Beer and Bottles (and other motherly advice)

Welcome, Carnival of Breastfeeding readers! This month’s theme is family breastfeeding histories. Check out the bottom of this posts for links to other posts on this topic.

My mother told me more than once that if she could do it over, she’d have learned to drink beer and watch football. Two things, she said, that would have come in handy in social settings. Even knowing this, I didn’t really develop a taste for beer or football, though I can tolerate them both. She also told me to introduce bottles to my babies.

I was born at home, in the late 70s, because my parents were concerned about the level of invasive procedures they’d be consenting to with a hospital delivery. My birth was attended by two midwives and an OB (called when he was on his way out to an event, and wearing, I’m told, a green tuxedo). My parents took Bradley classes, had a natural delivery (I’ve seen the video), and were committed to breastfeeding.

I nursed every two hours around the clock for the first 6 months of my life, maybe longer. My mother never gave me a bottle or a pacifier, never thought that her wholehearted commitment to the natural path would allow for such a thing. And she was, understandably exhausted.

When I was pregnant, she told me (much as she told me she wished she’d learned to drink beer) that she wished she’d arranged for my dad to give me a bottle – just one bottle a day – so she could get a break. And maybe a pacifier, too.

The arrival of my twins was eventful, and about as far from my own homebirth as possible. One baby was in the NICU for a few days and the other lost a lot of weight early on, and I began pumping and supplementing and trying to navigate between my room and the NICU and juggle three bodies, two breasts, and one frazzled mama.

My mother and my mother-in-law (herself a former Lamaze instructor) were both as supportive of breastfeeding as possible, though none of us had experience juggling twins. The two grandmothers stayed with us in shifts for the first 6 weeks, rotating night duties with my husband to help with the diapering and rocking so I could focus on breastfeeding.

When the babies were a few weeks old and we had settled into the slightest semblance of a routine, I tried to introduce the occasional bottle. I hadn’t forgotten what my mom had said, and she was just juggling ONE baby. We introduced bottles on and off, but neither baby seemed very interested. We tried again, with different brands, in different positions, with me in the room and out of the house – all the things you’re “supposed” to do to introduce bottles to breastfed babies, with no real success. Eventually we just gave up. I didn’t need to be away from them often or for long, so I didn’t worry much about the bottles.*

I didn’t sleep much for the first year of parenthood, either, so I get where my mom was coming from. In those dark, early days of breastfeeding, blog posts from other moms who breastfeeding their twins were lifelines, rays of hope that the neverending feedings and diapers would one day settle into a routine, and that we’d all make it through. I wish my mom had been blessed with the kind of community I have now, when she was a first time mom trying to make her way and make the best parenting decisions she could.


(*At some point, I read something on a blog about an enzyme imbalance and thought to taste my milk, and sure enough, it tasted off. After all that, maybe it was the milk and not the bottles!)

Check out these posts by other bloggers on this month’s theme (updated throughout the day):

11 Comments

  1. […] of Nursing Judy @ Mommy News Blog: My Family History of Breastfeeding Jona @ Breastfeeding Twins: Beer & Bottles (and other motherly advice) Jake Aryeh Marcus: Breastfeeding? Not in My Family Elita @ Blacktating: Three Generations of […]



  2. Mama Mo on November 22, 2010 at 5:47 am

    My twins were born six weeks early, and the introduction of bottles and pacis was not a choice of mine, but something given by (I am told) necessity. The NICU experience was horrendous, and establishing a nursing relationship with my boys was harrowing. Eventually, though, it was my mom who told me I didn’t have to pump around the clock, I could just sit down and nurse my babies. So I did, and we never looked back. They’re nine months old now and nursing like champs. I couldn’t have done it without my mom.

    On a different note, when I visited Ireland before I had children, the proprietors of two different B&Bs told me to drink Guiness after I had babies, to help with my milk supply. I wasn’t even close to thinking about getting pregnant at the time, but that advice has stuck with me. Too bad I don’t like beer (or football, really).



    • Jona on November 22, 2010 at 6:55 am

      Yay for supportive moms!! I’ve heard that about Guiness (and other dark beers) too.

      I feel incredibly lucky to have delivered at a Baby Friendly hospital with an attending pediatrician (whom I’d never met) who was a strong breastfeeding supporter in her way, and instructed the NICU not to use bottles but only finger feed that baby since they expected him to be released to me quickly (and he was). They had started to grumble about the finger feeds just a little when he was released to my room, so I’m sure if we’d had a longer NICU stay there would have been bottles.



  3. Elita @ Blacktating on November 22, 2010 at 7:01 am

    My mom has always told me that I was so “lucky” that my son would happily take a bottle (both of formula and expressed breast milk) because I never would. I purposely never introduced a pacifier because I just have a *thing* about them and really dislike them. I tried to avoid bottles as much as possible, but they did become a necessity once I returned to work. I know a lot of moms who’ve also had issues with excess lipase. A friend had to scald her milk every day after pumping at work. Now that’s dedication!



  4. […] of Nursing Judy @ Mommy News Blog: My Family History of Breastfeeding Jona @ Breastfeeding Twins: Beer & Bottles (and other motherly advice) Jake Aryeh Marcus: Breastfeeding? Not in My Family Elita @ Blacktating: Three Generations of […]



  5. Judy @MommyNews Blog on November 22, 2010 at 7:39 am

    Wow – so wonderful that you had the support of your family – I can’t even imagine how difficult it must be to breastfeed multiples and I am always so in awe of moms who do it. Kudos to you for sticking with it!



  6. Carnival of Breastfeeding: Family Ties - Mama Bear on November 22, 2010 at 11:33 am

    […] of Nursing Judy @ Mommy News Blog: My Family History of Breastfeeding Jona @ Breastfeeding Twins: Beer & Bottles (and other motherly advice) Jake Aryeh Marcus: Breastfeeding? Not in My Family Mama Mo @ Attached at the Nip: How Women in My […]



  7. […] of Nursing Judy @ Mommy News Blog: My Family History of Breastfeeding Jona @ Breastfeeding Twins: Beer & Bottles (and other motherly advice) Elita @ Blacktating: Three Generations of Breastfeeding Mama Mo @ Attached at the Nip: How Women in […]



  8. […] Beer &#1072nd Bottles (&#1072nd &#959th&#1077r motherly information) Tags: breastfeeding, carnival, histories, invasive procedures, midwives, pacifier […]



  9. Jake Aryeh Marcus on November 22, 2010 at 1:54 pm

    Great family history! None of my boys would take pumped breast milk. They never accepted either bottles or pacifiers. I think it is fairly common.



  10. Penny in TX on December 15, 2010 at 6:03 am

    “My mother never gave me a bottle or a pacifier, never thought that her wholehearted commitment to the natural path would allow for such a thing. And she was, understandably exhausted.”

    Motherhood is exhausting no matter how you slice it. As someone whose babies (now 17, 13, 10, and 3) were never given bottles or pacifiers, I don’t think I was “understandably exhausted” by that decision. While some mothers choose to give bottles and pacifiers for their own reasons–and continue to breastfeed in a way that meets their personal feeding and babycare goals as well–neither are necessary or routinely desirable as a means to avoid maternal exhaustion.