View allAll Photos Tagged breastpump

the thing is like an oil derrick...

Can you hear the woosh, woosh? I've got milk woes.

 

Blogged here .

marcro abstract art

If your into RP well this is the item you may need.

~Credit~

*CY* Breast Pump Can be found at CAKEDAY Event June 13-July 3 maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CAKEDAY/118/153/45 Mainstore Marketplace after event ➤Slink Physique :: Hourglass ➤Maitreya Lara ➤Legacy :: Legacy Perky ➤Belleza Freya :: Isis :: Venus ➤ Katena Regular :: Bimbo

 

*CY* BreastPump . Khaki . Bralette

Can be found at CAKEDAY Event June 13-July 3 maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CAKEDAY/118/153/45 Mainstore Marketplace after event ➤Slink Physique :: Hourglass ➤Maitreya Lara ➤Legacy :: Legacy Perky ➤Belleza Freya :: Isis :: Venus ➤ Katena Regular :: Bimbo

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Breast Pumps for nursing mothers, Target, Pics by Mike Mozart instagram.com/MikeMozart

Thank God for this invention (the breast pump) which is absolutely amazing for mothers-on-the-go who breastfeed. Breastfeeding is important on so many levels, emotionally, nutritionally, even financially. And it allows the husban d(or in our case, my lesbian partner) to be able to share the duties and enjoy feeding the baby. It is amazing that there are so many on the market and they are fairly easy to use, and makes going back to work easier for those (like us) balancing careers and parenthood.

Breastfeeding is a bliss and moms who are able to do it successfully are the luckier ones! It involves deciding upon a lot of things and this is a stressful task most pregnant women go through.

If you are a first-time Mom, you must be wondering which breast pump type to pick. Is it going to be an electric breast pump or a manual one? Here is a solution: Why would you choose a manual breast pump?

 

Looking for breast pumps and breastfeeding accessories?

Garner Supply is a US based company providing durable medical as well as home care products at your doorstep. We also provide valuable insights on medical devices and how to use them efficiently to live their best lives.

this famous blue lagoon beach, located in ilocos, in the northern part of the philippines, is known to the locals as "suso ng dalaga" beach 'coz of that twin boulders from afar which looked like "boobs". (aint it?)

 

but what's so interesting about this place is, it is so quiet, with clear blue waters and a white powdery sand. really a beach with all it's natural glory! .. the catch? .. you can do anything but plunge into the water! finish a book under the coconut trees, sunbathe 'till you burn, but don't go swim. it's been known that this water's undercurrent is so strong that as soon as the wave hits you, .. then retreats back to the sea, .. you'll go along with it ... and never come back .. even if you're an expert swimmer. as a matter of fact, this beach is a diver's nemesis/waterloo.

 

known too, that "suso ng dalaga" beach always claimed victims to first time visitors. it was our first time, so i warned my kids not to swim nor wade. I shouted on top of my lungs when i saw my son headed down the waters. he teased me by playing more with the in-coming waves! he almost gave me a heart attack! anyway, we left before i lost my voice. we were billeted on the otherside, a few km. down south.

 

as simple as this image may seem, but whenever i see this photo, it always gives me a heart throbbing ..ah..er.. breastpumping feeling.:-))) as was our experience.

  

A pumping and breastfeeding pod spotted in the Atlanta terminal. It seemed like a good direction to be taking and nice to see a spot for mothers, but it was awfully out of the way. How would one even know there was such a place for this once you are settled at your gate?

www.motherschoiceproducts.com | Mother’s Choice Products offers you all Ameda Breastfeeding Products for you and your baby. They are the only Canadian Distributor for Ameda Electric Breast Pumps and Breastfeeding Accessories. The Purely Yours Personal Electric Breast Pump has been reviewed by Canadian Family Magazine as perfect for frequent use. Ameda features the new ComfortGel™ Extended-Use Hydrogel Pads, the Ameda NoShow Premium™ Disposable Nursing Pads, and the Custom Flange System. Visit our website to shop or use our store locator to find a retailer near you.

www.motherschoiceproducts.com | Are you a new mom or a mom to be or just looking for that perfect baby gift? Look at Mother's Choice Products, we carry Ameda breast pumps and accessories, Kalencom diaper bags, Dimpleskins bath and skin care for baby, cookbooks for baby and toddler and much more. We also have videos and information on breastfeeding and new parent info.

 

See this pillow? I woke up at least twice or maybe three times holding

it in a breastfeeding position. The last hold was a crazy contorted

hold, which I frequently use with my right arm stuck out like a

chicken wing.

 

I talked to the lactation consultant yesterday afternoon to refocus my

goals of bringing my milk in. Seems I have had a bit of trouble, which

I think stems from my lack of breastfeeding from the very beginning

after Lucy's birth.

 

I guess that I should have skipped the AJ Jacobs book and skimmed the

hippie birthing book a little faster. Because the real trove of info

was found in the breastfeeding book. I packed both the birthing book

and breastfeeding book for the hospital. When I asked for it the first

night, Henry said I didn't need it.

 

By the time I made it home from the hospital, he had checked a couple

out of the library for me and was reading passages out loud to me. Who

is this man? I have never been able to get him to summarize anything

for me since I've known him! Last night, he also talked to me in the

bed with the lights out for the first time ever. Having a baby really

does change things.

 

My breastfeeding book describes a lot of the symptoms I've faced with

Lucy. First she had a heavily medicated entrance into the world. When

I "should have been" feeding her, I was completely numb from the waist

down. I was scared to hold her. Plus the grandparents were there in

the delivery room and everyone enjoyed passing her around.

 

Second she was beat up from the forceps and we were both exhausted. We

just wanted to sleep. She had a headache and it hurt her little jaws

to eat.

 

Furthermore, she was three weeks early. Even though she was

technically a full term baby, she was a near term baby in other books.

One nurse kept cramming her head into my breast telling me that she

was old enough to know what she was doing. But when she would suck her

fist, she would try once and then fall asleep. The latch/suck/swallow

reflex was not working together.

 

But I still didn't realize where things were headed. I guess because I

hadn't read the book that described the sleepy baby syndrome and

extreme jaundice very clearly. We were going home on the 16th until

they came to me and said that Lucy was staying in the hospital because

she had jaundice, which makes her sleepy, which means she won't eat,

which means she won't poop, which means the jaundice gets worse, which

means she just sleeps...

 

Hence the chicken vs. the egg. I can only speculate where this went

wrong. Or it was completely inevitable. I don't really care. I do know

that if she had listened to my inutero pep talks in the shower about

working together to get out of my body, some of the problems would

have been avoided - like the drugs and the bruises. Or if she had

listened to the doctor who turned her into position, but she just

rolled back over.

 

But as I've noticed so far, Lucy prefers to do things in her own time.

And she is incredibly observant. So I'm not surprised that she wanted

to see the look on everyone's faces when she actually made it out on

my very last push before being rolled off for a c-section.

 

I pumped while she stayed to tan im the hospital nursery for three

extra days. But once she returned home, I didn't keep it up. We were

feeding FOREVER. So I had no idea that she wasn't stimulating my milk

production. At least not until after our lactation consultation on a

Friday night before a holiday weekend. Once I started pumping, my

numbers had totally dropped. Here is where the books are not helpful.

 

They all say "use it or lose it." That's it. With reason after reason

with why it's important to feed her immediately after birth. Only

buried in passages of various books did I find seeds of hope. But not

until after I had a total breakdown. I was completely devastated that

I had obliviously let my chances of breastfeeding pass me by. And it

was only slipping farther away everytime I supplemented with formula,

had visitors and skipped skin-to-skin interaction. This was insanity

at it's best. An insightful article on breastfeeding in The Atlantic

helped me put things in perspective.

 

Yes, I suppose I do fall into the demographic the author describes in

the article. Unlike the author's experience, I haven't alienated any

of my friends who stopped breastfeeding for various reasons, including

many of the same ones I was facing. I knew that there was an even

chance that I

might not be able to breastfeed her for various reasons. Plus my mom

only breastfed me for eight weeks. And I certainly wasn't going to let

my child die. We would figure out a way to pump her full of food

before it came to that point. But it did help me think about why I

felt so passionate about breastfeeding with all scientific evidence

(or lack of) set aside.

 

Convenience... Clear and simple. In three months, I would like to pick

her up, head across the neighborhood, and not have to worry about

washing bottles along with paint brushes at the studio. I'm all about

being light. In fact her name means light and merry. So I didn't just

want to quit just like that. I was even on the fence about a

cesearean. I could have been swayed, except I just wanted one area to

heal. So once I started with the forceps, I wanted to finish there.

 

After emotionally bottoming out, I actually stopped reading the books

and read through a couple of my favorite art magazines, found another

class at Penland, and in general thought about life beyond now...

Could I go to Penland in August? Probably not, but I can dream. And it

lifted my spirits just enough to know that there is someone out there

who makes paper lanterns and homemade hot air balloons. And I can

learn from her.

 

So despite the book's foreboding advice, there are some things I

learned. Adoptive mothers can breastfeed. Yes... That's crazy. And

that fact gave me a lot of hope. I almost expected to read that a

transgender mom can breastfeed. Plus there is a term called

relactating. I don't think that just because I didn't pump for 24

hours and I let Lucy sleep for four hours between feedings that I

qualify as someone relactating. Like Taylor said, it's supply and

demand. Instead of being frustrated by not having enough milk for her,

I read that Lucy was finally working with me to bring in the milk that

I need. Don't just keep giving her more and more formula. Instead,

feed her more often.

 

So as I waited to hear from the lactation consultant, I made Henry

head out to Whole Foods to buy Mother's Milk tea, which contains

fenugreek, an herb that enhances milk production. I also scheduled my

third postnatal acupuncture appointment. The first two did wonders for

my healing and recovery, aka pain and swelling. My brother was upset

when I shared how I tried to explain that I had hemroids and quickly

cut me off.

 

In preparation for my appointment, I printed out a diagram of a little

Chinese acupuncture model for low breast milk and showed it to Peter.

He said that he would do the acupuncture for low breast milk, but I

really need to eat pig's feet soup. Plus whole milk, not low fat. And

eggs, lots of eggs. Maybe a half an hour after my appointment, I was

feeding Lucy once again, according to her on demand sucking. I

received a call from Mrs. Wu. She told me she had something special

for me and to send my husband over to the office next door. He

returned with a small paper bag of herbs for my pigs feet soup and a

jar of sweet rice pudding, which I am supposed to cook with eggs.

 

I finally spoke with my lactation consultant. She helped relieve my

fears. She knew all about the pig's feet soup, which she said gives

you greasy breast milk. And while I'm out shopping for pig's feet, I

could be pumping, which works. She gave me a focus and a plan. I'm

going to pump, pump, and pump. Yesterday I pumped 347cc and my goal is

700 a day. Not for today! So I pour little bottles into one another

and pour over the numbers I've logged into the spreadsheet seen at the

top of the screen. Then if she is alert, we can practice her

breastfeeding. But Daddy feeds her my milk from a bottle, otherwise.

Each day she is a little stronger and eats a little more. Which also

means she poops more, pees more and is even more alert after naps.

Plus I need a lot of skin on skin action with the little one. That's

not so bad. She's very sweet a

 

I am just looking forward to having my milk in and relaxing on the

pumping. Even better, when she is x months old and I can be a

recreational pumper, which is what I planned to be after taking the

breastpumping class. I hope that she will continue to be an excellent

sleeper beyond this early stage in her life. Because if there is

anything about this family, we like to sleep and that 3 am pump/feed

is very, very hard.

Mother using a breast pump with a hands-free pumping bra looking at photo of her baby on a smart phone. Find Team Nutrition resources for child care at: www.fns.usda.gov/tn/child-care-organization.

 

All photos are property of USDA with unlimited rights to the use and redistribution of the images.

 

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