[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON Oct-23-02 AT 03:14PM (Est)[/font][p]Hi Jeni-
I had the same situation with my son - I was planning on going back to work - but I just couldn't do it. At the last minute I decided to be a stay at home mom. That being said, I understand that everyone is in a different situation. Baby #2 should be here within a month. I'll be nursing too.
How long do you need to be gone from her? When you say-- "I'm prepared to keep "one feeding away" from my daughter."-- do you mean that she'll only miss one breast feeding session at a time? If that is the case, you probably won't need to pump while you're out - which is a great relief!
I would suggest that you start pumping a little bit now - not necessarily every day - but pump at the end of a feeding until you have a stockpile of frozen breast milk for your DH to feed to your daughter. I would also suggest that you try to schedule a couple of times per week (before you actually go back to work) where DH is "in charge" so that he can try and give a bottle of expressed milk and she'll get used to his soothing techniques. It would probably be best if you took a short walk or drive so that you're not actually there. (Babies seem to have a 6th sense when it comes to mommie!)
I've read that La Leche has recently been more accepting of moms that are returning to work, and their website has pupmping/bottlefeeding and returning to work information. You may want to peruse this list of articles:
http://www.lalecheleague.org/FAQ/FAQMain.html
down towards the bottom there is a section entitled:
Pumping, Working, and Breastfeeding
and articles:
I Need to Feed My Baby from a Bottle. Can You Help?
and
What Is the Father's Role in the Breastfeeding Relationship?
I hope this helps
Please remember - this is a short stage in her life - she needs you more than anything - you are her whole world. It is so fleeting - try and enjoy it!
Oh - I just remembered - about your concern that Olivia will like the bottle better than the breast - I had the same concern - I was totally paranoid that my son would stop wanting me after he had a taste of the bottle. As it turned out - my son HATED the bottle. He wouldn't drink from a bottle at all. He had to be given milk from a sippy cup that just dribbled into his mouth, or from a regular cup. He never took to a bottle at all although I tried lots of different nipples, etc. You could just try and use a sippy cup or small feeding cups - it may ease your mind a bit. Here's a link that has Ameda Baby Cups for feeding expressed breast milk:
http://www.ElizabethLee.com/accys/nnn.htm
Jennifer k