Sunday, July 5, 2009

Ode to my cloth pads


I have a lot to catch up on with this blog--Eden's birth story, for one, but also all of the postpartum-y things I've become intimately aware are part of "life after birth control"--but I can't help myself from taking the quick opportunity while Eden is sleeping to share my deep and abiding passion for cloth postpartum pads. Matt and I were actually cutting them out (loosely following this pattern, but there are tons of others out there) before we went to bed the night I went into labor, so obviously we didn't have time to sew them ("we" meaning "Matt" because I can't sew) by the time I gave birth. I was almost ready to throw in the towel and just keep using disposables, as my motivation was largely environmental and I figured the planet would understand, just this once--but Matt, bless his heart, sat down a few days ago and finished them, and I am now the proud owner of about 16 of the softest fleece-backed flannel pads with snaps on the wings that I have ever seen. The comfort is absolutely out of this world--to go from feeling like I was wearing a crinkly, sweaty, leaky plastic diaper and being constantly aware of that fact to being essentially unaware of the whisper-soft flannel lying absorbently next to my skin is one of the closest things I know of to postpartum heaven. They're slim, they're soft, they breathe, and they don't leak!

I'm sure the next question on everyone's mind is what you do with a used cloth postpartum pad. We've rigged up a nice system wherein we have a 1-gallon bucket under the bathroom sink that has several inches of water and a splash of Biz thrown in (upon my mother's recommendation, Biz is about the only thing we can find that gets out tough "human" stains like blood, sweat, and ring around the collar; we figure that in our largely chemical-free lifestyle, it's a concession we can make). I put the used pads in there and then dump the bucket in the wash when it's full. A little Biz and laundry detergent gets them sparkling clean again.

Plus, at $16-23 a pop to buy cloth pads (which you can do on Etsy or many other places if you don't have a sewing-inclined husband), we've saved literally hundreds of dollars by making them at home from a flannel sheet we got at Goodwill for a couple of dollars, a fleece blanket we picked up at KMart, and snaps we got for under $2. Plus, they were custom-made by my loving husband. It just doesn't get better than that!

1 comment:

Sara said...

We at Lunapads.com have a few suggestions for cleaning your cloth pads. If you are concerned about using chemicals try adding tea tree oil to your soaking water! Oxo Bright, Dr. Bronner's and hydrogen peroxide are also great at preventing staining. We also use our left over soaking water for plants in the garden!