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Episode 10 Breastfeeding Trauma with Amberley Harris

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Contenu fourni par Birth Trauma Training. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par Birth Trauma Training ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.

Breastfeeding trauma is often overlooked. It can represent a continuation of traumatic birth, come up as a new trauma in and of itself, or it can trigger previous abuse or unpleasant associations and memories with our own bodies.

With my first baby I really struggled. I managed to exclusively pump, but after 6-7 months I’d had enough. With my second baby, we’re about to hit 18 months of breastfeeding, and I have to pinch myself.

Today I interview my breastfeeding angel, Amberley Harris. Amberley is a breastfeeding consultant and registered Midwife. She absolutely changed my life.

In this episode, Amberley and I unpack some of the major differences between my first and second breastfeeding experiences and how breastfeeding can represent a continuation of traumatic birth.

Breastfeeding can trigger huge feelings of failure, shame, self-doubt, guilt, and crushing sense of bodily autonomy.

In today’s episode we cover:

· Common breastfeeding myths and negative story-telling handed down through families

· Self-fulfilling prophecies and the language that’s used (e.g., having ‘flat nipples’, or being pale = definite nipple damage)

· How we can teach birthing people about the ways in which certain interventions (medications, scalp clips, c-section) may impact breastfeeding

· Empowerment that can come from learning to express antenatally

· How we can encourage birthing people to make a breastfeeding plan rather than waiting to get help if things get difficult

· How less than 5 percent of women actually have insufficient milk supply (due to insufficient glandular tissue). There are SO many other factors contributing to difficulties with breastfeeding

· What’s a “normal” amount of pain with breastfeeding? How do we measure it? What happens to us when we’re told “but the latch looks ok”

· How you can help at that first feed. Skills for calming Mum and baby

· The benefits of time and patience. The breast crawl is replicable for months. If the first time doesn’t work out, there’s still time to encourage babies to use their instincts

· The idea that ‘her success is not your failure’. Talking positively about breastfeeding while being mindful that one person’s celebration can trigger someone else’s shame

· How I used the ‘4P’ analysis to put together a breastfeeding history and find the predisposing, protective, perpetuating and protective factors.

You can see the handout I used about applying the ‘4 P’ analysis to my breastfeeding history on the website www.doctorerin.com.au/podcast

Amberley Harris

https://www.maternal-instincts.com.au/

Diabetes and Antenatal Milk Expressing

http://www.adips-somanz.org/assets/2017-ADIPS-SOMANZ-presentations/Della-Forster-diabetes-and-antenatal-milk-expressing-DAME-a-multicentre-randomised-controlled-trial-abs-7.pdf

Jenna Kutcher’s podcast

https://podcast.jennakutcher.com/

There’s also a chapter on breastfeeding trauma in the book Traumatic Childbirth

https://www.amazon.com.au/Traumatic-Childbirth-Cheryl-Tatano-Beck/dp/0415678102/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=traumatic+childbirth&qid=1556599603&s=gateway&sr=8-2

  continue reading

40 episodes

Artwork
iconPartager
 
Manage episode 311395947 series 3117766
Contenu fourni par Birth Trauma Training. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par Birth Trauma Training ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.

Breastfeeding trauma is often overlooked. It can represent a continuation of traumatic birth, come up as a new trauma in and of itself, or it can trigger previous abuse or unpleasant associations and memories with our own bodies.

With my first baby I really struggled. I managed to exclusively pump, but after 6-7 months I’d had enough. With my second baby, we’re about to hit 18 months of breastfeeding, and I have to pinch myself.

Today I interview my breastfeeding angel, Amberley Harris. Amberley is a breastfeeding consultant and registered Midwife. She absolutely changed my life.

In this episode, Amberley and I unpack some of the major differences between my first and second breastfeeding experiences and how breastfeeding can represent a continuation of traumatic birth.

Breastfeeding can trigger huge feelings of failure, shame, self-doubt, guilt, and crushing sense of bodily autonomy.

In today’s episode we cover:

· Common breastfeeding myths and negative story-telling handed down through families

· Self-fulfilling prophecies and the language that’s used (e.g., having ‘flat nipples’, or being pale = definite nipple damage)

· How we can teach birthing people about the ways in which certain interventions (medications, scalp clips, c-section) may impact breastfeeding

· Empowerment that can come from learning to express antenatally

· How we can encourage birthing people to make a breastfeeding plan rather than waiting to get help if things get difficult

· How less than 5 percent of women actually have insufficient milk supply (due to insufficient glandular tissue). There are SO many other factors contributing to difficulties with breastfeeding

· What’s a “normal” amount of pain with breastfeeding? How do we measure it? What happens to us when we’re told “but the latch looks ok”

· How you can help at that first feed. Skills for calming Mum and baby

· The benefits of time and patience. The breast crawl is replicable for months. If the first time doesn’t work out, there’s still time to encourage babies to use their instincts

· The idea that ‘her success is not your failure’. Talking positively about breastfeeding while being mindful that one person’s celebration can trigger someone else’s shame

· How I used the ‘4P’ analysis to put together a breastfeeding history and find the predisposing, protective, perpetuating and protective factors.

You can see the handout I used about applying the ‘4 P’ analysis to my breastfeeding history on the website www.doctorerin.com.au/podcast

Amberley Harris

https://www.maternal-instincts.com.au/

Diabetes and Antenatal Milk Expressing

http://www.adips-somanz.org/assets/2017-ADIPS-SOMANZ-presentations/Della-Forster-diabetes-and-antenatal-milk-expressing-DAME-a-multicentre-randomised-controlled-trial-abs-7.pdf

Jenna Kutcher’s podcast

https://podcast.jennakutcher.com/

There’s also a chapter on breastfeeding trauma in the book Traumatic Childbirth

https://www.amazon.com.au/Traumatic-Childbirth-Cheryl-Tatano-Beck/dp/0415678102/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=traumatic+childbirth&qid=1556599603&s=gateway&sr=8-2

  continue reading

40 episodes

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