Some young new mothers, because of their lack of breastfeeding experience, often mistake normal milk filling for lactation, and then make all kinds of unnecessary interventions, which not only cost a lot of energy, but also have the opposite effect, and some mothers even suffer from mastitis or even breast abscess when they handle it too much, so it is important to correctly identify and distinguish between normal filling and lactation. As you can imagine, the most milk is discharged just after breastfeeding the baby, when the amount of milk in the breast is the least and the mother feels the most relaxed, and then, as the amount of milk is continuously produced, the milk keeps gathering, and at this time the baby is not sucking, the milk is only produced but not discharged, so the mother will gradually feel her breast This feeling disappears after feeding the baby to a certain extent, and the mother will also feel that both breasts are looser and softer, which is normal milk filling. This is normal milk filling. Milk stagnation is when milk cannot be discharged from the milk duct system for various reasons, and even after feeding the baby, there is still no obvious change in the area of milk stagnation, and even after other parts of the breast are loose, the place of milk stagnation is more obvious.