@wisper Not sure how old your baby is now, but a 1-2 month old spends soooo much more time nursing than a 4-6 month old.
I had my first just before the pandemic. It wasn’t the plan but I went back to work 2 weeks after the world shut down, to WFH splitting shifts with my husband with no childcare.
It was extremely hard, but the nursing a baby while working was not the hard part. In the early months, it seemed like we spent all day nursing, but by the time I went back to work, it was like a 5-7 minute affair. It was very easy to stop and take 5-7 minutes to nurse her when she was hungry and my partner brought her to me during my working hours. I would text him to let him know when I had a meeting coming up, so I could feed her before or after. Occasionally I took meetings with my camera off while nursing but it didn’t have to happen often.
For me, nursing didn’t take more time than walking to the kitchen, getting a snack or a drink, and chatting with a coworker, which I wouldn’t think twice about doing often in the office. And she was nursing maybe every 2-3 hours so it wasn’t a ton of interruptions.
You just aren’t “nursing nonstop” anymore by the time baby is 4 months. (Maybe still a little at 3, the first month might be harder but still less than the newborn days).