33 answers

Help Switching from Bottle to Sippy Cup

I am a mother of a 10 month old boy. I am in the process of switching him from a bottle to a sippy cup and I am also trying to figure out how to get rid of the pacifier. Our pedi has recommended that he be on a sippy cup and off the pacifier at age 1. Well, currently he is not interested in the sippy cup at all and I am not sure that I have the heart or nerve to take the pacifier away from him. Any suggestions would be welcomed with open arms.

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

I tried a lot of brands of sippy cups for my 10 month old with no luck. She didn't like the Nuby that so many kids seem to go for. Finally a friend suggested the Nuk a couple of weeks ago. She loves it and drank it dry on the first try. As another poster said, they have them at Wal-Mart, but not all Wal-Marts. I had to look for it, but it really works. It is definitely worth a try!

Far be it from me to disagree with a doctor, but do what you think is best.... My son is now 12 years old... He was on a bottle until he was 2 (he was tiny so we got away with it). He is perfectly normal.. He is fine...
Yes, he has braces, but so do kids who get off the bottle at one! Just my 2 cents!

I used the Nuby brand sippy cups when I transitioned my son from bottle to cup because they have a soft, bottle like spout. I used that for about 6 months then moved on to hard top cups. We only let my son have the pacifier when he was sleeping, nap time and night time. He was about 18 months old when we took it away. The reason we finally did is because he kept throwing it on the floor and then crying for it. So one night we just didn't go give it back to him. He cried for about 5 minutes and then fell asleep. The next night we didn't give it to him and he cried for about 3 minutes then fell asleep. The next night he cried for a couple of seconds and fell asleep. It only takes 3 days to break any habits. It is hard at first to listen to the crying but they won't remember.

More Answers

What worked for me is putting something new in the sippy cup, like diluted juice or water. I recommend the Gerber sippy cups to begin with. My kids did really well with them while they were getting started. Take the stopper out of the cup and just let your little one get a taste of what is in the cup. As you are feeding baby food, give him the cup every now and then with your help. Once, he realizes that there is the yummy juice in there, he will be more likely to make the switch. Once he has it down on the "sipping" part, then you can add the stopper back in. Once my kids were good at using the sippy cup, then I switch them to the Playtex Sippy cups. I like these way better, but the Gerber ones seem to be easier for them to learn with. It will probably take about a few weeks to get used to it and don't be afraid of it getting a little messy.

On the paci, what I do is start limiting my babies to the paci only at certain times. Such as, you can only have the paci in the car, at naptime and bedtime. Then we take out the car time. Then we will take out the bedtime. If they want the paci at other times, then they have to go to their bed to have it. Now, my baby is 2 years old and I am incorporating this routine with him. It is working great. I have never tried to take a paci away from a 10 month old. Both of my paci babies started their limited paci time when they were 2. As others have told me, they will not go to Kindergarten with it, and they won't get married with it; so, when it is right for you and your baby, then it will be the right time. You are the mother and you will decide what is best for your baby.

Good luck.

G.

There is no magic day to have the sippy cup, I'd just introduce it, give him a little now and then and wean gradually, as for the pacifier, give it to him at bed time and nap time and hide it other times, and he'll gradually wean himself from it also.

I may not be the best one to give you advice since I didn't get my son off the bottle until he was 2 but here is my experience. I finally decided one Friday that it was time to get him off the bottle and I bought him the Gerber Transition cups. (There is a link below to the Gerber site) I hid all of the regular bottles and when he asked for his BOT I gave him the transition cup. He was very unhappy the first two days but finally the third he just accepted the Transition Cup. It is the best thing I ever did and I wished I had done it sooner because he started eating more (like a little pig) and sleeping a lot better. The main reason I finally decided to take the plunge wasn't so much his teeth but he was drinking so much milk and only milk he was beginning to throw it up. He does not drink as much milk now but he definitely makes up for it by eating food. This approach seems a little barbaric I know especially for someone as young as a 10 month old. Try the Transition Cup with juice for a couple of days along with his bottle to give him time to get used to the Transition cup. As for the paci my son only took while he was in the hospital had no interest in it once he got home. Hang in there you will do fine. I am still trying to get my 2 year old into his own bed.

http://www.gerber.com/prodcat?catid=566

My daughter also disliked sippy cups, so I found some cups with built-in straws at Target. I cannot find them anywhere else, and it was only at the SuperTarget near Bryant Irvin Road in Southwest Fort Worth. The regular Target did not carry them, nor Babies 'R Us or WalMart. They are Munchkin Brand and hold 10 oz. They have a soft silicone straw top, similar to the Nuby's sold at WalMart. Try this, or persist with the sippy cup. For her, she just needed lots of exposure to finally adapt. Hope this helps.

I think all pedi are different my daugter will be 2 in August and we gradually started taking her off the bottle at 1 and she is now down to just taking one at night before she goes to bed. Our pedi said not to rush her. She has never taken a pacifier so I can't give suggestions for that.

To help switch my little one to a cup,I put a soft spout sippy cup on the floor when she was playing. I also pretended to drink from it and made it a game. Then I started to cut down on bottles during the day.So she got one in the morning with breakfast then she got a cup at lunch and one for dinner and then got a bottle to go to sleep.If he fights you and doesnt want his cup with lunch or dinner just stick it out and then maybe 15 after he is done with his meals then give him the bottle and then wait longer and longer as he gets used to it. He will eventually like his cup.After a couple of weeks you can get rid of the bottle at breakfast and have the one at bedtime.We didnt take our daughters pacifier away at the same time though because she still has the need to suck still.I hope this helps you the way it did me.

My daughter didnt move to a sippy until about 13 months...it took us a long time to get her to take to one. We tried several differenty ones...they nuby worked the best and slowly trans her to a regualr sippy. She now 2 and now off nuby's and on sippy cups.

As for paci's there is no rush to get them off. My dentist said she would like her off it by age 2. But as long as she isnt using it all day and only for nap time it is no rush. No damage will be done.

I wouldnt worry about getting him off the Paci right now...but i can tell you this if you do it now it is a lot easier to get him off the Paci then it would be in a Year.

Just keep trying different Sippy cups he will find one he likes. Turns out our DD doesnt like handles on the cups and liked the soft Nuby spout and not the hard ones.

Good luck.

I agree with a lot of other posters, don't stress too much about the paci, it does seem very young. Just work at it slowly.

I have an 13 month old who is completely off the bottle (she never took a paci but still sucks her thumb). She wasn't crazy about regular sippy cups but does very well with the straw sippy cups.

With both my 13 month old and my 5 year old when we started using sippy cups, we put them in the bath (the baby, not the cup) and gave them a cup with juice in it (something they really like) and took the plug out so they didn't have to suck on it so hard. It leaked all over the place (which is why we put them in the tub) but they figured out there was something good in there and it was worth working for. It was then easy to transition to putting the plug back in so the cups didn't leak everywhere and they would suck at it to get the juice. Once they knew how to use the cup, we started putting milk and water in them. Good luck!

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