The Incredible Journey of a Hyperlactation Syndrome Survivor
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Jul 17, 2024
Explore the inspiring story of a woman who donated over 350,000 oz of breast milk, overcoming hyperlactation syndrome to help save preemies.
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Over the last nine years, I estimate my total donation numbers to be over
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350,000 ounces. I would not wish this condition on my worst enemy. It is not
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fun. This is what I would pump in a day. It's a lot of milk. It's like the best
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feeling ever and it lasts for only minutes before my body starts making
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milk again. The milk bank I donated to, they specifically take donated breast
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milk and create a breast milk product that is for preemies and micro preemies
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So babies that have just reached that viability and something has happened
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where they were born far too early. They don't thrive. They don't survive. So this
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breast milk product is essentially a prescription. It is literally saving their lives. My body creates a lot of the hormone called prolactin and that is
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what drives milk production. So in the morning all of my pump sessions are my
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largest and usually when I start pumping you might be able to see that the milk
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looks a little blue and this is what's called for milk. It's the milk that comes
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out first. It's usually higher in sugar and then later during a pumping session
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more of the hind milk will come out and that's the fattier portion of the milk
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and I use a pitcher to mix all of the milk together so that it all has the
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same nutrients, the same makeup. Hyperlactation syndrome is technically a disability and I feel like we had to adapt just as anyone else would with any
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disability. First of all everything was new to me so everything was a learning
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curve. Everything was a struggle. Everything was painful. It has not only
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affected me but it has affected my family as well especially in the
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beginning when we couldn't go anywhere, we couldn't do anything. I always had to
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stick to this pump schedule but over the years and of course with the new
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technology that I am involved in I have been able to regain a lot of that
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freedom and I really try not to be held back. Will I ever stop? Yes. I don't think
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that this is sustainable. I think that the physical toll, the mental toll over
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time, it continues to stack up. I think right now my current goals are to make
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sure that my son has enough breast milk and then from there I think the most
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promising option for me would be to get a double mastectomy. I am really hopeful
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that breaking this record and kind of sharing my story will normalize milk-sharing
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