He had other plans and went
on a nursing strike when he was seven months old.
Not exact matches
When struck with dysentery, he
nurses himself through the fever and relies for healing
on his crop of melons and pumpkins.
So
when said husband encouraged me to go
on a health and wellness retreat last week, I frantically packed my bags before he could change his mind and ran out the door (OK that's not true, I argued with him about the what,
when, where for each kid and the logistics of leaving a 9 month old who's
nursing around the clock and a 9 year old who's out of school for weeks because her teachers are
on a
strike that seems like it will never end.
When I got home from work, she screamed and screamed while I put my stuff down and used the bathroom until I came to
nurse her and she spent all afternoon and evening making up for the fact that she had been
on strike all morning.
Ebey, how did you make sure that he was eating enough
when he was going
on a
nursing strike?
Ebey, did you end up having to pump
when he was going
on this
nursing strike?
I know it's easy to give up
on nursing when trouble
strikes, but it's so true what they say — every baby, and every breastfeeding relationship, is different.
She went
on a complete
nursing strike when she turned 6 months (again, before onset of my periods) and NEVER BFed again.
He had another bottle of formula
when he went
on a 15 days
nursing strike at 10 months old.
Bess is
on a mostly empty
nursing ship
when it
strikes a mine in the Mediterranean.