
The Lactation Survival Bundle
Breastfeeding is not intuitive. Nobody warned you.
You've been up for the third time tonight. The latch hurts. You're not sure if it's supposed to. You Google. The internet says everything.
The person who could actually fix your latch in one session charges more than your grocery budget. And she has no openings for two weeks.
Your mom says formula. Your friend says exclusive breastfeeding. Your OB says whatever works. Nobody explains supply cues, cluster feeds, or when to worry.
Your breast is hard, red, and 102°F. Your provider's office is closed. You don't know if this is an ER situation.
Everything an IBCLC would tell you, translated for 3am reading.
Latching, positioning, frequency, feed logs, is-this-normal. Everything for the first fortnight.
Multiple angles. What a good latch looks like. What a shallow latch looks like. How to fix it.
Is your baby getting enough? A clear tree that walks through diaper counts, weight, and demand cues.
Flange size, suction settings, when to pump, storage rules. Everything the pump manual doesn't say.
Sample schedules for different work situations, how much milk to store, weaning your pumping supply.
When to home-treat, when to call. Educational escalation guide reviewed by an IBCLC.
Gentle methods for weaning at any age. Baby-led, mother-led, and mixed approaches with timelines.
Foods that support supply (not the myths). One-handed meals for the nursing window. Hydration frameworks.
For the mom who cannot get an IBCLC on the phone at 3am.
- Pregnant women in weeks 30–40 preparing to breastfeed
- New moms 0–6 weeks postpartum in the thick of it
- Anyone who can't afford or access an in-person IBCLC
- Moms returning to work who need a pumping strategy
Latch right. Supply confident. 3am handled.
Actually see the correct latch
Multi-angle photos, not vague descriptions. You'll know if you're doing it right.
Know when supply is fine
A decision tree that walks through the real markers, not the internet ones. Rest without wondering.
Handle 3am emergencies
Clogged ducts. Mastitis. Fever. Educational escalation guides so you know what to do before you can reach a provider.
Written by an IBCLC. Translated for a 3am mom.
Other breastfeeding resources are either clinical textbooks or oversimplified mom blogs. This bundle is IBCLC-level information rewritten in plain English, with photos, decision trees, and immediate-action protocols. Reviewed by a certified IBCLC. Educational only — not a substitute for professional lactation care.
Written and reviewed by an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant.
Three tiers. Pro (with pumping) is the most chosen.
- First 2 weeks crisis guide
- Correct latch photo guide
- Supply troubleshooting tree
- Feed log
- Pumping basics
- Return-to-work schedule
- Clogged duct/mastitis plan
- Weaning protocols
- Supply-supporting meal plan
- First 2 weeks crisis guide
- Correct latch photo guide
- Supply troubleshooting tree
- Feed log
- Pumping basics
- Return-to-work pumping schedule
- Clogged duct/mastitis action plan
- Weaning protocols
- Supply-supporting meal plan
- First 2 weeks crisis guide
- Correct latch photo guide
- Supply troubleshooting tree
- Feed log
- Pumping basics
- Return-to-work pumping schedule
- Clogged duct/mastitis action plan
- Weaning protocols (any age)
- Supply-supporting meal plan
What nursing moms ask before buying.
Is this a substitute for an in-person IBCLC?
No. This is educational content written by an IBCLC. If you have access to an in-person consult, take it. This bundle exists for the moments between appointments and for the many families who can't access one.
Is this only for breastfeeding?
Primarily, yes. It also supports combo feeding (breast + bottle + formula) and pumping-only. Fed is best — the bundle just gives you the tools to make breastfeeding work if that's your goal.
When should I get it — before or after baby?
Both work. The first 2 weeks crisis guide is designed to be read weeks 30–40 of pregnancy so you're prepared, then referenced in the first weeks postpartum. The pumping section can wait until you're ready.
What if I have low supply / oversupply / other issues?
The troubleshooting sections cover the most common issues (real low supply, perceived low supply, oversupply, forceful letdown, nursing strikes). For complex or ongoing issues, work with an in-person IBCLC — many are covered by insurance under the ACA.
Who made this?
The Helper Hive imprint, with lead authorship and review by a certified International Board Certified Lactation Consultant (IBCLC) with 10+ years of clinical practice.
What is your refund policy?
Because this is an instant digital download, all sales are final. If you have any issue accessing your files, email us within 7 days and we'll make it right.
You don't have to keep googling at 3am.
Download the bundle. Save it to your phone. Look up the answer you need in the moment you need it.
Instant digital download · Written by an IBCLC · Educational only