Sentences with phrase «time nursing around»

My first only gave up night time nursing around 13 months.
Once my doctor cleared me for safety, she told me that I should time nursing around the drugs to ensure that the baby received as little of the drugs as possible.

Not exact matches

Rachel Held Evans recently wrote: «Every night, as I nurse my little boy for the last time before bed, I pray for the mamas nursing their babies in refugee camps and rafts around the world, desperate for a safe place to call home.»
Otherwise, you moved very slowly, which meant you had time to look around and see the tired faces: the many mothers and fathers lining the walls, nursing babies, charging phones, calming a child in meltdown or rousing a child from the despair of just learning he has to go with his parents to another talk.
I have thought about making it many times (the recipe sounds delicious but the title, I confess, is what really lured me in), but I also LOVE spotty bananas, and between that, and, well, nursing school, I just haven't gotten around to baking it in the last couple of years.
The problem is scoliosis presents itself during a time when well - child visits tend to fall off, around ages 10 - 15, says Molly Grant, a certified nurse practitioner at Shriners Hospitals and an Oak Park mom.
This time around, however, it didn't come as any surprise to me that I'm nursing a preschooler.
This time around I really want to keep my supply up and see if my sweet girl will tandem nurse.....
I nursed Yael until she was around 2 years old, and at times, Tamar would ask to try too, and I always let her — but she forgot how to do it.
I nurse the baby in bed in the morning and its our very special time because I work 3 - 11 and my husband works 11 - 7 so around 8:30 is magical at our house.
When it's time to breastfeed, you can button the nursing cover around yourself in whatever way is comfortable, and you have an instant cover up.
I wore the world's cheapest and ugliest nursing bras during my first pregnancy but I'm going to do it right this time around!
Remember too, that when you were in the hospital, it felt easy and comforting with nurses around all the time, but now that you are all on your own, you might feel a bit overwhelmed.
You want your baby to get just hungry enough to be willing to try nursing from the bottle when the next feeding time comes around.
Wet nurses at one time were around to help out with issues such these.
he goes to bed at around 7:30 pm or latest 8 pm then wakes up at 1:30 am then at 4 am both times he wants to just nurse then fall right back to sleep.
We worked our schedule around pumping, nursing, and feeding times.
I think that part of this was the amount of time that exclusive pumping takes, and part of it was the complex emotions that I had around exclusive pumping — a combination of guilt that I wasn't able to nurse and pride that I managed to stick with pumping for so long.
Nursing, changing diaper, changing spit - up clothes (baby's and yours), made a cup of tea, spent an hour trying to get in 10 minutes of Tummy Time so the baby won't be a dolt, spent 40 minutes getting the baby down for a nap which ended up lasting 20 minutes, made lunch and spilled half of it on the baby's head, clothing changes all around, nursing, found now - cold cup of untouched tea and drank it anyway, more nursing, baby falls asleep on you but wakes up if you try to move him so you just stay slumped on the couch with one leg forward and the other bent uncomfortably under you because this kid needs to sleep or we'll all diiieeee, nursing, realize you forgot about the weekly mothers» meeting which was your only adult outing dammit and now who will be your Nursing, changing diaper, changing spit - up clothes (baby's and yours), made a cup of tea, spent an hour trying to get in 10 minutes of Tummy Time so the baby won't be a dolt, spent 40 minutes getting the baby down for a nap which ended up lasting 20 minutes, made lunch and spilled half of it on the baby's head, clothing changes all around, nursing, found now - cold cup of untouched tea and drank it anyway, more nursing, baby falls asleep on you but wakes up if you try to move him so you just stay slumped on the couch with one leg forward and the other bent uncomfortably under you because this kid needs to sleep or we'll all diiieeee, nursing, realize you forgot about the weekly mothers» meeting which was your only adult outing dammit and now who will be your nursing, found now - cold cup of untouched tea and drank it anyway, more nursing, baby falls asleep on you but wakes up if you try to move him so you just stay slumped on the couch with one leg forward and the other bent uncomfortably under you because this kid needs to sleep or we'll all diiieeee, nursing, realize you forgot about the weekly mothers» meeting which was your only adult outing dammit and now who will be your nursing, baby falls asleep on you but wakes up if you try to move him so you just stay slumped on the couch with one leg forward and the other bent uncomfortably under you because this kid needs to sleep or we'll all diiieeee, nursing, realize you forgot about the weekly mothers» meeting which was your only adult outing dammit and now who will be your nursing, realize you forgot about the weekly mothers» meeting which was your only adult outing dammit and now who will be your friend?
Blood pressure measurement only takes around a minute, while the other is usually 20 minutes or more at a time, depending on when the nurse is available to help remove it.
She rarely slept during the day, and the only time she wasn't crying was when she was nursing, or if we were carrying her around.
Actually, it all seems somewhat horrifying to me, perhaps because I've spent so much time the past few years hanging around my dad's nursing home, so I'm a bit thankful I probably won't be around to see it (and based on what I observe in nursing homes, maybe we should focus on keeping men alive longer so women, after caretaking for so many years, might have someone to look after them in their old age).
So far I have freaked out about doubling the amount of children in our house, where the babies are going to sleep, cloth diapering, starting completely over with baby clothes instead of trying to sort through what would be usable, nursing two babies at the same time, buying a bigger house, how I'm going to drive four kids around (thank God we just replaced my husband's car in January with a full size SUV with a usable third row), traveling with four kids, what happens if my husband has to start traveling for work, getting the big kids to and from school with two babies in tow, how the big kids are going to feel once there are two new babies in the house, how I»M going to feel with two more babies in the house, and so on and so forth.
Start generally around when he eats (so like, if you nurse him down for naps, you can feed him a bottle at that time, then pump).
Who has time to lug a baby and a nursing pillow around the house!
Currently she is eating solids but still nursing around 7 times per day.
It did help some, but it would take forever to nurse her after we got settled, and this time around I had a 17 month old I also had to deal with!
I would then nurse again around nine o'clock in the evening and one last time right before I went to sleep.
They would fuss enough to where it would wake me and it was right around the 2 - 3 hr feeding time, so instead of letting them escalate I would pick them right up and nurse them, and it was easier for them to fall back asleep.
While we'd opted out of the eye drops with my son (born Jan 2007), we were told this time around that they were required by state law and there was no way to get out of it (and we were told this by the self - proclaimed «most natural birth friendly L&D nurse at the hospital»).
The La Leche League suggests nursing early and often, at least ten times a day (or about every two to three hours, around the clock).
If possible, have someone else around during the times when your child often asks to nurse.
I stopped nursing around that time as well.
Of course, I am the mother of an 18 - month - old who still wakes three times a night to nurse, and I spend a good percentage of the week walking around like a zombie.
A series of bad outcomes (dead babies) comes to the attention of the Midwifery Joint Committee (involving direct - entry midwife Rowan Bailey in July (mentioned above), and a Certified Professional Midwife and two Certified Nurse Midwives around the same time [additional deaths, not mentioned above]-RRB-.
I'm not sure why I've gotten such a negative response this time, but I thought I've done well, especially having a toddler running circles around me while nursing at home and in public.
This is the long way of saying that I 100 % believe in the benefits of nursing, and plan to continue nursing (even when I go back to work) etc etc... but i really believe that telling women they can't ever not nurse or that even one bottle of formula is evil does a terrible disservice and backfires in the long run (it certainly did for me this first time around)..
In May, Lily's second birthday passed, and again, no signs of weaning We have some boundaries set around night nursing (so mama can get some sleep) and around nursing in public, but for the most part, she has full access to the breast and still nurses 4 - 6 times per day, more when she's teething, overstimulated, sick, growing...
18 months is just a tough time all - around, and if you're still nursing, it tends to be one of those times the mother just can't deal with it anymore.
I have packed a handful of nursing pads too but I didn't really need them until about day 3 last time, but things could easily be different this time around.
It feels weird to think that I actually nursed my child this long, even though women around the world do it all the time and many cultures don't think anything of it.
I co-sleep with her & she nurses before bed (she doesn't always nurse to sleep,»cause I know that is a bad habit), she nurses when I get home from work and then she nurses around 4 - 5 am so I am comfortable during my day at work, so really only 3 maybe 4 times a day.
While many moms in my birth class were debating home births I simply said i wasn't brave enough becuase my mom was a neonatal nurse practitioner and I spent a lot of time around premie babies so the what ifs scared me.
After the first week I found that she nursed for a shorter period of time around 10 in the morning (less than 5 minutes on each side).
If you nurse from only one side at each feeding, it may be a little easier to tell which breast you should start the next feeding on because the opposite side will most likely be larger and fuller when the next feeding time comes around.
Baby - led weaning: Weaning is easiest when your child begins to lose interest in nursing, and that can happen any time after she starts eating solids (around 4 to 6 months).
And I'm assuming since you don't have time to «sit around» nursing, you let baby bottlefeed himself.
The second time around, I had a very fussy baby with tummy problems and a very demanding toddler that wouldn't let me sit still long enough to nurse.
I only made it a month nursing my first, so the second time around we enrolled in a Bradley class for a little extra support.
Baby Bunching: Do you have any tips for moms who have children close together — specifically, how to carve out time for nursing an infant when you have a toddler running circles around you?
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