clapham_gull
Legacy Fan
- Aug 20, 2003
- 25,878
Why anyone would have the SLIGHTEST problem with it is beyond me.
Fran Hagarty said:Full marks to her for breast feeding rather than using bottles of formula milk. The latter is what I find offensive. How come mothers have breastfed their babies for thosands of years but now some mothers see fit to use some inferior substitute? Sorry if I'm on my high horse but it's something I feel really strongly about. I could go on with the whys and wherefors, but this isn't really the place to do so!
SussexHoop said:Sadly not all mothers are able to breastfeed their babies. My wife did for 2 weeks before getting Mastitis and at that point, she had to stop and thus started the daily dredgery of formula milk.
To make matters worse, her boobs continued to produce milk, became incredibly large and painful and expressing didn't help. The bigger they got, the greater the pain so I never did cop a feel.
Mrs Coach said:Savoy Cabbage leaves inside the bra has never failed to relieve this to my knowledge (although after a few minutes the leaves start to 'steam' and you smell like a sunday roast!)
Seriously. I'm not kidding!
tedebear said:
I breastfed to a routine. I knew when Arthur would get hungry so managed to make sure I was at home or in an appropriate place.
clapham_gull said:Why anyone would have the SLIGHTEST problem with it is beyond me.
Fran Hagarty said:Full marks to her for breast feeding rather than using bottles of formula milk. The latter is what I find offensive. How come mothers have breastfed their babies for thosands of years but now some mothers see fit to use some inferior substitute? Sorry if I'm on my high horse but it's something I feel really strongly about. I could go on with the whys and wherefors, but this isn't really the place to do so!
Starry said:You should keep nursing and pumping from the affected breast/s if you have mastitis. I know it hurts awfully but it doesn't last forever. Express from that breast to ensure it's empty after baby has fed, plenty of hot showers and compresses to keep things loose in there, feel for the blocked duct yourself and as the baby feeds massage that duct, change the position you nurse in. And of course, cabbage leaves.
Stopping nursing completely to treat mastitis is a uhm, I don't know what to call it, but for weeks before your body has been used to producing all that milk and all of a sudden there is no baby sucking, you are still producing that milk, you have mastitis and now all that extra milk in a sore breast.
tedebear said:I'm not going to go into my personal experience but that didn't work for me. A trip to hospital was needed.
Starry said:Here too. They had to knock me out in early april to operate.
tedebear said:Thats why Arthur had to get used to bottles or get exceptionally hungry. So without formula I have no idea what would have happened - as Worthing Hospital only allows donated breast milk to be used on site, and he was at home!
In those days, they still had "Women Only" compartments on some trains.tedebear said:Did you ever see anyone feeding in public 30-40 years ago?
Dave the Gaffer said:why?
tedebear said:I'd hazard a guess that most of our mothers and definately our grandmothers fed in private. So why the change?
Lord Bracknell said:In those days, they still had "Women Only" compartments on some trains.
These were originally introduced for breast-feeding mothers.