Another topic of breastfeeding?

I know you must be sick of me all these questions but heres another. when my daughter nurses it seems to get only the milk from the first few minutes, then stops and breaks the chin just sucks and sucks. I breast compression and snack will be here and there, but mostly there is not any and when I click to see if nothing comes nothing when you step on the other side and after a few minutes of power on the other side of the face that was before starting to flee. if I go back to this side and only have a little more bite. Why this happens. just get a big mouth fulls the first minutes on each breast, then only occasionally bite and I have to keep swithcing sides. she ends up falling asleep before they actually ate. Does this mean that my milk is low? What is it?

No, that are leaking when you put it on the other side means that there are a lot of milk in the game that you just him away. However, he did not understand. There are a few reasons: 1) I really do not want more 2) The block is bad and it is difficult to get milk 3) Breast milk is too fast and loose and frustrated. If you gain weight and then she could simply be a Snacker as my first. No nurse for more than five minutes after being for one month of age (except when he was sleeping). He was 20 pounds in four months I assure you that you have enough milk. Nursing more than once per hour is actually much more common then you think. If the speed is fast, probably hear clicks, choking or gagging when the nurses. You can also "explode" when the milk that goes after eating. Your shit may be green and frothy. When it opens, you can see the stream of milk. Closure problems are a little more difficult, especially the text. But I insist that no matter how perfect a "manual" or "is a lock if there is pain or the mother or the baby fails to optimize the milk, then is wrong to lock the pair of nursing. Not all baby nipples and mouth are the same, so why does everyone a lock. I have to run, I'll try back links

Breastfeeding Breast Compression with Dr. Jack Newman