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Goidellick Designs Pro-Breastfeeding T-shirts

September 10th, 2010

Goidellick Designs is a tiny family run business. We run our business from our remote farm cottage in the Highlands of Scotland.

We have three children who are educated at home. We decided to start up our own business to allow us to be at home with the children. We wanted this business to reflect our values and opinions. We are enthusiastic about breastfeeding, home education and environmental issues. Through these interests we came up with our range of shirts and bags.
We’re now running a busy household full of children and cats and trying to promote our business too.

http://www.goidellick.toucansurf.com/goidellickdesigns/gd_bm_shirts.htm

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Sock Breasts and Knitted Knappies with Poo!

These are from the fantastic Alison Blenkinsop who is a former midwife. She was an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant for ten years, and still helps mothers with breastfeeding.

Alison’s aim is to help parents make informed choices on infant feeding. She does that in lots of different ways, all mentioned in her book Fit to Bust (profits to Baby Milk Action) which includes many breastfeeding songs. You can listen to a campaign song on Youtube here when she joined Equality Bill protesters on 18 July 2008 on Parliament Square.

Alison has developed a Toolchest of breastfeeding resources. These include a Sock Breast and Baby’s Mouth model, which can be very helpful to show mothers how and where the baby attaches, and how to hand express milk. It also makes them laugh!

Another tool is the knitted Knappy (see photo), which has coloured circles to show how baby’s poo changes in the first five days, when feeding is going well. It can help alert parents and health workers to early signs of inadequate intake. There’s a song to go with it too!

Instructions for the Sock Breast & Mouth and the Knappy, and information about other resources, plus a link to a knitted breast pattern, are all on the Breastfeeding Enabler’s Toolchest page on Alison’s website: http://www.linkable.biz/. You can also find out more about the right side, the left side, and the funny side of breastfeeding in her book Fit to Bust.

Lisa

9 months old – lots of poo and rice cakes

How can it possibly take the whole day to organise food for a baby? All the time I had left between breastfeeding, changing nappies and washing clothes is now taken up squishing banana, cooking soup with little chunks in, freezing or defrosting the stuff and removing tiny particles of food from the carpet, walls, me or the cat. I have decided the path of least resistance is to feed him on the floor as he cannot get such a good throwing angle from low down and I stand a chance of finding the minuscule chunks of rice cake he so happily discards.

The eating thing has an obvious knock on effect – poo. When he is not teething his nappies are really easy to deal with, just a couple of lumps to flush away. When he is teething, and that seems to be 99% of the time now he can poo up to 6 times a day and it is always a messy business that neither of us really want to do. It’s tricky to change the nappy of a little boy who really wants to try to crawl away from you as fast as possible whilst keeping up a continuous loud scream designed to make you really frantic. I have developed a system of holding him face down and changing his nappy with him on all fours. Sounds cruel but it’s much more humane than the arguments we have if he lies on his back. Another couple of months of holding the wriggly boy and I will be ready for the World Wrestling Federation. I could be ‘the Mother’. catchphrase ‘don’t mess with this Mother’, with a costume made of tiny particles of rice cake.

Wriggly fat boy is just about to crawl and I am nowhere near ready for that. Every square inch of the house is a potential danger zone. There are cables, bicycles, boxes, muddy wellys and a multitude of other things I would rather he didn’t taste and chew. There is a travel cot up in the kitchen now so I have a safe place to put him when I am cooking or if the phone rings.