Hi there!
I'm Avery. Â
I help new parents like you build the education and confidence you need to overcome latching and feeding challenges.Â
Because feeding should feel good. For both of you.
Hi there!
I'm Avery. Â
I help new parents like you build the education and confidence you need to overcome latching and feeding challenges.  Because feeding should feel good. For everyone.
Youâre doing everything ârightâ⌠so why is feeding still so hard?"
Â
You planned, you prepared, you did the research. But nothing could have prepared you for how hard latching and feeding would actually be. The pain, the stress, the self-doubt. I know exactly how it feelsâbecause Iâve been there, too. My journey into lactation support didnât start in a classroomâit started in the trenches of painful, frustrating feeds with my own baby.
And just like you, I just wanted to get it right.
But nobody had answers that helped. So I set out to find them.
Youâre doing everything ârightâ⌠so why is feeding still so hard?"
Â
You planned, you prepared, you did the research. But nothing could have prepared you for how hard latching and feeding would actually be. The pain, the stress, the self-doubt. I know exactly how it feelsâbecause Iâve been there, too. My journey into lactation support didnât start in a classroomâit started in the trenches of painful, frustrating feeds with my own baby.
And just like you, I just wanted to get it right. But nobody had answers that helped. So I set out to find them.
I quickly realized I had to find the answers myself.Â
Thatâs what led me to become a lactation consultantâbecause once I finally found what worked, I knew I couldnât keep it to myself. I had to share what Iâd learned with other parents who were just as desperate for real answers.
And it wasnât just the professionals who didnât have the right solutionsâmy friends, family, and the people who loved me wanted to help, but they were giving advice that didnât work for my babies. It wasnât their fault. They were relying on the same outdated guidance that had failed me.
At first, I thought I was alone in this. But the more parents I talked to, the more I realized we werenât failing at feedingâfeeding was failing us.
I wasnât just navigating feeding strugglesâI was navigating a system that wasnât built for parents like me. Parents with intense babies, parents with large bodies, parents whose challenges didnât fit neatly into the standard advice
Thatâs when I realized: If feeding was going to feel betterânot just for me, but for every parent strugglingâI had to rethink everything. So I did.
I quickly realized I had to find the answers myself.Â
Thatâs what led me to become a lactation consultantâbecause once I finally found what worked, I knew I couldnât keep it to myself. I had to share what Iâd learned with other parents who were just as desperate for real answers.
And it wasnât just the professionals who didnât have the right solutionsâmy friends, family, and the people who loved me wanted to help, but they were giving advice that didnât work for my babies. It wasnât their fault. They were relying on the same outdated guidance that had failed me.
At first, I thought I was alone in this. But the more parents I talked to, the more I realized we werenât failing at feedingâfeeding was failing us.
I wasnât just navigating feeding strugglesâI was navigating a system that wasnât built for parents like me. Parents with intense babies, parents with large bodies, parents whose challenges didnât fit neatly into the standard advice
Thatâs when I realized: If feeding was going to feel betterânot just for me, but for every parent strugglingâI had to rethink everything. So I did.
It Didnât Happen Overnight.
Becoming a lactation consultant didnât immediately solve everything.
The more I learned, the more I realized that parents were being given outdated adviceânot because professionals didnât care, but because they were working with the only information they had.
At first, I tried using the same advice I had been taught, but it led to the same resultsâthe same pain, the same struggles. Feeding was still hard, and no one seemed to have real answers, including me.Â
Was this really the only way?Â
It Didnât Happen Overnight.
Becoming a lactation consultant didnât immediately solve everything.
The more I learned, the more I realized that parents were being given outdated adviceânot because professionals didnât care, but because they were working with the only information they had.
At first, I tried using the same advice I had been taught, but it led to the same resultsâthe same pain, the same struggles. Feeding was still hard, and no one seemed to have real answers, including me.Â
Was this really the only way?Â
I almost gave up. Several times. Instead, I went on a mission to find a better way.
My background in Biology and years of teaching science had trained me to question, test, and refine. The scientific method wasnât just something I taughtâit was how I thought.
So, I went deep.
I studied everything I could about infant reflexes, brain development, and the mechanics of feeding. I experimented to see what worked.
I wasnât satisfied with solutions that worked once; I needed something that worked consistently, for every baby and every family.Â
I almost gave up. Several times. Instead, I went on a mission to find a better way.
My background in Biology and years of teaching science had trained me to question, test, and refine. The scientific method wasnât just something I taughtâit was how I thought.
So, I went deep.
I studied everything I could about infant reflexes, brain development, and the mechanics of feeding. I experimented to see what worked.
I wasnât satisfied with solutions that worked once; I needed something that worked consistently, for every baby and every family.Â
What I discovered changed the way I approach feeding forever.
What I discovered would change the way I approached feeding forever.
Then one run changed everything. Â
I wasnât in my office or pouring over research articles when the idea hit me. I was out on a run.
As my feet started running, my mind followed âreplaying everything I knew about how babies feed. The way their anatomy synchronizes with the feeding parent, the delicate balance of reflexes, movement, and muscle coordination.
And then, it clicked.
If a baby is supposed to feed in extension, with their head gently angled up and their mouth wide open, then the chin had to play a key role.
The moment I got back to my office, I started experimenting. And what I found rewrote everything I thought I knew about latching.
Then one run changed everything. Â
I wasnât in my office or pouring over research articles when the idea hit me. I was out on a run.
As my feet started running, my mind followed âreplaying everything I knew about how babies feed. The way their anatomy synchronizes with the feeding parent, the delicate balance of reflexes, movement, and muscle coordination.
And then, it clicked.
If a baby is supposed to feed in extension, with their head gently angled up and their mouth wide open, then the chin had to play a key role.
The moment I got back to my office, I started experimenting. And what I found rewrote everything I thought I knew about latching.
The touch that
transformed feeding.Â
I realized that touching a baby's chin triggered a reflexive response to open their mouth - wide. And it didnât just happen once. It happened over and over againâbaby after baby. Thatâs when I knew.
This wasnât random. It was a reflex.Â
The reflexive response I was taught was wrong. Stroking down a baby's lips didn't cause them to open wide. It causes them to chew or suck the nipple into their mouth, and that's what leads to pain and damage.Â
So I started learning how to incorporate what I discovered into practiceâto turn the theoretical into real-world results. Â
And It worked. And ended latch pain. Immediately. Â
And a touchÂ
transformed feeding.Â
I realized that touching a baby's chin triggered a reflexive response to open their mouth - wide. And it didnât just happen once. It happened over and over againâbaby after baby. Thatâs when I knew.
This wasnât random. It was a reflex.Â
The reflexive response I was taught was wrong. Stroking down a baby's lips didn't cause them to open wide. It causes them to chew or suck the nipple into their mouth, and that's what leads to pain and damage.Â
So I started learning how to incorporate what I discovered into practiceâto turn the theoretical into real-world results. Â
And It worked. And ended latch pain. Immediately. Â
From Discovery to RevolutionÂ
Over the next year, I experimentedâadapting my approach for different parents, different anatomies, and different babies.
And time after time, the pain stopped. Immediately. Damaged nipples healed. Parents gained confidence. Feeding started feeling easyâsometimes for the first time ever.
I didnât realize it at the time, but I was perfecting the Reflexive⢠Latch, so that it worked for every body.
Now, I had to see if it worked beyond my own practice.
I started teaching professionals and speaking at international professional conferences. And when professionals told me they started seeing the same results?
I knew this was bigger than just me.
Parents and professionals everywhere needed to know.
From Discovery to RevolutionÂ
Over the next year, I experimentedâadapting my approach for different parents, different anatomies, and different babies.
And time after time, the pain stopped. Immediately. Damaged nipples healed. Parents gained confidence. Feeding started feeling easyâsometimes for the first time ever.
I didnât realize it at the time, but I was perfecting the Reflexive⢠Latch, so that it worked for every body.
Now, I had to see if it worked beyond my own practice.
I started teaching professionals and speaking at international professional conferences. And when professionals told me they started seeing the same results?
I knew this was
bigger than just me.
Parents and professionals everywhere needed to know.
And now, thatâs my missionâto change how we feed babies, one latch at a time.
This isnât just about making feeding easier.
Itâs about rewriting the way we understand and support new parents, starting from the very first latch.
And if feeding feels hard, Iâd love to help you, too.
Avery Young, M.S, M.Ed, IBCLC
Founder of the Reflexive⢠Latch.
And now, thatâs my missionâto change how we feed babies, one latch at a time.
This isnât just about making feeding easier. Itâs about rewriting the way we understand and support new parents, starting from the very first latch.
And if feeding feels hard, Iâd love to help make it easier for you, too.
Avery Young, M.S, M.Ed, IBCLC
Founder of the Reflexive⢠Latch.