This post is part of a series sponsored by Philips AVENT in support of the launch of the double electric comfort Pump.
Pumping breast milk was still a mystery to me as I made secret lists of baby names and notified my boss of my pregnancy. I learned about it when my co-worker Mimi, newly back to work after having her first baby, invited me over to her house to show me the ropes of having a newborn. That those ropes would include a trip of her freezer was completely news to me.
What rookie mothers need to know about going back to work while breastfeeding:
1- You will need to own a breast pump. This is a device with a small motor that uses suction to extract milk from your breasts into bottles. (Not shown in this picture is the plug.)
Place the suction cups over your breasts and press the power button. Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh, goes the pump, squeezing your nipples, making milk flow through the funnel into the bottle. When you are finished, you’ll unscrew the bottle tops that have the funnels attached and replace them with a regular flat cap for storing the bottles in a lunchbox or small cooler during the rest of your workday. At home, remove the flat cap and replace with a rubber nipple. now someone else can feed your baby breast milk from the bottle.
2- Pumping will require a private place to be and a 15-20 minutes break a couple of times each day. Your company is probably legally required to supply this for you and if you are not the first woman to go back to work and continue nursing at your workplace, your hr person will know exactly what you need and help you make it happen. If you work at a big enough place, ask someone who has already taken a maternity leave to show you how she does it. [Read the stories we’ve compiled in our pumping project to feel less alone.]
3- Stockpiling milk during your maternity leave is a really good idea. thanks to Mimi’s advice, I began pumping about a month before returning to work. My goal was to have enough milk in my freezer to offer a cushion so that when I went back to work, I didn’t have so much pressure to produce the same amount of milk my baby was consuming in my absence from the get-go. Pumping takes some practice. getting used to the pump at home will help you unwind much more when you return to work.
4- purchase some Sharpies. You may develop a different system, but here’s what I did: Locked myself in the “Maternity” closet at my office; pumped into the bottles that came with my breast pump; stored them in a small lunch bag in my office’s refrigerator; brought the lunch bag and my pump home each day; transferred breastmilk into resealable bags for storing in the freezer; washed and dried bottles and pump parts for the next day. I would use a Sharpie to mark the date on the bag. When my spouse or nanny used milk from the freezer, they would use the oldest bag first. breast milk can be reheated from a frozen state for up to four months.
5- You get what you get and you don’t get upset. BRINCANDO! You will certainly get upset at some point. aggravating things that pumping mothers face are: inconveniently timed work activities that compromise your pumping schedule; having to remember to bring all the components to work each day — and that one time you forget the lunchbox and have to hide a bottle of breast milk in a mug of ice in your desk drawer; producing less milk than you hoped for; co-workers not understanding your need to pump. other pumping mothers will have experienced those disappointments. feel totally free to complain to us.
While this post is sponsored by Philips AVENT, all guidance and experiences are my own. Heather and I pumped for five breastfed babies between us and we strongly believe that whether you’re going to pump for a couple of months or a whole year, you ought to treat yourself to a good double electric pump. You’ll be thankful you did. (Read much more about the Philips AVENT comfort Pump on Amazon.com >)
Photo Credit: dianaschnuth through Compfight cc