Interview 25  

Interview 25

Age at Interview: 35
Sex: Female
Background: At the time of interview, this 35 year old, French-British woman was breastfeeding her 8 week old son. She also had a 2½ year old son whom she had breastfed. A mother and self-employed osteopath, she was married to a human resources director.

Brief outline:Special Care separation from 1st baby emotionally difficult. Got into cycle of engorgement, expressing, mastitis, too much milk for six months. Has not expressed for second baby.

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Her mother combined breastfeeding with bottle feeding and she saw her sister-in-law breastfeeding. She decided to breastfeed after reading about it during pregnancy.
 
She said that breastfeeding is not a technique, it is an experience and that professionals need to spend time listening to a woman's story but are constrained by lack of funding.
 
She is in total harmony with her eight week old baby's feeding pattern in contrast to her experience with her first son when she was expressing breastmilk.
 
Meeting with other women to share experiences has been important in helping her to adapt to motherhood.
 
She felt that regular weighing of her baby was a judgement on her so she stopped going. Introducing solids early did not make any difference to her baby's weight.
 
She thought that the best environment for breastfeeding was in a supportive community and was shocked by the advertising for infant formula in France and the UK.
 
She had two very different experiences of breastfeeding after a caesarean section. Positioning for feeding was important and lying down was the easiest.
 
Breastfeeding was physically demanding and she was keen to begin exercising again to maintain her fitness. She was keen to reclaim her body after the act of 'giving' breastmilk.
 
She began expressing to deal with engorgement and mastitis and continued to do so for six months. Expressing built up her milk supply beyond what her baby needed.
 
At first, she and her husband did not know how to relate to her breasts which she saw as sensual not sexual and essentially belonging to their baby.
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