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Date: | Sat, 18 Oct 2008 18:58:30 +0100 |
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Dear Marianne, Gonneke, Magda and all,
I once attended a presentation by Mike Woolridge, at an LLLGB
conference I think, where he discussed 'frequency days', 'growth
spurts' etc. His research showed that the mother did not in fact
produce more milk at those times and the baby did not in fact grow
faster then - what he thinks happens is: the mother gets distracted,
maybe feeds less often or hurries the baby through feedings for a few
days, and the baby then insists on getting the milk supply back on
track. Probably this is published somewhere, it was a few years ago. I
wish I could remember references, sorry!
This reading of the situation would fit with the timing that these
days often happen - when the mother has recovered from the birth and
is getting more active, when more demands are made on her time, when
the baby's behaviour changes because of developmental changes....?
What do you think?
However, it still seems helpful sometimes to refer to them as 'growth
spurts' because this explains the baby's needs to the mother without
blaming her, makes her look at the baby closely and think about the
baby again, and trust that her body can respond to the baby's
requirements. Maybe we need to think of better language to explain
what's going on?
Rachel O'Leary
Cambridge, UK
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