The midwife was back with her scales and this time she also had a little kit to test his blood sugars. "If it's low, you'll really have to give him formula," she said.
No, I don't want that. I want to keep breastfeeding him... but she looked at me as if to say, well, I want to win the lotto, but that's not going to happen either, is it? She did the tests and weighed him again, and yes, he had lost more weight, and his blood sugars were too low. The second kick. She went off to get the formula, and I just sat there and cried. Failure to thrive.
At this point, I really started to question myself. Was I harming my baby by insisting on this need to breastfeed? Did I really know better than qualified medical nurses? My instinct was telling me to keep going, but my determination was really shaken, and I was just full of doubt that I could do it.
By the time I got home from the hospital when the public health nurse called to check him, he had lost more weight still. And that's where I started to fear for my own mental health. I spoke to her about my concerns – and they kind of watch you like a hawk those first few days anyway for signs of post-natal depression. I don't think I had that, but honestly, after you have a baby, regardless of how you had it or how you're feeding the baby, your head is just all over the place. You feel like you've been run over by a truck, you can't move without pain, you're severely sleep-deprived, so you really don't know your arse from your elbow. I told her I intended to hire a private lactation consultant and as luck would have it, her colleague actually is one, so she sent her in to visit me the next day. Ok, I was finally going to get proper informed help and honestly, I think at this point I just wanted someone to tell me what to do, I wanted the doubt and fear to go away.
Of course, I have family and friends who had breastfed and who were still breastfeeding. They were such a massive support, all of them. They all went out of their way to contact me and offer support and solutions, and for that, I am so grateful. Just those pieces of support, the calls, and texts, were like comforting hugs each time, reaching into my doubt and chipping it away.
Despite all the support and visits from the lactation health nurse, Alex still was not gaining weight. The more weight he lost, the more stressed I got, and the more I doubted myself. I started to dread the feeds. I was told my supply was low. I was also told that the fact I was on fertility drugs for so long (two attempts at IVF and three frozen embryo transfers equals a lot of drugs) could have played a part in that. I was pumping and getting virtually nothing. So yet again, the more formula he was given, the less of my own milk. Your body will only produce what it thinks you need. Alex was two-weeks-old at this stage, and I had to make a decision.