
Nursing is something I have never loved. I wish that it was. It always felt uncomfortable to me. Stressful really. How much is he getting? Is it enough? Is it the right mix of fore-milk and hind-milk. Am I eating the right things? Are we on time? Does that feeding fit into our hectic pace to get to that event? When is my body, mine, and when is it really his?
I do wish nursing was the blissful, relaxing moment it might have been. Maybe I just wasn’t keen enough to “be in the moment” to enjoy it all.
There are so many experiences that have led me to this place of mixed fillings. But this third try was the eye-opener. Some of the puzzle pieces finally fit together to reveal why nursing is so physically difficult for me.
I wanted to share my story here in the hopes that another mother out there struggling with the same symptoms I had could find some solace, direction, a few answers, and someone who understands. Nursing can be hard. It can be work. And it can be rewarding in the end.
For me, this third time, my milk came in on the third day. We had gotten plenty of help from the lactation consultants in the hospital and I felt I was ready to handle engorgement and milk supply. Little Dylan was nursing beautifully. He did it all: waking up to nurse every two hours, staying awake for 30-40 minute feeds, suckling powerfully, and gaining weight well. But I began to get more and more swollen. And it all was extremely painful.
Within 48 hours, I was so swollen, I couldn’t close my hands, walking was painful, and my breasts were as hard as softballs after our feeding session. The pediatrician instructed us to return to the hospital for phototherapy to manage Little Dylan’s jaundice. Even though getting back to the hospital seemed like a set-back, it turned out to be truly a blessing in disguise.
I was in tears because of the painful swelling. We would nurse, and I would get more swollen. As the hours passed between feedings I’d feel a bit better. My breasts burned, let-down felt like daggers in my chest, and heat and ice compresses did nothing to quell my discomfort. My skin felt like there were spiders crawling on it. My heart felt like it was racing and hot flashes made me sweat. My mind felt sleepy, my throat felt thirsty and all of a sudden, I’d feel ice cold covered in sweat.
My doctor, two different lactation specialists, and many nurses told me they had never heard of anyone experiencing such symptoms while nursing. They advised pumping to alleviate the engorgement, hot and cold compresses to ease the swelling, hot showers to help let-down, and more frequent feedings to empty the milk in my breasts. No one could tell me why nursing made me swollen afterward.
With puffy eyes from tears of pain and frustration, and a body hurting, we checked into the pediatric ward at the hospital. A nurse asked me if I was okay and she turned out to be the angel sent for me.
I told her of my symptoms, about our difficulty breastfeeding, and that no one could tell me how to help myself. She looked at me and said, “I think you have “hyper-let-down. I’ll help you nurse tonight.” I was so surprised. And I felt a flow of relief amidst this supreme gift of grace from God.
When the baby latches on and begins to suck, the nipple simulation sends messages to the brain’s pituitary gland to create oxytocin. Oxytocin pulses to the milk glands in the breasts and lets-down the milk so that it can gently flow out through the nipple. In women with hyper-let-down the message to breast is to let the flood gates open and the deluge of milk in the breast is released with force. The milk can shoot out of the nipple, the flow can cause the baby to choke, gag, and unlatch, and hyper-let-down can feel painful to mom.
Our nurse angel told me to lay down on my back and informed me that I’d be feeding that way for a while. With my baby above my chest, or if we are laying side, beside me, gravity isn’t pulling the milk down out of my breast. The flow is lessened, my pain is lessened, and my baby can feed more comfortably. After that feeding laying down I could open and close my hands easily, my feet were not swollen, and my breast felt relief instead of more engorged. I cannot explain swelling less. Nursing laying down just worked for us.
Through that night of feedings we also surmised I might also be hyper-sensitive to the prolactin hormones in my body. Many times, hyper-let down is coupled with milk over production. I seem to have very sensitive breasts that take every bump in the road, cool draft, and touch of cold water to mean “make more milk.” I know it sounds weird. I don’t understand all the ways the body works but I these are my symptoms. The best it was explained to me was that each time after the baby would empty a breast my body would work over time to make more milk. Hot flashes, cold sweats, racing heart beats, all may have been because of overactive hormones saying, “make more milk!”
Additionally, I fell upon this tid bit during a Google search. Koreans eat a traditional seaweed soup called miyeok guk after giving birth. In fact, this soup is made for the mom on the birthdays of her children for years to come. It is sweet, salty, and soft on the tummy, and I was eating two large bowls of it a day. But seaweeds can be milk production enhancers. I already had a problem with over production. After halting my seaweed soup consumption, some of my oversupply subsided and my breasts became lighter, softer, and less painful.
The real solution for hyper-let-down and overproduction is time, patience and to have faith. In time hormones will transition to post-partum levels, residual bodily swelling will subside, and the baby will feed more regularly and the milk supply will match the need. I am not a person of much patience. But this time I vow to remember daily, or perhaps hourly, that this time nursing Little Dylan is truly precious. I hope I can trust in God, and my baby’s feeding habits, enough to let go a bit, relax, gaze at my little one and enjoy his amazing new presence. In the meantime, we are nursing laying down, reclined, and at home, patiently waiting for the day the rest of the nursing puzzle fits together and we can rejoin regular life together as a happily nursing couple.
I write this today to share with others a sense of hope when nursing seems impossible. Have faith in the Lord. Have faith in your resolve to be the best mother you can be. Be proactive, ask for answers, and search with your heart. I am forever grateful to that nurse who helped me. You too may be surprised who shows up in your hour of need.
Thank you all for your wonderful comments and well wishes. I so appreciate each one of them! More to come about our family fun this summer.

Goodness I am so behind when it comes to organizing the kid’s photo albums. Heck, I haven’t even completed my wedding scrapbook. Now with number three on the way, I am in kind of a sleepy panic. (Sleepy because I still haven’t been sleeping well. And a panic because, well, with less than five weeks until we meet this new little one, there is no way that I am going to complete Mini Mister’s latest album. This one for Little Miss took me a year and a half.)
This album, to be published by Blurb.com, is for Little Miss’ first two years of life. There are a little over 900 pictures on 325 pages, with all the little notes I could manage to remember. I know that there were so many other little quotes, cute moments, and wonderful tid bits I forget and would have loved to have document here, but my memory didn’t pull through. Plus, enough is enough right?
Now, on to Mini Mister’s latest album. That would be from his 18 months to his current 4 1/2 years old. YIKES. And Little Miss already has another year of photos to document. AND, there is this new baby whose first months of life is sure to be filled with snap shots.
Isn’t amazing what the digital age has done? I believe my baby photo album contains something like 30 pictures of me before I turned two years old. How is it that I was able to shoot more than 1,000 of each kid? Really, are they that much more photogenic than moi?
Blurb is a book publishing software and service. Their easy-to-use downloadable software helps you lay out your book, what ever kind you choose. Then you upload the book to their site and order it. This 300+ page book in hardback form is currently about $90. This may seem like a lot, BUT, it is actually fairly economical when you consider what it would cost to print out 900 photos. Shutterfly currently charges a discounted 10¢ per print with their annual plan. After spending $90 on prints, and $29.99 for their Annual Plan fee, there is the cost of all those album books as well. I figured I’d just get it all done at once and pay a little less.
Whew. So two years are done. Only two more albums to go.
Butterflies in my tummy is definitely the way to describe it. Today is there is a shot clinic at our pediatrician’s office and hopefully Mini Mister will be getting his pre-kindergarten booster shots. All four of them. Or as many as we can manage today.
I have very mixed personal feelings about immunizations all around. This is such a complex and touchy subject among parents for so many very good reasons. I feel most grumpy about the government telling me what I should and should not put in my child. I feel perfectly capable of making my own informed decisions about our bodies and really resent the intensely profit-driven relationship between our legislators and the drug company lobbyists. This isn’t to say if given the opportunity that I wouldn’t immunize. Maybe it is the inner independent in me that just doesn’t like being told what to do.
I am tremendously grateful that my children haven’t yet had any adverse reactions to these shots. I know that others who haven’t been so lucky.
Nevertheless, our state requires these shots as a prerequisite of kindergarten enrollment. And Mini Mister is due for four pricks.
For years anybody close by wearing a white lab coat induced monumental fits of physical struggling, tears, and screaming. So many invasive medical tests beginning at 4 months of age, and a forced daily medicine regimen, really scared the poor guy. Since his surgery, doctor visits with no pricks, catheters, IVs, or velcro straps, have gradually become less terrifying. I am really worried that the fear of all things medical will return with trauma of four shots.
I am worried about splitting up the shots into two session. Would that simply be dragging out the process? Am I right to separate the shots from his regular check-up appointment? Am I worrying too much about nothing? Will my son who has trouble with sensory processing anyway feel the entire incident is an insignificant drop in the bucket?
Parents you know how it is. You’d like to keep all harm, discomfort, embarrassment, and angst from your child for all time. We do the best that we can. Today, I’ll pray that God will lead me through this trial with a strong spirit and that I’ll be able to reassure Mini Mister that growing up has bumps and crazy turns, but in the end the smooth parts are to be thankful for.
This weekend was a birthday party whirl wind. Little Miss turned three years old last Friday, as did two of her pre-school classmates. This equals three school days of cupcakes, and an entire weekend dedicated to birthday parties. One party was for Little Miss exclusively.
Whew! The shopping. The planning. The sewing. The cooking and the baking. And the clean-up! Finished. Successful. And fun was had by all!

We loved our piggy cake. It took four pre-schoolers to blow out three candles. Vanilla cake–gluten free. Yum! (I wasn’t behind the camera at all that day. I was concentrating on getting this pregnant mama up and down the stairs with all the food stuffs. So I apologize that there aren’t any photos of the wonderful Korean Bibimpab bar, the pink piggy craft table, the chaos in the toy-play-room, or shots of Little Miss avoiding everything on the second floor all alone.)

Our most favorite present was this piggy blanket. (Which did not replace our dingy, scrubby, bear baby blanket. That one is still number one!)

And in a grand thought of being a bit more eco-friendly mama started to sew 25 reusable fabric snack sacks. Pink kitties for the girls, and blue rockets for the boys. Yeah. That didn’t get finished. Maybe for a “happy summer” end of the school year giftie.
On to other important things. My husband’s birthday is four days after Little Miss’ birthday. And we have Valentine’s Day coming up. And two other pre-school birthdays…and…you get the idea. In between, I sit and knit, stitch spring shirts made of breezy linen, and cook yummy veggie dishes to keep this little baby fed well. What are you on to now?
…to be. Today is Little Miss’ birthday. She is three. Shhhh, don’t tell her until Daddy comes home with balloons.
Preparations, preparations, and more birthday party preparations by this mama is what the day has in store. (Yup, we mistakenly decided that having 50 of her closest friends over for a Saturday luncheon party was a good idea.) A lot of cooking. A little wrapping. A bit of sewing. A touch of frosting and hopefully then a good night’s rest.
*Gotta get to it! We’ll catch up on Monday!*

One of the reasons I spend so much time knitting on the sofa is because of these beauties. I remember being a teenager, holed up in my parent’s den, chatting with a friend on the phone, feet up on the desk, watching the winter birds feeding. For hours. Mostly chickadees in New Hampshire. But here, in balmy northern Virginia, we see a few more varieties.

Ammy and Gramps gave the kids this bird feeder for Christmas. It took a bit for the birds to find us. Like a month. But after much frustration, moving the feeder a couple of times, and self-doubt about the quality of our seed, they came. Well, they came after they found our neighbor’s larger tree-hanging feeder. And they usually visit us after his is empty of seed. We feel like we are a pretty strong back-up nonetheless.

At first the kids wanted to “roar” and jump around like monkeys to scare the birds. After a few “let’s be nice to nature” prompts, they have calmed down and turn to our bird watching book to see who visited our feeder that day.

I just like seeing a bit of nature outside our very, very, suburban window.

We’ve been doing a little gingerbread thinking here at home and at pre-school.

Graham cracker gingerbread houses stuck with candies of all kinds came home this week.

Foam gingerbread men with googley eyes and buttons pasted on are proudly displayed. We’ve been reading the gingerbread man story over and over and over. And we’ve been eating these gluten-free gingerbread cookie men.

I didn’t think that it would be possible in this universe to actually create a tasty gingerbread man cookie that could hold up to the rigors of toddler icing and sprinkling. But possible it is! Here’s how we did it.
1. I used King Arthur Flour’s Gluten-Free Cookie Mix. (It says it is a brown-sugar based mix which means it will produce a softer cookie.) I prepared the dough as indicated on the box, except I substituted 1T of blackstrap molasses for 1T of molasses, and added 1/2 t cinnamon, 1/4 t ground ginger, and 1/8 t ground cloves in the first mix-around.
2. MOST IMPORTANT, CHILL THE DOUGH. It must, must, must be cold. Other wise you’ll get a very sticky debacle. Turn out dough onto plastic wrap and form into a flat disk. Wrap tightly and refrigerate for at least 45 minutes. The butter will harden quite a bit and the dough should be a bit difficult to roll out.
3. Use a gluten-free flour for dusting your cold work-surface and cold rolling pin. (I used sweet white sorghum flour.) Dust everything liberally. Place dough disk on a piece of parchment paper and roll out to a 1/4″ thickness turning dough frequently to keep it all from sticking. (Keep the dough thicker than you might think to here. The end result is a pretty soft cookie so a thicker cookie will provide a more sturdy base for decorating.)
4. Re-roll scraps using additional flour to keep everything from sticking. Chill the dough as needed in a flat disk shape.
5. Use your favorite cookie cutters and cut away. (I’ve found that the larger cutters work best. Cutters with lots of delicate edges don’t work as well with this soft dough.) Place cookies about 2″ apart on a silpad lined baking sheet and bake at 350° F for about 12 minutes or until lightly browned around the edges.
6. Allow to cool on baking sheet for 10 minutes and then carefully remove cookies to a cooling rack with a spatula. Allow the cookies to cool completely before decorating. Makes about 3 dozen medium gingerbread men.
  
A note of toddler-caution: This dough is very delicate and can become sticky quickly and tear easily. Toddlers will place that cookie cutter smack in the middle of the dough circle and you’ll be able to get exactly ONE cookie before you need to chill the dough once more and re-roll everything. It took 20 minutes to produce 2 toddler cookies. And 30 minutes to produce 3 dozen adult cookies.
Little kitchen helpers love, love, love cookie cutters and are so very eager to help. So, if you have the time and patience and let them help. Otherwise, break out the playdough that doesn’t require any chilling, and let them have at it while you turn out those gingerbread men. THEN, let them in on the decorating fun.
The Result…a soft, chewy, very yummy gingerbread man cookie. The extra flour to roll everything out didn’t adversely affect the taste or texture. And your baking time might vary, as my oven runs a bit hot. This is what the kiddos decided would be for dinner last night and then proceeded to run around exclaiming, “you can’t catch me I’m the gingerbread man!”
Happy Holidays all! Meet you back here after the holidays!
P/S How did the link between gingerbread and Christmas come about? The gingerbread man doesn’t mention anything about Christ’s Mass in his little runaway tale…
Spurred by this title, you are probably thinking, cookie baking, present wrapping, stocking stuffing, candle lighting, dreidel spinning, and shoveling snow (if you live in those parts.) But I am talking about enrolling in pre-school for fall 2011.Yes, really.
Our pre-school enrolls returning families in January. I remember a couple years ago trying to secure a spot for my then-three-year-old son we were on the wait list February 1st! This year, we are trying to decide whether that same little-but-much-more-grown-up-boy should go to kindergarten, or should take another year in pre-school. And then if I am to homeschool or if he should attend somewhere else.
Is sending your first born off to SCHOOL so nerve-wracking for every parent? All of my little-kid insecurities about the first day of school come flooding back. It kind of makes me queasy. Will I make friends? Will I be able to find my way? Will my teacher be nice? Will I earn good grades? Of course we all want the very-very best for our children. And of course we all want to keep them from unnecessary embarrassment, disappointment, and peril. And, but of course, we all want our children to get the very best education possible in this lifetime.
So, I am being me. Researching. Phone-calling. Reading. Internet-searching. Talking to other parents. Talking to his teacher. Talking to his pediatrician. And keeping busy in the process. (Admittedly, sometimes I get a bit too caught up in the process and forget that there was a goal somewhere there.)
In the end I just keep telling myself that whatever decision we make isn’t set in stone. We can change schools. We can choose to homeschool if that is more appropriate. We can keep his new teacher informed of our thoughts about his education. And we can augment his classroom time with other activities that encourage creative and physical energies. And I know that we will shower him with love, no matter how well he does, and no matter how much he struggles. We will make informed decisions as a family and let our love and support for each other shine through. Isn’t that what families are supposed to do?
This weekend was a little tree decorating.

We use a fake tree. I never in my life thought that I would bend to a plastic tree. But there are some eco-upsides to this. Since we live in the suburbs we’d have to track down a recycling service since most just put their dried-out pine skeleton by the curb for the landfill-bound-trash truck come January. We pack our tree in it’s box and plan to use it for many years to come. Maybe I’ll just get a natural pine scented candle to set the mood.

We unpacked our new nativity set. The catalog description indicated this set was “safe for little fingers.” Though I’d have loved to start our Advent traditions with a beautiful set carved of natural wood, the reality is cost here. The President of the United States just proposed to the new conservative House a federal employee salary freeze which may mean that we’d be stuck with our pay-cut-to-switch-to-the-public-sector for another two years or more. Maybe in three years, we can graduate to that beautiful wooden Nativity set I’ve been loving.
But “safe for little fingers” has now been tried and tested over and over in our home. I remember as a kid looking at nativity figurines that were “not for touching.” As a mom seeking to set new family Advent traditions, I feel it was imperative for the kids to be able to play with each of the characters in this important scene. So far, Cassie from the PBS show Dragon Tales has been to visit Mary and Joseph as has Hello Kitty. And I’ve seen one of the Wise Men going for a spin in Speed Racer’s Mach 5 car, and the animals keep on getting holed up with the food near our play kitchen. I wonder where I am going to find Baby Jesus come Christmas day afternoon!

And finally, my husband did a fabulous job of picking out the kids’ Christmas Mass outfits. We usually try to play it a bit more business casual on Sunday mornings, but Christmas is a bit special. Surprisingly both kids tolerated their “dress-up” outfits quite well. Mini Mister exclaimed, “I’m just like daddy,” when my husband fastened his little tie and adjusted his suit jacket (he sees his daddy leaving in a suit and tie each morning now.) Little Miss twirled and twirled and announced she was a princess before falling down dizzy. We’ll see how easily these outfits go on come 30 minutes before Christmas vigil Mass time!
 
After these Advent basics and a trip to the fabric store…I am on to a bit of fabric-y fun…stay tuned!
I stepped off and I did it. I finally got a juicer.
Usually this is one of those counter top appliances that is welcomed into the home with great anticipation and grand notions of healthful living. And then is eventually relegated to the far reaches of the under-cabinet world, or even storage. But I decided to take the gulp, and get one for me, and for the kids.
My kids don’t eat vegetables. As a vegetable-lover myself, I am kind of ashamed to admit this. I also must admit they don’t eat the same dinner my husband and I do each night. And yes, I am ashamed to admit this too. Some I think is picky eating that will pass, and some I think is a deeper issue that is for another post entirely. BUT they do love juice. It is a constant daily mantra, “juice mama!” And they do drink mixed juices, those juices that also contain veggie juices. So, I though that instead of gagging on a carrot, that I’d try to get them to drink their carrots. It’s a start, and if any makes it into their bodies, it will also be added vitamins in their diet.

There are some caveats to my genius plan. This juicer brilliantly extracts the essence of the veggies and fruits I shove into it. But the veggies and fruits are raw. And so is the juice. The juice we get from the store tastes entirely different because it was pasteurized, sealed in a container, and sat around for a couple of months before it reached our humble glasses. This raw juice tastes bright. It tastes earthy. I can almost taste and smell the vibrant nutrition it offers. And I think so will the kids who abhor anything that might seem healthy. So I don’t know if they will even try the stuff.
Also, this new trend will require daily maintenance. The juice oxidizes quickly and turns a browner color. I don’t mind, but I am sure those preschoolers who reside at this residence will mind greatly. Additionally, my little instruction manual indicates that the vitamins and nutrients start to deteriorate immediately after juicing, so I can’t really stock-pile this stuff. Too bad, since I’d love to be able to break out the frozen watermelon juice in the dead of winter!

Nevertheless, it is one more mama try at the healthy diet thing. We’ll see how it all goes.
P/S
I really love this juicer. It is a Breville Juice Fountain Plus JE98XL. I prep my veggies and fruits a bit more than the instructions say you need to. Really they recommend you can juice an entire 3″ diameter apple whole. My apples are larger so I quarter them and remove the stems and the seeds. It works wonderfully on harder fruits and veggies like beets, carrots and apples. The pulp is very dry so I am confident that all the juicy goodness is down in my pitcher. It does an okay job on soft items like grapefruit. Even after a firm up overnight in the fridge, the grapefruit pulp wasn’t nearly dry. The whole thing is very easy and quick to clean up. It isn’t as loud as I thought it might be. And overall, I think this thing and I are going to have a very healthy, happy relationship in the future.
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thank you for stopping by my blog  I am a 35 year old mom to a 4 year old son, a 3 year old daughter, a son born in May, and a wife to my life wonderful. I write in this space when my crafty inspiration strikes or when I get to pondering about how we can live more simply and better connect with the earth around us. We are a family surviving the suburbs, contending with commercialism, and getting to a greener lifestyle. Welcome! ~Abbie
a few blogs I like in no particular order Permission © Organizing-Life 2009
All images and designs are property of Organizing-Life. Please do not copy any original designs or photography without written permission. Thank you!
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