Hi Ren
My DD went from the 90th percentile when she was born down to the 25th in the first few weeks - we had a lot of trouble feeding and then the midwives panicked me into giving her some formula. We were having LOTS of trouble anyway (she would attach but not stay on for more than a few minutes) but the weight loss added to my anxiety about the whole thing made me more receptive to expressing and giving formula.
Anyhow, she has stayed at the 50th percentile pretty much from the first month (she's now nearly 8 months old) and has never got anywhere near the 90th she was born at!
With the benefit of hindsight (ain't it wonderful), in my case I think she was born too heavy (3.925kg). I was borderline gestational diabetes which makes babies heavier plus my MCHN later told me that if you have a very big placenta (mine was apparently) then your baby can grow bigger than what it's really meant to be. So ... for me the weight loss was all about getting back to what she was genetically meant to be. Added to this, I think there's a rule of thumb that babies double their birth weight at Month Four. My DD was 6kg at Month Four which if you work backwards means that she 'should have' been about 3kg at birth - a whole kg less than what she actually was.
Sorry, I've rambled. But what I'm saying is that I think you're doing absolutely the right thing and concentrating on wet/dirty nappies, general contentedness rather than weight. I'm sure Barb will come in and reassure you more but from a layperson's point of view, two weeks is early days and if you feel like BF is on the right track, then good for you. Might not be a bad idea to increase the feeds and feed at every opportunity though - the midwives didn't explain to me that a sleeping baby could also mean a very tired/dehydrated baby who hasn't the energy to wake up for feeds. I just presumed that sleep = good.
It's hard to find a balance isn't it?
Best of luck and let us know how you go.


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