Christine writes:
My sister mostly wants to know if she can reasonably expect this to change
or if she should even try. Emotionally she feels she can work through her
self-defined frustration and sadness; she welcomes any and all thoughts on
her situation.
~~~
Hi Christine and all,
Having "only" had two children, and them being SO different right from the
beginning, I think it was easier for me to adjust to their differences.
First was hospital-born, managed ( pretty aggressively I saw in retrospect) by
a midwife, no rooming-in after 10 PM so lots of mother-baby separation,
baby given AIM behind my back, then discharged in pretty much full-on breast
refusal. With the help of a local LLLL/IBCLC he became a happy,
breastfeeding baby. Couldn't fall asleep without nursing, and woke up every 2 hours
for nearly 4 years. So, when his home-born, nursing right away, sister
arrived, and was presented with a let-down like Niagara Falls, her strategy
seemed to be to nurse as quickly as he did ( about 5 minutes on one side only),
but then suck her own thumb. Her brother met his needs at breast, never
sucked his thumb. She also had a higher palate at birth, different dentition,
and different sucking needs with a different way of meeting them. She also
didn't need to nurse to sleep, which I had no experience with. I would
look down and notice that a few minutes after nursing and she let go, she
would have drifted off to sleep in my arms. SO weird for me, so different. She
also slept about 5 hours straight, from the first night she was delivered.
After getting up every 2 hours for almost 4 years, I was kind of ecstatic
and figured they were just different. She nursed til she was 3, but in a
very different style than her brother. Looking back, I probably had overactive
letdown especially with her, but at the time there was no name for it, we
figured it out in the best way we could, she would begin to nurse, pull off
and wait patiently while she got totally sprayed in the face, or I grabbed
a towel to soak up the jetting milk she knew was too fast for her. She
just hung out and went on a minute or so in when things were slower. In time,
the flow regulated, but she didn't change in infancy, as far as seeking out
the breast for comfort the way her brother did. Now a young adult: She is
loving and well-connected and a recent CST visit prompted my colleague to
remark that she is "very aware of" her body for someone her age (20). I
took that as a very good thing. As a toddler, her nursings were sweet but
short and didn't have the urgency of her brother's. To this day, he is a much
more intense person, while she is calmer overall. Different approaches to
life, right from the start. I don't know if that helps, but there it is...:)
Peace,
Judy
Judy LeVan Fram, PT, IBCLC, LLLL
Brooklyn, NY, USA
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