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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think I don’t need to buy these just in case?

132 replies

FlyingSoap · 27/06/2024 12:37

My sister has a toddler and chose not to breastfeed, which is completely fine and she had her reasons! Individual choice. She has been asking me (loads) how I plan on feeding my baby. I intend to breastfeed, I’m researching into it as much as I can before baby’s arrival and really hope we can be successful. If it doesn’t work out for whatever reason I’ll move to formula. I have looked at this too and know the brand we’d go for, and how to safely prepare a bottle and sterilise the equipment.

My sister is repeatedly saying that I must buy 8 bottles, steriliser and tubs of formula just in case. She won’t let it go. I try and change the subject but she finds a way to bring it back onto that whenever we talk about baby prep. She keeps repeating, ‘trust me, breastfeeding is not the easy option from watching my friends, it’s so limiting’. It’s making me feel a bit awkward actually. We live very close by to a 24 hour ASDA so it’s not as though we couldn’t nip out and buy everything we need if we had to. I feel like if I have formula available it will be easier to give up when it is inevitably a bit tricky in the early days.

When it’s not that, it’s how all of her friends had a really traumatic birth, she was never expecting parenthood to be so hard, they nearly got a divorce…

Observationally her DH doesn’t seem to help very much and never has done. My DN is a very easy going toddler with a placid temperament and has slept through for 11 hour nights since about 4/5 months.

I’m not naive enough to think it won’t be really difficult at times (beyond my current comprehension, even) but I never understand why people have to tell you this when you are pregnant almost like they are basking in the experience of having done it already.

Anyway, AIBU to not buy bottles ahead of time? I would worry it would be money wasted. I do have a couple of small ‘Mam’ bottles gifted from the Boots parenting club so not entirely without.

OP posts:
OhMoreDrama · 27/06/2024 17:26

IsaidByeByeMissAmericanPie · 27/06/2024 17:03

Also... always seems to be lots of posts on threads like this saying 'my milk didn't come in until day 3' etc etc. That's completely NORMAL. I'd really advise reading up on normal behaviour of breastfeeding babies/cluster feeding/colostrum so you know to trust that your milk will (almost certainly) come in.

I didn't have any milk at all.

IsaidByeByeMissAmericanPie · 27/06/2024 18:32

OhMoreDrama · 27/06/2024 17:26

I didn't have any milk at all.

That's why I said (almost certainly) come in. Some people don't have any milk at all but that's not common. I just see it mentioned a lot : 'my milk didn't come in till day 2/3!!' When actually that's completely normal, but people don't realise. I didn't realise!

WiseBiscuit · 27/06/2024 18:44

It’s amazing how statistically only a teeny tiny number of women can’t physically breastfeed, yet they all happen to be on mumsnet. The reality is that most didn’t know what they were doing, didn’t understand how milk is produced and didn’t have access to the right help.

This forum is absolutely the worst place to come for any breastfeeding information.

My NCT group managed 100% EBF to 9 months and all but one did 12 months+ and were aren’t unusual.

maw1681 · 27/06/2024 18:55

No don't bother, I didn't. We have a 24h Tesco a couple of miles away and Amazon prime for next day delivery so I thought that was good enough if breastfeeding went wrong

Babyboomtastic · 27/06/2024 19:05

WiseBiscuit · 27/06/2024 13:51

I didn’t buy anything and didn’t need it. We live in the arse end of nowhere and even we can buy things easily enough.

Unless you live out of reach of Amazon you’ll be grand.

Formula Feeders love to try and tell you the downsides to breastfeeding to make themselves feel better.

And those of us that have done both, had zero difficulty establishing breastfeeding, zero pain, and still see they are many upsides to formula?

You sound like a boob supremacist. Urgh.

Breast and bottle birth have both advantages and advantages. It's obvious.

Marblessolveeverything · 27/06/2024 19:13

YANBU, you have made a decision and have a plan B. I was the Plan B for my friend 🤣, I had the premade bottles in my kitchen for an emergency.

She knew I had formula and had agreed a safe word😉 for the panic 3 am call. We came up with this as we didn't have a 24 hour shop and she gave me strict rules and knew I was in her corner for her to have the best chance.

MaryMary6589 · 27/06/2024 21:43

Screamingabdabz · 27/06/2024 15:30

I breastfed but my milk didn’t come in until around 3 days after the birth. My parents thought he’d starve so did the 24 hour Asda thing. I just went along with it in a haze of exhausted bewilderment. He was fine. Had a couple of ounces of formula every now and then but as soon as my breast milk came in, I switched to breastfeeding. All fine.

Yanbu - see how you go.

I'm sorry if someone else has said this and I've missed it, but everyone's milk comes in around day 3 or 4. You produce colostrum before that. That's why babies lose weight when they're first born before they start gaining weight.

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