Inspired Motherhood - Birth & Lactation Services - Peachtree City, GA

Inspired Motherhood - Birth & Lactation Services - Peachtree City, GA Inspired Motherhood Birth & Lactation Services, LLC is owned by Angela Orenczak, IBCLC.

The height of the young mama days for me. Doing Mother Blessing events for all my birthy baby mamas. 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻I saw this pi...
11/15/2025

The height of the young mama days for me.

Doing Mother Blessing events for all my birthy baby mamas. 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

I saw this picture and it took me right back. This was such a fun time in my life! 😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘

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11/15/2025

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By Heart formula recall.  Check your supply!
11/14/2025

By Heart formula recall. Check your supply!

Here’s a list of impacted products.

Join us!
11/09/2025

Join us!

11/07/2025
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11/05/2025

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A Life-Changing Release 💙

At his initial appointment, this 3-month-old’s parents were worried — he had only gained 3 lbs since birth. The reason? A restrictive lip and tongue tie that made both nursing and bottle-feeding incredibly difficult.

After his release procedure, everything changed. In the 3 months that followed, he gained 8 lbs and began meeting his growth milestones!

Undiagnosed oral ties can lead to big challenges for both baby (poor weight gain, fussiness, gassiness) and mom (pain, low supply). We’re so thrilled to see this little one thriving and his parents finally finding relief! 🍼💙

My last baby at 5 weeks old. 💙💙💙I see a lot of parents when their babies are 3-6 weeks old. We talk a LOT about growth s...
11/04/2025

My last baby at 5 weeks old. 💙💙💙

I see a lot of parents when their babies are 3-6 weeks old. We talk a LOT about growth spurts and normal newborn behavior.

This little guy accompanied me to a lactation conference at 5 weeks. All he wanted was to be close to Mama and to feed on demand. ✅ done.

Babies are portable. They love being close. It’s way easy to throw them into a sling or carrier to keep them chest to chest.

Sometimes you just gotta do what you gotta do and the baby just blends in. 💙💚🩷💜

Peep my gorgeous wrap conversion to ring sling. I looooooved it. 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

If you’ve been my client and are happy with the care I provided, I would love to have a few more Google reviews for folk...
10/16/2025

If you’ve been my client and are happy with the care I provided, I would love to have a few more Google reviews for folks to see!

Check out Inspired Motherhood - Birth & Lactation Services on Google Search https://share.google/vKtfXOj9cpLYcErGC

Birth classes or lactation visits - or both!

I appreciate your time and kind words. 🤩🤩🤩🩷🩷🩷

5.0 ⭐ · Consultant

10/13/2025
10/13/2025

Attn! Support group is cancelled for tomorrow!!

There willk be no meeting tomorrow (Oct 14)!

Haters gonna hate. I BF my 5 kids for 2-3 years each. ✌🏻Biological norms say BF a toddler/preschooler should be the norm...
10/13/2025

Haters gonna hate.

I BF my 5 kids for 2-3 years each. ✌🏻

Biological norms say BF a toddler/preschooler should be the norm duration for BF. 🤷🏻‍♀️

I kept my kids close. They slept with us. They were never without me the first 2 years of their lives. Then they slowly went on Papa Dates and expanded their durations of breastfeeding.

It’s not weird. It’s just life. 💙💙💙🩷💙

Lifestyle
Rumer Willis defends breastfeeding her two-year-old daughter amid criticism
Rumer is the oldest daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore

By Brittany Miller Sunday 05 October 2025

"Rumer Willis has responded to critics of her choosing to breastfeed her two-year-old daughter.

On Thursday, the 37-year-old actor posted a photo of herself on her Instagram Story of her lying down on a couch while nursing her toddler, Louetta, who has the nickname “Lou.”

“For the haters who come at me about breastfeeding my 2 yr old,” she wrote on top of the photo. “I hope you have a blessed day.”

This is not the first time Rumer has addressed breastfeeding on social media. In 2023, she responded to commenters asking why she posted photos of her nursing on Instagram, replying: “Cause I want to.”

Another follower accused Willis of sharing the photo “for attention,” arguing that “nursing a baby is very private and should not be displayed like a circus event.” Willis responded saying that breastfeeding her daughter was a “privilege” and said the critic’s remarks reflected “a limited view” of motherhood.The American Academy of Pediatrics and the World Health Organization recommend that infants be exclusively breastfed for about the first six months of their lives, while starting to introduce other foods into the child’s diet, and continuing breastfeeding until they are two years old or older. Mothers often begin to wean their child off of breastmilk between the ages of two and four.

Rumer is the eldest daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore. The former couple also shares Scout LaRue Willis, 34, and Tallulah Belle Willis, 31. Following their divorce, the Die Hard actor married Emma Heming Willis in 2009, where they went on to welcome two more daughters, Mabel Ray Willis, 13, and Evelyn Penn Willis, 11.

Rumer has previously opened up about how close her blended family is, and how she hopes she and Lou — whom she shares with her ex-boyfriend singer Derek Richard Thomas — can one day be the same way.

“Honestly, I hope Lou will, like, still sleep in bed with me when she's my age,” she said during an episode of Zoe Winkler’s What in the Winkler?! podcast in April. “I still sleep in bed with my mom, and I don't think it’s weird.”

She added that she and her sisters also bathe together.

“We all still take baths together, my sisters and I. And that’s just the kind of house that I grew up in,” she explained, adding: “People might think that that’s crazy and weird, but I don't.”

During the conversation, Winkler and Rumer were discussing their different approaches to sleep-training her children, prompting Willis to share that she prefers sleeping with her toddler in the same room.

“I co-sleep with Louetta and have not spent a night away for her since she was born,” she said, adding, “I always think about it as, imagine if you took a baby gorilla or a dog when it was two weeks old or three months old, and had it sleep in a different room than [its] mom. Everyone would look at you like you were crazy. But yet we’re like, ‘Oh no, that kid can sleep through the night. It’s got to fend for themselves, got to learn how to self-soothe.’ They can't even feed themselves!” "

The Independent:
https://www.the-independent.com/life-style/rumer-willis-breastfeed-daughter-louetta-instagram-b2839575.html

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10/13/2025

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“Just stop, switch to formula, it isn’t a big deal.”

We have to stop saying this.

Sometimes feeding our babies is difficult.

Sometimes it is overwhelming.

Sometimes we are touched out and overtaxed in the process.

It doesnt help to hear: “just stop. Switch to formula. Don’t be a martyr.”

Sometimes feeding our babies with our bodies doesn’t seem to work.

And still, they don’t need to hear “just stop” or “give it up already” or “formula is just as good.”

For someone who planned to feed their baby naturally with their body, to breastfeed, ending breastfeeding can raise their risk of postpartum mood disorders significantly. It doesn’t mean they shouldn’t stop, it simply means there is an increased risk to do so.

Which is why, if they want to continue, working to make that possible is a protective measure. Not only for the health of the baby but also for the health of the one that intended to nurse that baby.

“Just stop” can even add to the stress. It can feel judgmental, even blaming. “You wouldn’t be having such a hard time if you weren’t trying to breastfeed, it doesn’t even matter, you’re doing this to yourself” is what it can sound like. But it does matter to them.

There are ways we can support someone and let them know they aren’t pressured to breastfeed without undermining them. A friend of mine and expert in the field gently told me that stopping was ONE of my options (we had also gone over the othet options) and it was my call because I was the expert on me and my baby. That was supportive for me to hear, even with my 9th baby.

Ending breastfeeding isn’t failure, it can be quite brave to change paths from the one you prepared for.

But it isn’t simple, easy, or risk free.

Nothing “just” about it.

Pressure to end can be even more damaging than pressure to continue. It can be isolating and disconnecting.

“Just stop” isn’t supportive, it is dismissive and minimizing. It is blaming and judgmental.

What are some actually supportive ways to communicate that ending nursing is ok?

***Pic of me syring feeding my youngest my colostrum. The baby that 3 of my friends and lactation colleagues reminded me that it was ok to stop breastfeeding but did so in a way that was sensitive, caring, informed, and truly supportive. That baby is 2 now and yes, STILL breastfeeding.

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145 Governors Square A
Peachtree City, GA
30269

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