psocoptera (
psocoptera) wrote2009-04-04 05:22 pm
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Revelation 1:1 - 1:5
I have also learned some things:
1:1 If you put cabbage leaves in your bra, when you open up your bra again later to pull them out, it will smell like cabbage.
1:2 What with leaking milk, you're halfway to a coleslaw.
1:3 But adding carrots and mustard seed would not help anything.
1:4 Speaking of mustard, when they said baby poop was "mustardy", I was picturing something like brown mustard. No, they apparently mean bright yellow-orange fake ballpark mustard. Dang.
1:5 It's really hard to tell where the line is between being paranoid and properly concerned. For example, , the little scabby bits on the ends of my nipples aren't really a problem for me, and they definitely don't seem to be a problem for Juniper, but after reading a zillion things about Your Latch, Oh God, Your Latch, You Are Totally Doing Something Wrong Even If A Lactation Consultant Said You Were Great, I can't stop worrying that I am Doing Something Wrong and they are a precursor of the dreaded Cracked and Bleeding Nipples (the breastfeeding advice has a lot about Cracked and Bleeding Nipples and not anything I can find about Tiny Flat Totally Non-Bleeding Scabs). I just feel like pain or a baby who didn't seem to be satisfied by feeding would be a less ambiguous concern - I mean, maybe they just tend to scab a little at first? How would I know?
1:1 If you put cabbage leaves in your bra, when you open up your bra again later to pull them out, it will smell like cabbage.
1:2 What with leaking milk, you're halfway to a coleslaw.
1:3 But adding carrots and mustard seed would not help anything.
1:4 Speaking of mustard, when they said baby poop was "mustardy", I was picturing something like brown mustard. No, they apparently mean bright yellow-orange fake ballpark mustard. Dang.
1:5 It's really hard to tell where the line is between being paranoid and properly concerned. For example, , the little scabby bits on the ends of my nipples aren't really a problem for me, and they definitely don't seem to be a problem for Juniper, but after reading a zillion things about Your Latch, Oh God, Your Latch, You Are Totally Doing Something Wrong Even If A Lactation Consultant Said You Were Great, I can't stop worrying that I am Doing Something Wrong and they are a precursor of the dreaded Cracked and Bleeding Nipples (the breastfeeding advice has a lot about Cracked and Bleeding Nipples and not anything I can find about Tiny Flat Totally Non-Bleeding Scabs). I just feel like pain or a baby who didn't seem to be satisfied by feeding would be a less ambiguous concern - I mean, maybe they just tend to scab a little at first? How would I know?
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As for cracked nipples, I also suggest lanolin (like Lansinoh). It's probably not worth an emergncy lactation consultant, but you could drop by a La Leche League meeting some time to double-check. (And if Junie spits up blood, first check if your nipples are bleeding, because that is the most likely cause. I don't think that causes her to become a vampire.)
Have you joined the breastfeeding LJ community? Also, you should go check out kellymom.com for extra advice.
(And I am giving breastfeeding advice on my phone while breastfeeding. Very odd.)
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I hope Juniper does not become a vampire, that seems like it would make it even more difficult to ever leave the house (during the daytime)...
I was hoping to get a free sample of lanolin in the hospital so I could inner-arm test it before buying any - I *think* the last time I had hand lotion with lanolin in it, it irritated my skin, so I'm reluctant to put any directly onto my nipples without a good 24-hour allergy test, because that would Not Be Helpful. But it never materialized. Probably still worth buying some to test, though, thanks.
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Engorgement will eventually end. (And it also helps that Junie's mouth will get bigger.)