Yes; you are expending more calories than when you were pregnant (if your baby is exclusively breastfeeding)!
only if you have a baby first
Yes, this is sometimes possible
Have a baby. If you have a baby wouldn't that make it worse?! Obviously the person who answered that is dumb! Breastfeeding really helps!
Some words that rhyme with "hungrier" include "angrier," "dungaree," and "youngery."
Yes, the drug you intake gets into the milk you make and this then affects the baby.
well i could never figure out how to rotate the bowl,. the baby got hungrier and hungrier every time, what i did was choose three foods, FOCUS on the first food selection youve chosen, and if the baby likes that first food ex barley cereal , if your baby likes barley cereal make sure to make that your FIRST choice every single feeding the food on the tray appears in the order list you choose it on the food menu
Breastfeeding women need to make sure that any medication they take is also safe for the baby, since almost all drugs they take appear in the breastmilk.
Mostly milk, meats, and grain. Fish and steak can be really healthy for the baby but make sure not to drink too much soda.
Its called BREASTFEEDING not nipple feeding, the baby is meant to take a good portion of the areola and breastflesh so the nipple is compressed and elongated.
Many women readily recognize the tired washed out feeling of early pregnancy. Others may find that the baby goes off the milk, seems hungrier, or does not seem to enjoy feeding as much. This is because the milk seems to acquire a distinctive taste due to the pregnancy hormones, and may sometimes reduce the amount of milk the mother produces.
Breastfeeding infact causes the uterus to shrink back to normal size faster, lessening the chance of postbirth bleeding.
yes it is normal. my sister just had her baby and was constantly itchy. the doc told us it was from her skin stretching to make room for baby.