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Dale,

 

There is a tea called Mothers Milk and it works wonders. The makers of it is

Traditional Medicinal, and can be found at some grocery store, GNC, Wild Oats.

I would drink 3 cups a day, and it helped tremendously with my last baby.

 

Rahnny

 

 

 

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See my other post.

 

Again, if anyone has heard of a massage therapy for lactation I would appreciate

hearing about it.

 

It was recently mentioned in a group setting w/ other doulas that there was a

thought that massaging around the shoulder area would help with lactation.

 

I've never before heard of this.

 

Dale

 

 

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In a message dated 11/7/04 4:34:31 PM US Mountain Standard Time,

An.Indigo.Rose writes:

 

 

> new

> > mothers?

>

> My apologies for butting in...

>

> Speaking from experience, brewer's yeast can help increase/improve

> milk production. All three of my babies have been very happy with the

> new flavor, also...no adverse side affects noted. :) I used tablets

> from GNC, but I believe you can get jars of powder form in the health

> food section of the grocery store, now.

> Per my doc's instructions <bg>, a medicinal beer was always a nice

> fore-runner to a nursing session. (On the theory of relaxation and

> brewer's yeast....and, it may be a weak theory...but, hey! :)

> We practiced that technique with Black Dog Raspberry Ale. :) HTH

>

>

 

In the " OLD DAYS " doctors frequently told mothers to drink ale or stout for

lactation -- it works!!!!!

 

 

 

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Dale,

I'm not a massage therapist or an expert in acupressure; however, I'm

guessing that this idea is similar to the concept of body reflexology. When

you massage the reflexes in your neck (for beautiful skin) ... you are also

stimulating hormones to help in the development of the breasts.

 

This from my book on body reflexology: Place right hand under jaw with

fingers on one side of the throat and thumb on the other. Using a gentle

rolling motion work down to the collarbone; then up again. Reverse hands and

again massage down, then up. This should be a VERY GENTLE massage. Go slowly

and only do once or twice on the first day. Increase time as necessary.

 

You may also find that stimulating the pituitary gland could also be helpful

(after delivery).

 

I found these points in another book but without any detail:

- Gently massage your breasts in a clockwise direction to increase

circulation and milk flow.

- Reflexology can promote milk flow and balance hormone production.

- Massaging around the head, neck and shoulders will ease tension, promote

circulation and stimulate pressure points useful during breast feeding.

 

HTH ...

Linda Wallen

ljwallen

 

 

-

 

>

> Is there an acupressure point for help w/ increasing lactation for new

mothers?

>

> Dale

>

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> > Is there an acupressure point for help w/ increasing lactation for new

> mothers?

 

My apologies for butting in...

 

Speaking from experience, brewer's yeast can help increase/improve

milk production. All three of my babies have been very happy with the

new flavor, also...no adverse side affects noted. :) I used tablets

from GNC, but I believe you can get jars of powder form in the health

food section of the grocery store, now.

Per my doc's instructions <bg>, a medicinal beer was always a nice

fore-runner to a nursing session. (On the theory of relaxation and

brewer's yeast....and, it may be a weak theory...but, hey! :)

We practiced that technique with Black Dog Raspberry Ale. :) HTH

 

Lisa

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Lisa -

 

Never apologize on this list! All butt-insky's welcome! LOL

 

It's true! Have a beer for that milk production. Speaking from experience with

many mothers - try an imported beer. Not likely to have as many pesticides in

it!!

 

;)

 

Dale

-

Lisa Nelson

 

My apologies for butting in...

 

Per my doc's instructions <bg>, a medicinal beer was always a nice

fore-runner to a nursing session. (On the theory of relaxation and

brewer's yeast....and, it may be a weak theory...but, hey! :)

We practiced that technique with Black Dog Raspberry Ale. :) HTH

 

Lisa

 

 

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thank you Linda!

 

I will check other reflexology sources.

 

Dale

-

Linda Wallen

 

 

Dale,

I'm not a massage therapist or an expert in acupressure; however, I'm

guessing that this idea is similar to the concept of body reflexology.

 

 

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Hi Dale

 

I am studying remedial massage...there is an acupressure point called

'Breast Window' (St16) directly above the breast tissue (in line with

the nipple). It's at the area between the 3rd and 4th ribs and also one

called 'Heavenly Pond' (P1) which is one thumbwidth outside the nipple.

Both of these points relive lactation problems and help with

insufficient milk production. These points should be held for one minute

as you breathe deeply whenever you have a free hand. St16 will be the

site of a tender spot. (Obviously P1 is best done by the lady in

question!!!)

 

My very simple other suggestion (as a mother) is to drink a glass of

water for each breast every time the baby feeds. Sometimes it is sheer

lack of fluid in the mother's body that reduces milk production and in

my experience new mum's usually neglect their own hydration.

 

Hope this helps

regards

Veronica

 

Is there an acupressure point for help w/ increasing lactation for new

mothers?

 

Dale

 

 

 

 

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Veronica -

 

Thank you!! Would this be a part of all remedial massage courses? I am

wondering because I would like to reach out to area massage therapists and

include them in my local resources for my students. Or possibly add a national

resource page to my website.

 

Women need to know every available option out there for themselves and their

children - and it would be great if I could get dads to start reading more too!!

 

My hubby does a lot of housework around here and spends a lot of time with the

kids (way more than any dad I personally know). However, when it comes to the

homeschooling, vaccine issues, etc. he waits for me to learn first and then

educate him.

 

And yes, you're right - dehydration is a big factor. LLL has a great book out

there for the physiological basics and foundations of breastfeeding and all of

the ideas posted here so far (with the exception of the honeybush/roibos tea)

are in there.

 

It's the acupressure point that raised my interest. I try to keep up with

what's current.

 

Dale

-

Veronica

 

I am studying remedial massage...there is an acupressure point called

'Breast Window' (St16) directly above the breast tissue (in line with

the nipple). It's at the area between the 3rd and 4th ribs and also one

called 'Heavenly Pond' (P1) which is one thumbwidth outside the nipple.

Both of these points relive lactation problems and help with

insufficient milk production. These points should be held for one minute

as you breathe deeply whenever you have a free hand. St16 will be the

site of a tender spot. (Obviously P1 is best done by the lady in

question!!!)

 

 

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Hi.

My ex-dh is from Cuba. Standard practice there was (at least back in the

early days) to have lactating women drink Guiness Stout. Said it boosted

their milk production tremendously. And I'm sure it made for very happy

babies, too. :-)

Enjoy.

Angela

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sun, 7 Nov 2004 21:24:15 -0500

" Dale Bernucca " <dbernucca

Re: Massage Therapists on the List

 

Lisa -

 

Never apologize on this list! All butt-insky's welcome! LOL

 

It's true! Have a beer for that milk production. Speaking from experience

with many mothers - try an imported beer. Not likely to have as many

pesticides in it!!

 

;)

 

Dale

-

Lisa Nelson

 

My apologies for butting in...

 

Per my doc's instructions <bg>, a medicinal beer was always a nice

fore-runner to a nursing session. (On the theory of relaxation and

brewer's yeast....and, it may be a weak theory...but, hey! :)

We practiced that technique with Black Dog Raspberry Ale. :) HTH

 

Lisa

 

 

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Hi Dale

 

<snip> Thank you!! Would this be a part of all remedial massage

courses? I am wondering because I would like to reach out to area

massage therapists and include them in my local resources for my

students. Or possibly add a national resource page to my website.

<snip>

 

We do some accupressure work as part of our Aromatherapy massage course

butI have a great book on self-application of accupressure from which I

sourced this specific information. If you are interested in the book, it

is called " Acupressure's Potent Points: A Guide to self-care for common

ailments " by Michael Reed Gach (founder & Director of the Acupressure

Institute of America). It's a great book of self-remedies and includes

photographs and diagrams to make sure you hit those pressure points!

 

I think accupressure is a more specialised technique and not necessarily

taught as part of remedial massage. In my experience every course is

actually a little bit different at the practical level and really

depends on the skills of the teacher. For example, my massage teacher is

a reflexologist so we tend to get a lot more reflexology technique than

others might...and then there is the fact that I am located in

Australia, and our courses may be a bit different to yours. Sorry I

can't really answer your question!

 

all the best

 

Veronica

 

PS Let me know how the treatment works. It's not one I have had reason

to apply.

 

 

 

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