunning-Kruger effect, named after an experiment at Cornell in 1999. In this blog post, the author puts it in this apt nutshell: “The less you know about a subject, the less you believe there is to know in total. Only once you have some experience do you start to recognize the breadth and depth you have yet to plunder.” And in some situations, what you don’t know CAN hurt.

What does this have to do with breastfeeding? It has a whole lot to do with support and advocacy.

Let me back up. The other day. The Leaky Boob posted a link to a Cafe Mom piece written by an expecting mom who is facing some significant challenges – not contraindications, but challenges. Twins, a prior breast reduction surgery, the likelihood of a cesarean birth: all present potential complications on the road to breastfeeding. The author vented what I read as very understandable frustration in her experience of seeking non-judgmental support for these concerns and finding, instead, the “breastfeeding police”. If you’ve been around the mom blogs and parenting sites for a while, as if an APB had been sent out, you know what happened next.

Here’s one sample; there were quite a few others in a sadly similar vein. Insert [sic] throughout:

“the “i wasn’t able to breastfeed” (no offense) is a mental thing. just like not being “able” to loose weight. its all mind over matter and seems to me no one really realizes it now a days.”

Where to even begin with a statement like this?

And so, to start with, my response was as follows:

I’m starting to feel that if I could get one wish and make one impact on the world, it will be to bridge the gap between these two worlds. YES, I do think that women who feel they ‘can’t’ produce enough milk have often been sabotaged (i.e. booby-trapped) in ways they are unaware of. And one of the things that most often thwarts them is misinformation.

HOWEVER.  Statements that imply that really, everyone can breastfeed and if they didn’t succeed, they just didn’t try hard enough, mind over matter? EVERY BIT as misinformed as the bad advice that might have led a mom to undermine her supply or her belief in her supply. I know it’s highly unorthodox for a breastfeeding advocate to call other breastfeeding advocates out when their intentions really were good, but I see so much poor advice online that it’s really starting to get to me.

Case in point: somewhere on a different page, not long ago, a mom with IGT posted about her struggles. More “lactivists” than I thought possible commented all about how breast size has nothing to do with ability to produce, that an A cup can make just as much as a C cup.

This is only true if the woman’s glandular tissue developed normally – which is NOT ALWAYS THE CASE. Very few of the women who were full of advice had ever heard of hypoplasia/insufficient glandular tissue, let alone known the symptoms. Yes, it is rare, but it’s also REAL. And statements like “It’s all in your mind” not only insult women whose problems were absolutely not imaginary, but reveal a lack of education on the realities of breastfeeding issues. Yes, REAL-LIFE, LEGITIMATE, ACTUAL breastfeeding issues.

Am I suggesting that everyone who wants to support breastfeeding needs to become an IBCLC in order to have an opinion or offer up information? NO. There totally is a place for peer support. What I AM suggesting is that when a mother talks about her difficulties, don’t dismiss them/her, and don’t assume you know everything about the situation. Her difficulties could have been booby-traps, yes. They could also be ‘legitimate’ (in itself a problematic attitude, but I’m rambling enough already). What ALL moms need is respect and support, and to have her experience recognized – she needs to be met with understanding, and we can move forward from there, hopefully armed with more information for the next time, if that’s in the cards. Alienating moms with judgment because you feel that they came from a place of ignorance or were affected by ignorance is not only counterproductive, it’s also, frankly, sometimes hypocritical.

Let’s look at one example in particular: Breastfeeding after a reduction, one of the factors the writer of the above article was facing, can sometimes pose supply challenges to mothers. Some BFAR moms are able to exclusively breastfeed, and some do require supplementation. Are there some things BFAR moms can do to build their supply? Absolutely. Let me tell you what I see time and again when advice is sought online: “Take fenugreek!”

Fenugreek is a galactagogue, an herb that can help to increase a mother’s supply.  Someone who doesn’t know anything about breastfeeding would not know this. Someone who knows some things about breastfeeding might. And that someone sees a mom asking for help on supply issues, and wants to help. Totally good intentions. Here’s the thing: What she likely does not know is HOW fenugreek works to increase a mother’s supply, along with detailed knowledge of how milk production works in the first place, and this is paramount.

Fenugreek works by stimulating the production of prolactin. Prolactin is the hormone that signals a mother’s mammary glands to produce milk. And like any hormone, it is useless without receptors. These receptors are IN the very tissue that was compromised by the prior surgery. Without sufficient prolactin receptors, the mother can take so much fenugreek that she smells like Mrs. Butterworth in Vermont during sugaring season and it won’t make much, if any, difference. Does this mean there is no herbal galactagogue that might help? Not at all – goat’s rue would probably be the most important herb for her to start taking, as it has the potential to help actually BUILD ductal tissue. Fenugreek might then still be helpful, working in conjunction with the goat’s rue, but on its own, increasing prolactin without enough places for it to go? Not so much likely to help.

This is just one example of an an issue where a little knowledge can indeed be a dangerous thing. Other examples abound.

I want to reiterate the last part of my prior comment, though: This does NOT mean that there is not a place for peer support. There so absolutely is is – La Leche League turned the tide on breastfeeding half a century ago and its very foundation was peer support. But part of being a trustworthy resource is knowing when something is beyond your knowledge – even for professionals, certain things are beyond one’s scope of practice, and it is crucial to have the honesty and humility to know when to refer. La Leche League itself has a rigorous course of study for those who want to become leaders, and even then, their reach is limited.

The nomenclature surrounding lactation professionals IS confusing, no doubt. Luckily, the topic has been well-covered recently, so indulge me in a brief linkapalooza. Recently, Lactation Laura did a great post on this, including a link to another blog’s helpful post sussing out the differences between the various alphabet soups you see after people’s names, from CLE to IBCLC; what each means and what each can and cannot do. Best for Babes wrote the must-read “Is your ‘Lactation Specialist’ an Imposter?” Hint: beware of anyone calling themselves a ‘lactation specialist’ without any other specific breastfeeding credential – it would be just as accurate and based on just as much for me to start calling myself the Grand Poobah of Boobs.

I have, myself, with my very own eyes, witnessed a person who had exactly zero credentials or any sort of formal training in breastfeeding essentially hang out a shingle as a professional. It started out innocently enough, with a peer support group, but the “peer” part of the equation started becoming eroded as she decided that she was the leader, even establishing time for one-on-one sessions with moms who needed more help. I don’t think her intentions were malicious or even all that self-serving; it’s not like anyone is ever going to get rich from being a lactation consultant. I think she really did want to help, a good thing – and figured she had breastfed her own babies and read enough books to declare herself an expert – not such a good thing.

And finally, if you’ll permit me one more link, Analytical Armadillo talks about the consequences of subpar breastfeeding support. Here’s a lengthy but potent excerpt:

I’ve seen mums with scabs covering the entire tip of the nipples, coming out misshapen post feed.  Very very low weight gain or static (to the point of being of concern to me – but weirdly in this situation nobody seemed too concerned that at three weeks baby had remained static since the day 3 loss.) Babies never showing signs of sation after mums have been sternly instructed to only use one breast.  Who have all been told to “stick at it it will click”. For some mums, should they not contact alternative support – I often don’t see how things will resolve.

For those who say mum can’t have tried hard enough – let me tell you that I’ve seen mums who have seen no less than five, six or seven, health care professionals in total to specifically help with breastfeeding.  These ranged from a peer supporter to midwives (and “breastfeeding specialist midwives”), and health visitors.  Mums who are on the phone constantly asking for help – yet was persistently told things were “fine” or to “stick at it and they would improve” or the gem of the lot “this is what breastfeeding is like”.

In reality what is often happening is that due to baby feeding so ineffectively at the breast, supply by now determined by baby’s appetite – dwindles fast.  But at this crucial point nobody notices that. The trouble is if nobody finds the cause of the problem, but keeps treating the symptoms – no amount of “persistence” will improve things if there is an unresolved underlying fundamental issue.  Mums are left with a reduced breastmilk supply – because of all that had gone before!  We also know that more evidence now suggests those first few weeks of breastfeeding can be crucial in supply later ie 4-5 months.

I can see how women can believe they truly couldn’t breastfeed – that they tried everything they could think of yet nothing worked; that they reached a point they simply couldn’t take anymore trying. Let’s always remember that we don’t know someones back story or what they endured trying to breastfeed.  That it’s not always a case of just “trying harder” or “persisting longer”; in the above case persistence alone would never have resolved the issues – it’s about effective help, emotional and mental support and accurate information – and most importantly it’s about getting it at the right time.

So what am I saying? Not to ever offer help to a mother online or in person when she’s seeking help and looking for ideas, unless you happen to be an IBCLC (and for the time being, this disqualifies me too)? No. Again, community and peer support can be a mighty and wonderful thing. Our hands don’t have to be totally tied. But be very aware of when you start to go beyond the basics;  I can change a tire, but that doesn’t mean I can therefore rebuild an engine. And be especially mindful of when the dialogue gets into analyzing variables of any individual situation. Often the very best thing you can do is help the mother find good professional support. If you really want to help breastfeeding moms in your area, make a list of your local IBCLCs and La Leche League leaders and meeting times. Write down the contact info for WIC’s peer counselor program. For research-based, solid information, should mom want to look into things more deeply herself, Kellymom is the happening place to be. And never underestimate the need for simple empathy and encouragement.

What I do feel needs to be stamped out are statements judging a mom’s performance – ever, but especially after the fact. If a mom faced challenges that were just insurmountable for her, this is not your opportunity to jump in and Monday Morning Quarterback where she went wrong – especially if that assessment involved anything about mind overcoming matter or how she should have just tried harder. Not only does that kind of crap backfire on the entire ‘movement’, because you’ve just confirmed the image of the overzealous lactivist as The Breastfeeding Police, and not only have you most likely alienated another mother from possibly seeking help in the community again – you are probably wrong.

I implore everyone to check out a pair of new posts by Just West of Crunchy – Top 10 Things Breastfeeding Advocates Should STOP SAYING (to which I give a hearty amen, in case you hadn’t gathered from this whole piece in the first place) and the flip side of the coin, Top 10 Things Breastfeeding Advocates SHOULD Say (testify, sister). I especially love the positive focus of the second post, especially since I’ve done more than my share of venting here. Please, if you read no other link I’ve included here, read this one, especially if you feel that what I’ve written here seems unduly limiting – on the contrary, there really is SO much to be said!

Final disclaimer: I’m just starting out on this pathway to become an IBCLC. I’m not even close to knowing everything there is to know about breastfeeding. But I do know enough, now, to know how much I DON’T know, and how much there is left to know.

World Breastfeeding Week- TGIF!

Random, funny French ad using breastfeeding to sell their beer.
B@@bs are used to sell beer all the time these days but it sure doesn’t look like that now!

Squiggle Bug doesn’t believe in sleep any more. At 2.5 years old she has figured out how to run on pure energy. I’m jealous. I haven’t had time to really do my own blogging. Because, seriously, I have to at least attempt to sleep once in a while even if Squiggle Bug is dead-set against The Piano Man or I actually getting to sleep.

This blog carnival is intended to be open minded and thoughtful, to encourage dialogue and view breastfeeding from all different perspectives and experiences and I secretly (now not-so-secretly) hope that will be a spring board for viewing and discussing the rest of life. It’s also supposed to have funny moments. Don’t think there is much room for humor when it comes to breastfeeding? Check the blog name. Only someone that has never has sported two wet circles perfectly positioned on the chest of their top with milk that came from their own body or has never had a baby dive-bomb their chest with an open mouth or had a toddler screaming “MY BOOBIE!” could think that. Trust me, there is room for humor. There has to be. It’s a carnival hosted by The Leaky B@@b and if The Leaky B@@b can’t do humor well then, we’re screwed.

Talk about a perspective! A really kind Leaky shared this photo with me to demonstrate how she tandem feeds her twins while co-sleeping.

So I finally got something out. There are so many different perspectives I could give on breastfeeding so I shared 4. And just so you know, if you know me in real life and you bring up any of those perspectives I will deny every. single. one. Except for the Easter dress poop one, I have photographic evidence of that.

Other blogs today have a wide spectrum of perspectives, visit and let them know you’re stopping by from The Leaky B@@b checking out different perspectives on breastfeeding.

Perspectives: When “Natural” =/= “Easy”– I knew I’d love this post from the first two lines. “Hi, my name is Star, and I used to think breastfeeding was disgusting. I like to think of myself as a breastfeeding success story.” When Star isn’t chasing her toddler or nursing her infant, she works as a peer breastfeeding counselor, blogs, and spends time with her fiance. She blogs here.

The Joys of Breastfeeding Past Infancy #17
– Once again, NursingFreedom.org brings a charming and informative post to the carnival. NursingFreedom.org was cofounded by Dionna of Code Name: Mama and Paige of Baby Dust Diaries. NursingFreedom.org is dedicated to normalizing breastfeeding and advocating for breastfeeding rights. Please follow NursingFreedom.org on its Facebook page to connect with other mamas who are passionate about breastfeeding advocacy.

Postpartum OCD Part 2 of 2: The Mom Who Couldn’t Stop Logging– Postpartum depression, breastfeeding difficulties and OCD, Anne invites us to journey deeper into her experience, sharing a perspective as debilitating as it is hopeful. Dou-la-la is written by Anne, doula-in-training, birth advocate and a moderately crunchy mother.

Breastfeeding and Early Intervention– A professional that works with children birth to age three in her state’s Early Intervention program, Susan gives us her perspective working with the families in need of her program’s services. A mom of 7 children, she provides support to families with special needs children drawing on her training and her own personal experience with Early Intervention for 3 of her own children. She has enjoyed the roller coaster of different breastfeeding adventures with all of 7 of her kids and is currently nursing her youngest. Susan blogs at My Breastfeeding Journey.

Our guest post today talks about breastfeeding and one’s faith and how this influenced one mom of 3. I hope you enjoy The Way of The B@@b from Jessi, an American Taoist living in China doing her best to parent her children naturally.

There are still give-aways going on and even some more to come: Kate Hansen prints and PumpEase Prize Pack.


Amber submitted this drawing done by her 8 year old step-daughter Kate and had this to share about it.

“[This] is of a woman sitting in a chair breast feeding her child and being happy about it.

Kate was very curious about when I started breastfeeding her siblings, and asked a lot of questions about how and why. When her mother had another child this year Kate told her very matter of factly, that her new sister should have the “Boobie Juices” cause that was what is good for the baby, and not those phooey bottles.
Kate is very proud to tell people that babies should have breast milk and that our 2 kids have it making them really smart.

She is very smart herself, and she cracks me up!”