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I'm a working & breastfeeding mama

Welcome to The Breastfeeding Café Carnival!

This post was written as part of The Breastfeeding Café’s Carnival. For more info on the Breastfeeding Café, go to www​.breastfeedingcafe​.wordpress​.com. For more info on the Carnival or if you want to participate, contact Claire at clindstrom2 {at} gmail {dot} com. Today’s post is about breastfeeding and employment. Please read the other blogs in today’s carnival listed below and check back for more posts July 18th through the 31st!


About three months ago, I wrote a post about working and breastfeeding (Why I pump at work: priorities). Well, we’re nearing the 7 month mark of exclusively breastfeeding. That’s right, Ryan hasn’t had any baby food or rice cereal yet. He’s not interested yet! But I also increased my hours at work recently and work 30 hours a week. So I pump.

I hate pumping. I hate being in the middle of a project at work and needing to take a 15 minute break to go pump. It’s boring and it’s a hassle. But it’s a priority. There isn’t any other way to say it – I do it for Ryan. As long as I can make milk and Ryan wants it, he is going to get it.

THANKFULLY, I work in a very friendly environment that makes this possible. I’ve heard horror stories from moms that have to go pump in their car at work or that don’t get a break that allows them to pump. If I’m super busy, I just shut my office door and pump right there while I keep working. Otherwise (and most often), I go to the break room and pump in the bathroom. I really have my pick of offices and rooms that I could pump in, but the bathroom off the kitchen is just easiest… I have a sink to clean pump parts, I can grab my lunch or a snack, and no one bothers me ;) And? it’s usually the one time during my work day that I’m able to check twitter or call my hubby. So I guess it’s not that bad, haha.

When I first started back at work, I wasn’t pumping enough – Ryan was eating more while I was gone than I was able to pump. So I pumped at night after Ryan went to bed, too. Now? Ryan usually eats quite a bit less than I’m able to pump at work so we have been able to stock some up in the freezer! Thank goodness – I need to make sure I have enough while I’m gone at BlogHer!!! (which I’m attending thanks to my AWESOME sponsor: Simplisse Breastfeeding Products–how fitting, right?!) Speaking of Simplisse, I cannot wait until their new electric pump comes out so I can use that at work! Their manual pump has been wonderful to have at home for quick/night pumps.

Where do you pump at work? Do you ever have any issues with people/bosses that don’t understand or respect your needs? I hope it’s as easy for everyone else as it has been for me!


 Here are more post by the Breastfeeding Café Carnival participants! Check back because more will be added throughout the day.

Lewis no longer chairman of Muscular Dystrophy Association

Charleston Daily Mail August 5, 2011 TUCSON, Ariz. — Comedian Jerry Lewis is no longer serving as the Muscular Dystrophy Association’s national chairman and won’t be appearing on this year’s Labor Day telethon, the nonprofit agency announced Wednesday night.

Lewis, 85, has been the MDA’s national chairman since the early 1950s and has hosted the Labor Day Muscular Dystrophy Association telethon since 1966.

He announced in May that he was retiring as host of the telethon that has become synonymous with his name. But Lewis added that he planned to make his final appearance on this year’s Sept. 4, show and planned on continuing to serve as MDA’s national chairman.

MDA Chairman of the Board R. Rodney Howell said in a statement that Lewis “will not be appearing on the telethon” and “we will not be replacing him as MDA national chairman.” Howell added that Lewis “is a world-class humanitarian and we’re forever grateful to him for his more than half century of generous service to MDA.” The statement did not provide any further explanation for the moves, and calls to the Tucson, Ariz,-based nonprofit weren’t immediately returned Wednesday night. Representatives for Lewis, a publicist and a manager, also did not immediately respond to messages left for comment. go to site muscular dystrophy association

Lewis, a Las Vegas resident, has in recent years battled a debilitating back condition, heart issues and the crippling lung disease pulmonary fibrosis.

MDA officials said more than $1 billion has been raised during Muscular Dystrophy Association telethons over the years and a national network of some 200 hospital-affiliated clinics has opened since Lewis became involved in the telethon. go to website muscular dystrophy association

Lewis’ first live Labor Day weekend telethon in 1966 was broadcast by a single New York City television station. It raised more than $1 million in pledges.

The telethon moved from New York to Las Vegas in 1973 and had stints in Los Angeles before returning in 2006 to Las Vegas.

Last year’s Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon aired from the South Coast hotel-casino on the Las Vegas Strip and was broadcast by more than 170 stations. It raised almost $59 million to fund research to find a cure for muscular dystrophy and ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease.

The live telethon usually lasts 21 1/2 hours. Sometimes Lewis would sing or tell lighthearted jokes. He introduced guests and other performers like a ringmaster. Sometimes, he turned serious and shared stories of people afflicted by the disease or who were helped by the association. All the while, he urged donors to contribute while a tote board rang up pledge totals.

Some telethon moments have made history.

In Las Vegas during the 1976 telethon, Lewis was reunited by Frank Sinatra with Dean Martin, with whom the comedian had an acrimonious split 20 years earlier. The famous entertainer best known for his slapstick humor first teamed with Martin in the 1940s to play nightclubs and television shows and to make a series of comedy films.


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