For those who don't know, I am a single mother living in South Africa.
Simone Jasmine Ray is my only daughter and she was born on 4 May
1998. She is almost 24 months old and we're still a nursing couple. I never thought that nursing a toddler would be this satisfying, but I'm glad I stuck with it long enough to find out. I plan
to nurse for as long as she wants. Notwithstanding the many
benefits of breastfeeding, it is a wonderful way for her and I
to reconnect when I get home from work. I currently work as
co-ordinator for a small NGO in South Africa that does InService
training of Primary Science Teachers. We have also created a range
of exciting multi-media classroom tools for learners to use and
explore the world of science. It's strange that I work in
this environment as I actually studied drama at University.
I call myself a jack-of-all-trades. I've been a stage manager,
production manager, bar-lady, published poet, actress, film-maker,
administrator, and while all of this has made for a really exciting
life, I am proudest of all to call myself mother. It is also
undoubtedly the most responsible and long-term position I'm ever
likely to hold. I rely a lot on my instinct when it comes to
parenting Simone, but I also find validation for those instincts
on the web. That's why I've included some of my favourite links below.
Because Simone was born on our bed it felt natural that she should sleep
there with me. I wasn't even conscious that I was making a parenting
choice. It was just easy and practical. Now we still co-sleep for most
of the night.
When I was pregnant, I knew that I wanted to give breastfeeding a try.
In her first few minutes in this world Simone latched like an expert and
she's never really left the breast, not for extended periods anyway. I
know that I was lucky though, not to have too many of the early
breastfeeding problems that do occur. I remember the night my milk came in.
I was sitting in my lounge with my mother, nursing Simone. Suddenly I felt
this hot, tingling rush that sent a flush through my entire body.
I'd never felt anything like it. I was amazed that my body could keep
this
strange sensation secret from me for 30 years. I suffered no
engorgement, I think
mostly due to the fact that Simone was such a voracious and
lengthy nurser in the
early days. I remember trying to log our feedings as a record, but
gave up
when I couldn't figure out when a feeding ended and a new one began.
I'd been given a front carrier at one of my baby showers and soon
discovered
how easy it made life. I could go for walks with Simone bundled
closely
against me and she always slept deeply in the sling.
I still spend a lot of my time carrying her and often strap
her to my back 'African Style' if I need to do stuff with my hands.
Some people advised me against picking Simone up and carrying
her all the time; "You can't let her get used to your arms all
the time."
they said. I nodded but there was no way I couldn't pick her up
and hold her when she was awake. She was very easy-going and we soon
fell into a real synchronicity. I KNEW when she was hungry or
uncomfortable before she had to vocalise. Her needs were always met and
she was a very healthy infant so I was stunned the first time I
heard her cry when she received her 6 week immunisations.
I loved being home with Simone and dreaded the day that I
would have to return to work. I didn't want to stop breastfeeding
her just because I had to go back to work, but procrastinated about
finding concrete ways to continue breastfeeding. Finally, a week before my return to work,
I called my midwife and she
referred me to a Medela dealer. I
bought the Medela mini-electric breastpump, as the PIS hadn't
been released in SA then,
and also it would have been way too expensive. The dreaded
day came and I had a good few
bottles of EMM (Expressed Mother's Milk) in the fridge. I had
no idea how
much Simone would take while I was away, so I also mixed a
bottle of formula
'just in case'. When I came home that evening, Betty, the
nanny, told
me that she'd given Simone the bottle of formula that
afternoon as she knew the EMM
could last in the fridge but she wasn't sure about the formula.
Simone
looked fine and
totally unfazed by the almost 9 hour separation, so we settled
down to nurse. After the feed,
she posseted, what seemed to me, a huge amount of milk. Then
she posseted again. Then she began to retch
and vomit. I tried to nurse her and she half latched
and fell asleep. I began
to panic at the limpness of my normally wriggly girl.
She woke only to vomit and
cry weakly, then she would fall asleep. I called my friend
Donne who rushed us to the emergency room.
There Simone was examined by the intern on duty who could find
nothing
obviously wrong with her, but prescribed antibiotics anyway.
By now I was convinced that the formula had caused the reaction,
and I left the
hospital (without filling the prescription) vowing that never again
would formula touch my daughter’s lips (either going in or coming out).
I have been very lucky
that I was able to made good on my vow. I've pumped my way through 2
mini-electric’s and just recently retired my Avent Isis breastpump.
I love nursing my daughter now more than I did when she was little. When she asks for "some very yummy titty" after a day's separation and
settles down on my lap I am eternally grateful that I mother at the breast and I know that
I'm doing the right thing for both of us.
Still not convinced about the breastfeeding thang?
[mud hut]
[more of me]
[links]
[simone's photos]
[family album]