I absolutely agree. Also, how many moms with "oversupply" are sitting
straight up or bending over their babies to flood them? What about just
leaning back and being comfortable?
-----Original Message-----
From: Lactation Information and Discussion
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Diane Wiessinger
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2008 12:26 PM
Subject: one more source of "oversupply"?
I'll build on Susan's analysis of systems out of whack: Once
(circumstances just haven't repeated themselves yet), I had a client
return with her second baby. She'd had terrible "oversupply" problems
with her first - despite my "help" - until she just threw up her hands,
nursed the baby... and everything was fine.
She came back with her second because they were in trouble by 2 weeks.
He would nurse until her milk released, when he'd start glugging and
backing away. She'd ease him off, let the milk spray, and start him
over again. But all the on and off was making her sore, and he wasn't
all that happy either. Things were, if anything, getting worse daily.
Sure enough, when they nursed at my house her milk released, he started
glugging and pulling away, and she was about to take him off. Happily,
I was a little more savvy this time around. "Wait," I said. "Try just
snugging his back and shoulders in a bit closer." What that did was
allow his head to tip back a little more. There was now a straighter
path for the milk to follow - no crook-in-the-neck to get around. His
swallowing smoothed right out, he stayed on and nursed easily through
her let-down, and finished the feed with no fussing. I thought of it as
the sword-swallower's solution to a rapid flow: straighten out the pipe!
She e-mailed me a few days later to say that everything was fine. It
made me wonder how many of our "oversupplies" are babies who are trying
to nurse without tipping their heads back as they would during
self-attachment. And if that's the case, are we down-regulating mom's
supply to below what it *ought* to be, so that the baby can drink more
comfortably in an unphysiologic position??? How many of our
"oversupply" cases are just over-managed positioning of the
head-in-crook-of-mama's-arm type, I wonder?
Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC Ithaca, NY USA
www.wiessinger.baka.com
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