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Originally Posted by Pinkhippie: What if you were not producing enough milk, but your doc continued to "support" your BFing by doing nothing when he discovered that your baby was gaining slowly. I put quotes around support because it seems "support" for you would have been to not recommend formula. So as I was saying, if he did nothing and then you found out down the line that there was a supply issue, and you had to give formula anyway, then you'd be complaining your doc ignored the concern that your baby wasn't gaining. Or here's another thought. Lets say you give formula, but the baby still isn't gaining because of another medical or metabolic issue? Well, now the doc knows its not you milk or the formula, but has evidence that the baby is unable to gain from either source. Suggesting you switch to formula and then seeing a gain tells the doc that there's not a larger issue at play there, but its just a simple problem of you possibly not having enough milk. But patients don't get this. I think if docs explained things a little better, it would prevent some people from jumping to conclusions, like he's discouraging BFing. I'm sorry but patients can be really clueless sometimes. |
Originally Posted by GlamourGirl827: |
Originally Posted by berryblondeboys: I am not and never have been a part of the modern breastfeeding movement - I believe every woman should choose herself what's best for her and her child - and ultimately, I chose formula. And I do agree that some opposition to, and the severity of it, is sometimes perceived. But there is absolutely still a large part of the medical community that lacks sufficient support for breastfeeding and even some who still push it - sometimes because formula companies have offered them incentives to do so. While some areas have gone to great lengths to educate and support mothers who choose to breastfeed, there are still vastly more who don't; often, it's the under/un-education, lower-income mothers who depend on programs like WIC and nutritional assistance that end up lacking the support. For example, WIC has contracts with three of the major formula companies, so every WIC recipient who feeds formula is more guaranteed money for them. I don't subscribe to the camp that formula is poison and everyone should breastfeed, but I'm also not ignorant of the very firm grip that formula companies still have on many parts of the medical community. |
I am UK. But just to put an alternate experience out there: I really struggled with breastfeeding my first. He fed every 20mins sometimes more, I was beyond sore, in tears, couldn't get him to latch, he lost weight, everything! If it weren't for the constant support of the midwives and medical professions to keep going and stick with it I would've thought I was incapable of breastfeeding and given formula.
I breastfeed for 14months, then fell pregnant with second. Similar problems, she was even hungrier! Some days I did nothing but sit and feed. She also fed for 14months. Different people have different experiences. |
Originally Posted by Arctic Mama: There's not a single IE book that I've read that doesn't warn the possibility of an initial gain during the legalization and on-demand feeding step. I gained, everyone I know that's done it gained. But you can't extract that one little particular step, call it IE and continue doing it until you've gained 100lbs, that's not the actual process of IE. Does that make sense? I do think there is a misconception that IE is only "eat what you want whenever you want it" and people get stuck on that one principle when there is so much more that goes into it like mindful eating practices, identifying all the different stages of hunger, eating slowly, assessing your hunger every few bites, questioning your hunger when it arises, going back and re-evaluating your hunger after you've eaten, identifying emotional triggers and finding the appropriate way to deal with them instead of reaching for food, working on building your self-image, getting rid of negative thoughts and guilt, neutralizing your relationship with food, there's a lot that goes into the process, it's not an all-you-can-eat program. |
Originally Posted by Wannabeskinny: I would fall off the wagon in days if I went on a high carb diet. I would gain if I started to eat intuitively without adjusting WHAT foods I was eating. I would barf if I went on a fish diet. I would get bored and start craving if I went on the cabbage soup diet, etc. So... what I have done is create my own diet. It is a lower carb (but not super low carb) diet, with intermittent fasting thrown in, calorie counting AND a bit of intuitive eating. Yes, intuitive eating is in there! How all four? I eat when I am hungry. So, since I haven't been hungry in the morning, I am not eating (although SOOOOO many things say you need to eat in the morning - bah!) And.. I sometimes eat lunch and sometimes not. I strive NOT to, but if I feel really hungry, I do eat. I then am very hungry by dinner and so I eat a big dinner. Since I don't have an "I'm full" meter that is reasonable, I still have to plan how much I can allow myself to eat, thus the calorie counting to make sure I don't go overboard. But... I listen to my hunger and sometimes I will eat less than I am "allowing" myself and sometimes I eat more. I WILL NOT let myself get too hungry as that can spell disaster for me too. So... I can "sort of" intuitively eat as I do listen for when I'm truly hungry - like GNAWING hungry. But I need help in control eating by calorie counting... the intermittent fasting just kind of "happened" by listening to when I was hungry and since I do have a BIG appetite, I LOVE having a really substantial meal that actually leaves me feeling like I'm really EATING versus nibbling. No one else in the WORLD may be able to follow the same diet as me, but that is the one that I have tweaked for the last 3 years and I'm constantly adjusting and discovering new things about what makes sustaining this easier for me. It is not that people are doing intuitive eating WRONG... it's that intuitive eating is wrong FOR THEM. Just like restricting foods was wrong for YOU, but it's best FOR ME. |
Originally Posted by freelancemomma: A few months ago, he got on the scale for curiosity's sake [because it happened to be out and I had just changed the battery] and he weighed 179 (6 ft, decent muscle tone---never works out). About a month later, he stepped on the scale again at my request, and he was EXACTLY the same weight! Arrgh! Like you, I believe I could comfortably pack away 5,000 calories a day. This attitude toward food that my husband (and others like him) have never ceases to amaze me. They have some sort of internal regulator that effortlessly helps them control their weight. I believe it's something one is born with. I say this because he has a sister who is overweight, and they both grew up in the same house, so it cannot be environment. |
Originally Posted by berryblondeboys: |
Originally Posted by Wannabeskinny: Just some food for thought |
Originally Posted by berryblondeboys: |
Originally Posted by lin43: You know, there's lots of people who give advice about what works for them. A lot of people say 'you've got to cut out the sugar" or they say "you've gotta create a caloric deficit" or "you're eating way too many carbs" and nobody argues. It's standard diet dialogue. But as soon as someone mentions IE inevitably someone jumps in and says THAT DOESN'T WORK, and so maybe you're just witnessing me defending it. People tend to oversimplify IE which is a little unfair. But I don't presume that it works for everyone, but I'm fortunate that I have a nutritional therapist who works specifically with getting people with eating disorders back into intuitive eating. I can imagine that doing IE without that supervision can be very scary and improbable. |
Originally Posted by Pinkhippie: Funny enough, DP had the same experience as your DH - huge baby, rice cereal in the bottle, and yet, my DP has the healthiest attitude towards food of anyone I have ever met. So far, anyway. ;) |
Originally Posted by Durian: But it's interesting how environmental factors do play in to our relationship with food. I am the only one in my family who had an ED. Everyone else is an intuitive eater. My husband is a natural intuitive eater even though he was raised in a house where you had to wipe your plate clean, and could only eat what was served. His mother and sister have huge issues with food, undoubtedly they exhibit disordered eating, I've never met anyone who can eat as fast and as much as his sister can, very large quantities of food in one sitting all gone before I've taken a few bites myself. But hubby is not like that at all, he eats normally and very easily refuses food if he's not hungry. |
Originally Posted by GlamourGirl827: In MY case, I refused formula and instead kept track for them of wet and dirty diapers and we went in for weight checks. (and started looking for another ped) But this was the Dr's very grudging second option when I wouldn't do formula. I know for LLL in order to tell if a baby is getting enough milk and supply stuff, they weigh the baby, then have the mom nurse the baby and weigh the baby again. A pump doesn't really tell you if you have supply issues because a pump is sadly inefficient at getting out milk compared to a baby. I always had trouble getting much out with a pump but actual nursing was fine. :) Anywho, didn't mean to get in to a breastfeeding dr debate. Glamourgirl are you a Dr? |
Originally Posted by berryblondeboys: Originally Posted by futureformerfisher: Originally Posted by Durian: |
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