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  • step #4. the power of micromovements

Micromovements in breastfeeding: helping you find 'the sweet spot'

Dr Pamela Douglas1st of Sep 202326th of Dec 2024

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The gestalt method of fit and hold is only one part of the Neuroprotective Developmental Care (NDC) or Possums breastfeeding programs (under development as Breastfeeding stripped bare), but an important place to start. This version of the gestalt method of fit and hold for breastfeeding women has been available since 2016. I'm hoping that Breastfeeding stripped bare, the comprehensive NDC approach to breastfeeding and lactation, will be publicly available by the end of 2024. Key elements of the NDC breastfeeding work are also found in The discontented little baby book, and in my research publications, starting here.

What are micromovements?

As soon as your baby is on, and even if baby has come on towards the end of your nipple (which is usual), draw your baby in close to your breast for a deep face-breast bury and begin to apply micromovements.

Micromovements are tiny steady movements of the baby in various directions, mostly just a millimetre or two at a time, to find what

  • Feels best for your breast and nipple

  • Gives your baby the best face-breast bury, and

  • Is most relaxing for baby.

There are three kinds of micromovements to experiment with, millimetre by millimetre.

  • Your forearm gives you control over vertical movements, higher or lower relative to your breast's natural fall in response to gravity when you're semi-reclined

  • You cuddle baby in and slide your baby's body against your own, in tiny horizontal movements either towards baby's toes or toward baby's nose

  • Your forearm moves as a lever, changing your baby's face's angle of contact with your breast with slight rolling movements.

micromovements1

The sweet spot

As you do these little exploratory micromovements, you are paying attention to the sensations of your breast and nipple. You are looking for a deep drawing sensation of your breast, which has no discomfort.

This is the 'sweet spot', where the nipple, areola and breast tissue are being pulled directly and deeply into the baby's mouth, without any drag. Once the baby has this big mouthful of breast tissue, the nipple is safely up near the junction of the hard and soft palate, and best protected from damage.

You are also looking for where the baby seems to be most relaxed and stable, not pulling off or fretting.

Babies are often restless at the breast because of nipple and breast tissue drag. This is also a common cause of breastfeeding problems in older babies, who have grown much longer but who are still being accidentally positioned as if they were younger. One way to tell if baby has this kind of positional instability is to notice if the nipple falls towards the baby's chin or ear when she pulls off the breast.

Your forearm as lever

In the gestalt method of fit and hold, we use the forearm that is supporting the baby's head (on the same side as the breast she is feeding from) as a lever to control how baby's face falls into the breast.

Often, as you experiment with micromovements using your forearm as a lever, it's most comfortable to have your wrist resting neutral (not bent or flexed). That is, your hand sits out, relaxed and perhaps looking weirdly redundant, not bent in to rest against your baby!

But this protects your wrist from strain and injury (which is quite common actually after having a baby), and gives you best use of your forearm as a lever for micromovements.

Acknowledgements

I first introduced the term micromovement into clinical breastfeeding support as a foundational part of the gestalt method in 2015. I borrowed this term from NIA dance. My NIA teachers used the term micromovement when describing women's relationships with their bodies and particular movements. In 2015, I had not heard the term micromovement used in any other context.

Recommended resources

Paying attention to micromovements is the best way to heal up nipple pain and damage

The power of micromovements

Selected references

Douglas PS, Keogh R. Gestalt breastfeeding: helping mothers and infants optimise positional stability and intra-oral breast tissue volume for effective, pain-free milk transfer. Journal of Human Lactation. 2017;33(3):509–518.

Douglas PS, Geddes DB. Practice-based interpretation of ultrasound studies leads the way to less pharmaceutical and surgical intervention for breastfeeding babies and more effective clinical support. Midwifery. 2018;58:145–155.

Douglas PS, Perrella SL, Geddes DT. A brief gestalt intervention changes ultrasound measures of tongue movement during breastfeeding: case series. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth. 2022;22(1):94. DOI: 10.1186/s12884-12021-04363-12887.

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Next up in working out for yourself what might help as you breastfeed your baby

Dr Pam talks you through the basic principles of the gestalt method using a knitted breast

The gestalt method of fit and hold helps empower you so that you can enjoy pain-free and effective breastfeeding. In this five minute video, I run through an overview of the gestalt method using a knitted breast.

steps of gestalt breastfeeding intervention

Resources

  • You can find a video and animation of how babies suck at the breast here (short) and here (longer).

  • You can find an NDC accredited practitioner who is trained in helping breastfeeding mothers with the gestalt method here.

  • You can find a research study here which shows, using ultrasound imaging, how the gestalt method changes what happens inside a baby's mouth during breastfeeding. The mothers and babies in this small case series had a long history of breastfeeding problems and multiple prior consultations with lactation consultants, which...

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