I bottle-fed my first three kids with relatively few issues. Bottle-feeding is pretty straightforward and works in actuality a lot like you pretended it worked when you were bottle-feeding your dolls as a kid. There aren’t a lot of resources on how to bottle-feed and other than some basic instructions on how many ounces are recommended at a feeding, you won’t get much guidance from your pediatrician or even the all-knowing internet. There really is no philosophy of bottle-feeding that I can find.
From looking at the growth charts of my three bottle-fed babies and by knowing how bonded they are to me and how healthy they are, I think their experiences were successful. I loved the sweet time I spent rocking and feeding them and bottle-feeding was a pretty low-stress activity compared to the other tasks of becoming an instant parent through adoption. I have had my moments of irritation about the aggressiveness of the pro-breastfeeding movement that seems to imply my kids must be damaged because I couldn’t/didn’t breastfeed them. My kids are happy, healthy, and well adjusted in spite of all the dire predictions.
After the birth of my fourth child (our one and only biological baby), I was excited to get the opportunity to breastfeed. To put it very simply– it was not a positive experience. That’s the subject of a different post, but what I want to do here is give a few lessons I learned from breastfeeding that I would do differently if I have another bottle-fed baby either through adoption, birth or a foster child.

