L.L. asks from Fort Myers, FL on July 04, 2007
Bottle
need help getting two year old to stop screaming crying and carrying on for the bottle- he has been refusing the cup even while thirsty and to the point of almost dehydration- last night he screamed for three hours for the bottle and this morning so far for two hours! He cannot get over the bottle being gone------------
So What Happened?™
After reading everyone's advice and putting it all together---- I stuck to my guns and it only took one night and two days and now he asks for his cup. I told him bottles are yucky and for babies and heard me say "yucky" now he says it too. No more bottles. Thanks for everyone's advice.
Featured Answers
C.M. answers from Melbourne on July 05, 2007
My 21 month old still gets a bottle at nap time and bed time, however his Dr. suggested we water down the milk in the biottle, then give him undiluted milk in a cup, he says that eventually he will prefer the cup to the bottle.
My sister has now 3 year old twins and they had their bottles until they were almost 2 1/2, what she did becuase they did NOT want to give it either was when her sister in law had a baby she told the kids that the baby needed the bottles and how happy it would make him if he could have theirs, so she let them pack them up in baoxes and brought them to the post office to mail the bottles to the baby. It worked for them and she did not have to ight with them naymore.
However since you have already been strong enough to deal with the fits this long, maybe it will pay off to keep it up and he will eventually give up and accept the cup.
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K.N. answers from Miami on July 05, 2007
Dear L.,
hi, my name is kathy. You did not mention if you have been wheening him off, or if it is totally off the bottle. I had to slowly compromise with my niece & my son. I only gave it to them at night until they were ready to be "big people"; and stopped themselves. Please praise your little man every time he uses the cup! To encourage this more often! All children step into a direction of growing up at their own pace. It is ok, for him to have the bottle say just at night for a while longer. I hope this helps some. Be patient, he will give it up on his own soon. Good luck and I will pary that all goes well without the screaming and tantrums.
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V.W. answers from Orlando on July 05, 2007
Hi L., Wow brings back memories. I tried and tried and tried to take the bottle away from my son, now seventeen.. I stopped trying to take it. Let him have the bottle your in a lost battle. He is not ready to give it up WHICH by the way is fine to still be on a bottle till your two and three years old. My son had his bottle until he was almost three it was his crutch, his little sense of security. You can start talking with him in a few months and ask him to give his bottle to a characture like ..Thumper.. Winnie, Tigger... Santa... Talk to your son about the characture and how they might need it and it is your choice but I really think "thumper" would like it. Mine sons was the Easter Bunny.. We together took his bottle left it on the table for the Easter Bunny, He needed to give his bottle a poor less fortunate child that needed it.. It worked he was happy I was happy.. He never saked to the bottle again...
Hope this helps
hugs
Viviamn
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S.K. answers from New York on July 05, 2007
I would first ask, what sort of cups have you tried?
My daughter didn't take well to the hard-top cups (playtex ones) to begin with, so we got her some of the Nuby cups with the soft flexible tops. Also, has he mastered the "turning up" aspect of drinking from a cup? The tilting his head back might be half the problem.
Let me show you the ones we used in progression. Copy and paste the links to view the items. All fo these should be available at your local wal-mart of from www.baby-wise.com. If not, try the website the pictures are from.
The cups we started with can be seen here: http://us.st11.yimg.com/us.st.yimg.com/I/thebabybungalow_...#
The short stubby design with 2 handles helps them learn to tip their heads up without havign to tip terrifically far to get a sip.
If he's figured out tipping his head up and the nipple shape is the problem, try these: http://us.st11.yimg.com/us.st.yimg.com/I/thebabybungalow_...#
The nipple on them are very similar to a regular bottle.
After she got the tipping of the head down, she figured out that the cups above could be turned on their sides and pushed into the carpet, causeing the soft nipples to leak without barrier. SOOO...we moved on to the Munchkin cups, which are actually labeled as "disposibles" but we re-use them and love them for around the house and the beach and such where we don't have to worry if she loses them.
http://www.munchkin.com/userfiles/Image/travelware%20spil...
That's a picture of them, they can be found at the Munchkin website http://www.munchkin.com/products/detail.html?pID=121&...
My local BJ's is where I got mine. And they came as part of a set with dishes and lids as well. I highly recommend the dishes since they hold just the right amount of food for a child that age.
Playtex cups can be purchased from your local wal-mart as well, http://www.baby-wise.com/images/10-2680-01b.jpg shows a picture of the Insulated ones I recommend. They're a little heavier but they keep your kid's drink cooler longer.
All of this being said...I DO NOT recommend the Gerber line of cups. The valve they use and the way they work is VERY difficult to keep the mouthpiece clean and you'll find them developing nasty mold quickly since they can't be cleaned well in a dishwasher or by hand.
Make sure you're showing him how to use the cup and that it's cool to use it. My hubby sat in the floor with the cup and would drink a few sips and smack his lips like he enjoyed it, making sure he tilted his head waaay back to drive the point home. My daughter would go over to participate and he'd hold the cup up above her head until she looked up, then bring it down to her lips until she looked down. Then he'd drink a little and offer it to her. We did this for about 3 days before she had the idea down.
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I wish you the best of luck and perserverence. It's tough to deal with a screaming child, but sometimes tough love is the best they can get. Lord knows he won't want to be sipping from a bottle when he's 10. :)
Take care!
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T.H. answers from Boca Raton on July 05, 2007
Be strong, I am going through the same thing now but not to the same extreme as your son. Now my son loves the little 4 oz bottle made by gerber graduates. He does not do that well with juice boxes because he still squeezes the middle to hard and gets juice everywhere. I had to take him off the bottle because he started preschool in June and they don't allow anything. He will kinda drink from a sippy cup but no really. He does not drink any milk now but he does eat yogurt and lots of cheese which the doctor said is just fine. Calcium is calcium no matter how he gets it. Hope this helps.
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M.R. answers from Orlando on July 05, 2007
I have a 14 month old that I have had excellant luck with weening. He drinks from a cup that has a soft straw and I used playtex bottles that have a similar nipple. He was so accustomed to sucking milk out the bottle without having to invert the bottle that the cup came naturally to him. Be patient with the cry over the bottle. I would offer your little one other types of food. Maybe he's still hungry.
My older son was a bear to ween. He eventually took to a sports water bottle. He liked to lift the drink bottle just like his gerber bottles so he was accustomed to how it was done.
You just have to find cups that your child likes then weening will be easy. Good luck.
1 mom found this helpful
C.M. answers from Melbourne on July 05, 2007
My 21 month old still gets a bottle at nap time and bed time, however his Dr. suggested we water down the milk in the biottle, then give him undiluted milk in a cup, he says that eventually he will prefer the cup to the bottle.
My sister has now 3 year old twins and they had their bottles until they were almost 2 1/2, what she did becuase they did NOT want to give it either was when her sister in law had a baby she told the kids that the baby needed the bottles and how happy it would make him if he could have theirs, so she let them pack them up in baoxes and brought them to the post office to mail the bottles to the baby. It worked for them and she did not have to ight with them naymore.
However since you have already been strong enough to deal with the fits this long, maybe it will pay off to keep it up and he will eventually give up and accept the cup.
1 mom found this helpful
A.R. answers from Miami on July 05, 2007
you could do what i did, when my son turned 1 we both went in the kitchen. I gave him his bottles and told him to throw them in the trash, which he did. Then we went right to the sippy cup, had a fit at first but then he started to take it to bed with him. After that we took his sippies and did the same thing, now he is 4 1/2 and drinks out of a cup with a straw.
Maybe this will help......
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T.F. answers from Orlando on July 04, 2007
Not sure what to tell you about the screaming except to hold your ground and don't give in and give the bottle. To avoid dehydration, offer things like popcicles and watermelon until he finally decides to drink from a cup. Have you tried different cups? I don't think you should go spend money on 10 different cups, but let him go to the store and pick one- there are so many different kinds. Also, at his age, reverse psychology works wonders sometimes. Put milk (or some other liquid) in a cup and offer it. When he refuses it, play a game of, "OK- mommy will drink from it then. Mmmmmm. This is yummy..." and put it where he can reach it if he wants it without mentioning it again.
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