Yes you can. But you should try to fix the sore nipples. If your babies are latching correctly it should reduce the pain and prevent the soreness. In the mean-time let them air dry, then apply lanolin. If you are desparate use a nipple shield to protect them.
There can be many challenges when breastfeeding twins. A mother has to get both babies to adapt to feeding at the same time. The pain and discomfort usually felt from breastfeeding one baby is double with twins.
No it doesn't weirdo. Where the heck did you get that conclusion! it means sore nipples that's it.
there's a reason god gave women 2 boobs and not 1.
Because he was born that way. Because he was suposed to have a siamese twin but it didnt work so he got his twins nipples. Thts What I heard.
Harry was suppose to have a twin so him/her passed away and sometimes twins body can stick together so when harrys twin passed away while it was in its mommys belly or when it was born it left its for nipples behind
yes they can but one of them normally dies after birth.
Hugely unlikely. Women can't produce enough milk to fred that many. Even twins will usually need supplements quite soon.
only one, twins are extremely rare!
As a breastfeeding mother of twins, it is important that you are eating a healthy diet with plenty of nutrients to keep your children healthy and gaining weight. You want to be sure that you are making plenty of milk. To find the foods you want to eat more often, please visit http://mydoctor.kaiserpermanente.org/ncal/Images/Breastfeeding%20Diet-Mothers%20of%20Twins-English_tcm28-12749.pdf and http://www.amazon.com/Well-Lose-Weight-While-Breastfeeding/dp/0679733558/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1314997813&sr=1-1
No, all twins are born at the same time. A sibling can look extremely like you, but you are still not twins unless you are born at the same time.
Horses don't have litters, they have one foal or in extremely rare cases, twins.
Generally fraternal twins are more common. For fraternal twins to occur twins must diverge, but differentiate upon becoming separate entities. Identical twins are rarer, in which the two siblings are of the same gender and are exactly alike upon birth. Rarer so are conjoined, or "Siamese" twins. This occurs when twins are born partially or extremely fused together. There is only a 25% survival chance for a conjoined twin. Most were only connected by gristle and flesh, and could have been easily separated easily, were they in modern society.