Welcome Aboard
If women logged hours on a breast pump the way pilots log hours in airplanes, I'd be doing long-haul flights to Beijing by now. Seriously. By my rough estimates, at this point in my nine-month-old's life (and this is not math I recommend doing), I have pumped at least 3,000 ounces of breast milk for her and her older sister, neither of whom have been given formula. That's a whole lot of hours hooked up to the milk machine.
From hour one, I loved nursing—the closeness, the convenience, the feeling of being able to provide exactly what my baby needed, whenever she needed it. I also loved my job, and the benefits it provided—like, you know, food to eat and a roof over my head. So, like most over-educated mothers who waited probably until they should have known better to have babies, I spent a lot of time reading everything I could about how to pump milk for my baby once I went back to work.
There's no shortage of advice about what works, and that's great—get all the advice you can. But having been through this a couple of times now, I've learned several things that are the opposite of everything I read about successfully giving a baby breast milk without the breast. Here's the advice that no one gave me.
Yo, Baby!
Ovulation Calculator
Treating Infertility
Benadryl Doseage Chart
Help Baby Eat Healthy
Is Baby Teething?
Baby Shower Games
Skip the Tea Sandwiches
Take Great Family Photos
Best Jogging Strollers
The Nursery Checklist
Diaper Bags…
Birthdays on a Budget
Fantastic Finger Foods
The 7 Secrets