23 answers

19 Mo. Old Prefers Only mom/Wanting to Wean from Night Time Breastfeeding

I have two requests in one, so please bare with me.
First of all, my husband and I are having big issues with my son only wanting me.....all of the time. In the evenings, all he'll do is follow me around with his arms up (wanting me to hold him) and cry. This makes it hard to do anything, like make dinner. My husband will try to take him, entertain him, nothing works. He doesn't want him, only me. I do work, but only 3-4 days a week of which he is in daycare. Last night, he wouldn't even go near his dad and pushed him away any time he got close to him. It is frustrating for me, and is starting to hurt my husband's feelings. There are days where he and his dad are buddies, playing outside, and he will show affection to him. Is this normal toddler behavior, or should I be concerned?
This leads to my second issue. I am still breastfeeding at bedtime. Part of it is because, it is so easy. And at the end of the day, I want easy. But, I am ready to stop. I have tried to just rock him with a pacifier, like we do at naptime, but he just sobs and sobs. It truly breaks my heart. His dad has put him to bed before with minimal resistance, but I was not home at the time. I am afraid if his dad tries to take him to bed while I am there, he will have a fit (as mentioned above). Any ideas? He won't even take the pacifier at night and I seriously doubt he would take the sippy cup. He's too smart to accept any substitutions!

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

I, too, used Dr. Jay Gordon's approach. It worked for us when my son was about 20 months. Good luck!!

My son now 23 mo recently went through the exact same only wanting mommy stuff. He started crying and throwing fits when I dropped him at daycare which he never did before and would not even got to his dad too. GOOD NEWS-that phase is over!!!
It seems like it lasted about 6 weeks. hang in there. It is just that age and new awareness.

More Answers

Do not go cold turkey with the weaning if you can avoid it. Abrupt weaning can bring on clogged ducts and mastitis not to mention it can be too much change at one time for a little one. (I got a clogged duct 6 months after gradual weaning so it can happen even then).

The best method I've found and used is the Jay Gordon method. Very gentle and it works.

Here are some articles / info that helped me.
http://www.drjaygordon.com/development/ap/sleep.asp
http://www.kellymom.com/bf/weaning/weaning-night.html

1 mom found this helpful

At night when he is following you around wanting held, he is probably tired he assocaites the tiredness with nursing and going to sleep therefore he wants MOM!!! Even at 19 months you said he is really smart and wont take substitutes, well he is REALLY smart because he is controlling you and setting the ground work for always getting his way. Like one poster said, Crying never hurt a child. If he knows he will get picked up when he cries yes he is going to cry. Wean his as soon as you can. You are not hurting him or doing any kind of mental damage to him.
As for your husband, getting his feelings hurt I can understand that. I was home by myself at night for 5 yrs with my son, it took alot for him to go to dad with little things like he did me, or when he was hurt, or when he needed comforted. But I think once your son is not associating the nursing and cuddle with only you he will be more open to dad. Good Luck!

My son was clingy like this at that age too. I was working at the time, so when we'd come home from the babysitters, he'd follow me, clinging and crying. I'm the kind of person who wants to come home, put my stuff up, check the mail, get all that boring stuff out and then have the rest of the afternoon (until it was time to cook dinner) to relax. I have a hard time relaxing or playing when stuff needs to be done. Eventually, I had to break myself of that. My son had been away from me all day and wanted me. So, as soon as we got home, I'd drop everything and either just cuddle him or play with him or something like that. Something that focused my attention on him 100% for maybe an hour. Then, eventually, I could get myself organized for the evening, check the mail, cook dinner, and he was content to just be near me at that point. I am not sure if that helps any, but good luck!

I, too, used Dr. Jay Gordon's approach. It worked for us when my son was about 20 months. Good luck!!

My youngest son was the exact same way and still is to a certaing extent but it does get better as they get a little older and then you'll actually miss him wanting you all the time. I know that's probably hard to believe right now but its true. As far as the other issue I'm not sure what to tell you I'm not a fan of letting a kid suck a bottle or cuppy or anything else to go to sleep because its bad for their teeth and it starts a habit, that I've learned from my best friend, is very difficult to break. Wish you luck.

I read your post and thought, wow someone else with the same exact problem that I have. My 20 month old prefers me over dad. She is fine all day, until everyone gets home. Then she gets whiney if I get up and move or cook dinner. If dad tries to touch her or come close to her, she thinks that he will be taking her away from me. All I can tell ya is to continue to let your husband take the baby. You need to try and leave them alone starting with a little at a time. That is what I am having to do. I will go to the store by myself, or go somewhere without her. She is fine if she doesnt see me. It is getting a little bit better now. At bedtime, she only prefers me but I have him put her to bed....and then I will go up there if she starts to fuss and pat her back. She then falls asleep after that.

I cant help out with the breastfeeding issue, sorry. Hope my advice helped ya out, knowing that you arent the only one that is going through this problem.

Also, my daughter wont let any of my kids or husband hug me or touch me. Its kind of funny, but then again its annoying. We just ignore it!

He probably wants you of an evening if you have been at work all day, and espically if he knows he will get nursed. He may cry a bit,but tell him "all gone", and go ahead and rock him and try the pacifier again. When you first get home from work if you gave him just 10 minutes of your time, like a story or a little game, he may be satisfied with that attention and go on and play while you got a meal, or if he is like my kids, he is hungry, so whines while I'm fixing supper, so if there is something healty you could let him nibble on while cooking that may help. I hesitate to say give him a bottle at bed time, as soon you'll have to wean him from that, but just a bedtime only may help with the transition.

Concerning the second part of your question, at bedtime leave the house and take a walk while your husband puts your child to bed. This will allow your husband "bonding" time, give you an opportunity to exercise, and wean your child. This is what worked for us with our son, becasue our son knew if I was still in the house.

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