Oh, pumping. You have such an amazing way of messing with my head.
Why yes. I’m still exclusively pumping. It’s been over a month, and here I sit. Half an hour at a time, eight times a day (down from ten, look at how reasonable I’m being!). Every bottle carefully sealed and labeled with the date and time, refrigerated until it can be delivered to the hospital. It’s a glamorous thing, believe me.
I’m keeping up (just barely, for now, until she grows and they change the quantity again) with what she’s taking. I believe she has had 100% breastmilk for the last three weeks, and there may be a few spare ounces of buffer in the freezer at the hospital. I’m proud of that, and I don’t mean to belittle it. But despite the herbs and supplements and medication and tricks with the pump, I feel like I’m hanging on by my fingernails, just to keep up.
I was feeling particularly panicky the other day, wondering if my supply was dropping, or if I was actually keeping up, so I decided to start tracking. Oh yes, I made a spreadsheet. And while I absolutely see the crazy-making potential, I was already informally watching the quantities every time, anyways. At least now I have real data.
On the positive side, I was able to see several days worth of keeping up with her intake, with a little bit extra. That was helpful and a little calming. But I was also hoping to see some kind of pattern – maybe one time of day when I seemed to get more or less – so that I could anticipate it and feel a little less defeated when the inevitable “bad pump” happens. Sadly, no dice. I cannot, for the life of me, discern any rhyme or reason as to why some times I get a lot more, and some times I get a lot less (and by “a lot,” know that we’re only talking a range of maybe 20-30mL, and yes I can still easily measure my output in mL).
If I was breastfeeding on demand, of course, I’d never know any of this. It would fluctuate day to day, the baby would eat more or less often, and that would be that. Not so with the pump. This way, lucky me, I get to evaluate myself every three hours, and see if I make the grade or come up short. And if you think this doesn’t have a major impact on my mood when I see the results, you’ve got another thing coming.
But, for now, I keep going. As I said before, it’s one of the few concrete things I can actually do and provide for Eleanor while she’s in the hospital. And while I do not think formula is evil (I have two healthy, brilliant, amazing kids who were almost 100% formula-fed), I do think that there is something particularly good about breastmilk, and I want to give her as much of it as I can.
But after more than 30 days of this routine, it’s still a big mystery to me.














