Site icon lyonessandcub

… take “Tree of Life” Belfies (breastfeeding selfies) in the NICU

Dear NICU mom,

You’ve probably seen them, those beautiful belfies from the breastfeeding mommy cohort, #Tree of Life (to normalize breastfeeding and to show the bond between mommy and baby), but you are stuck in the NICU with a micro-preemie, preemie, IUGR baby, TTTS (twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome) babies, or an otherwise sick and tiny newborn you are not allowed to nurse yet. Or perhaps, you don’t have any milk. Or, you are an exclusive pumper like I was, because you have to fortify for extra calories. Maybe you can bottle feed, maybe your little darling has a feeding tube. Did you know you can create belfies for bottle-fed and tube-fed babies, too? Who says the tree of life needs to come out of a boob? Fed is best, no matter how you feed. Don’t let the breastfeeding mommies steel your thunder. I will show you how it goes; it’s easy! All you need is a smartphone.

Here are the steps to take, before I go into detail with examples:

Effects, “Magic”

And now in detail. Let’s start:

Download the app called, “PicsArt.” It will tell you that the subscription costs $47.95 per year and will automatically renew, BUT you get a free 7-day trial. If you just want to take the belfie, use up your 7-day free trial and then cancel your subscription. Don’t forget it. If you get hooked by those beautiful possibilities, you can of course keep your subscription. I made mine just to show you where to click on.

After you have downloaded the PicsArt app, create an account. Then, upload the photo you want to use for your picture. I am using this photo of my 1-year-old Lyons Cub (who says it has to be a newborn?):

I chose this pic because of his ice-blue eyes. I just love it. So, the next step is to find one of the many Trees of Life that appeals to you for your picture. Be careful: the root of the tree goes to the milk source (i.e., the boob, the bottle, the feeding tube, the glass, wherever it comes from) and the crown with the leaves goes into the face of your child. You wouldn’t want the face all covered up, so choose a Tree of Life with a big root and a smaller crown, or a crown that is spread so far apart that you can still recognize the face of your child. There are also some cool trees showing hearts, or a mother and child. Here is an example of what kind of trees of life you can pick from (the list is endless):

I chose a very long tree with a tiny root and a narrow crown, because I needed it to fit over a bottle. Look at the different effects. I chose “artistic,” “halftone dots,” and then, I looked at the previews for different kinds of “magic” effects and selected those that appealed to me most:

In retrospect, I think I chose a picture where Lyons Cub had banged his nose. “Oopsie-daisy!” as Lyons Cub would say. Oh well! People might take it for one of those artistic effects 😉 Our next trial is with newborn photos in the NICU. Here is the original picture:

Not the greatest pic, I know. Sucking grumpily on colostrum. But this is how it was. The wires are hanging out of his jumper. I was lucky, for Lyons Cub only had monitors attached to him, no intravenous fluids, oxygen, or a feeding tube. But you can do Tree of Life pictures if your baby is on the vent or CPAP, too. Those pictures are memories for mommy. They are beautiful to her, anyway. And if you’re not satisfied, you can filter the photo or make it watercolor, pastel, comic, grayscale, or something else to distort reality. Here is the artwork:

The “Midnight” version seems to be the most often used one, as far as I can tell from using online forums. I tried it a few times, and those dots are in different places for the same photo all the time! So if you don’t like one dot placement (like, above, it’s in between the eyes), just try it a second time, and the dot will be somewhere else.

Finally, I tried something in the Andy Warhol style, with four differently colored panels, by choosing “Pop Art Colors.” This is the original picture, the first bottle I gave my sweet baby of my own colostrum when he was five days old (he was on donor breast milk before my own one came in). I will always cherish our first time “nursing” together:

He was jaundiced and rather orange, but the effects will get rid of that. I chose an individual Tree of Life for each of the four panels. I chose “cartoonizer” to smoothen the lines.

I guess you’ve seen enough examples now. Thus, get your feeding image, how ever you feed, and pick that Tree of Life.

Exit mobile version