I was a breastfeeding mother, but with my second child, I had a situation where I had to stop nursing much sooner than I would have liked. My son, when he was only a couple of months old, was gravely ill and ended up in the intensive care unit. I was not allowed to feed him for a few days (he was on apparatus to help with breathing, and was getting sustenance through an IV)
The stress, and the lack of regular nursing caused my milk supply to plummet. I pumped a few times a day next to his bedside at the hospital religiously...but because of the stress I was under, it dried me up pretty good. (From what I read, the lack of the baby feeding, and the trauma I was experiencing made my body think that something HAPPENED to my son...and that I was done nursing, if you get the picture...) After he was released, I tried 24/7 nursing, taking fenugreek, and doing everything I possibly could to get my supply back up. I was nursing him, and then supplementing with formula. I fought for over a month to get my supply back up, every hour of every day. I was also giving my son aftercare at home-nebulizer treatments every couple of hours, etc.
I finally came to the realization that it was no longer going to work. I felt EXTREMELY guilty that nursing had been going so well...and then his hospitalization cut our nursing relationship short. I ended up having to switch to formula full time. I cried.
I UNDERSTAND. Some people don't think that nursing is all that important...but I do, and I was really disappointed about what happened. I just had to change my thinking, and tell myself that he nursed for his first two months, and I did everything humanly possible...and realize that it wasn't MY FAULT, it was the situation that I didn't ask for.
You didn't ask for your medical condition, and it isn't your fault that the specific medication that you need is not good for a nursing baby. That isn't your fault. It isn't like you aren't nursing "just because". You have a medical reason, and that isn't your fault.
I understand, dear.
