S.J. asks from Round Rock, TX on May 16, 2008
Help Weaning from Bottle
I have a 18 month old son who is still on the bottle and eats baby food from a jar. I can't seem to get him to take a sippy cup or eat table food. I'm not really sure what to do. My other two boys it took a couple of days but they did give up the bottle. And wanted to eat table food since they were 1. The baby has a milk allergy so I still feed him formula. I've gotten the nuby cups to try to help him but he wont drink milk from them. Also I started him in a bad habbit of going to bed with a bottle. We went out of town and my parents watched him starting this habbit and now I can't seem to get him to stop. Any advice on what to do would be great. I'm just worried because he wont eat anything from the cup so I'm not sure how to get rid of the bottle. And with summer coming and we are going on a trip in Aug. I wanted to make sure he's very adjusted to the new thing before we pull him out of his routine.
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D.T. answers from San Antonio on May 17, 2008
S.,
When my son who is now a teenager was being weaned from the bottle I did this. I kept one bottle for him and pulled the trash can to the counter. I got all his bottles except his favorite one and had him throw them away. As he did I said "look no more bottle for the BIG boy" everytime he threw one in the garbage. He used his favorite one only in the car when we went on errands. He used the sippy cup at home. At first he wanted the bottle and would throw fits, but he learned that the sippy cup was all he would get he started using it. As for that last bottle. When I moved back here in 1993 coming back from Oklahoma. I had opened the windows down half way because it was a nice day and not to hot. As I was driving down the highway I heard him say "all gone gone." I asked him what was all gone gone and looked over to see him throwing his bottle out the window. I said "yep all gone gone and I am not stopping to pick it up." That was the end of bottles for him. Hope this helps.
M.H. answers from Houston on May 17, 2008
I only had a problem with my youngest. We were out riding one day and I ask her for her bottle and then just pitched it out the window. I know this is littering, but drive by a friends house and pitch it in their yard notifying them a head of time that you are doing this. When she wanted a bottle, I reminded her that we had thrown it out the window. A few crying times, but she decided if she wanted milk or other beverages, she would use a glass or sippy cup. Do the same with baby food, let him see you throw it in the trash and when he gets hungry he will eat from the table.
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S.O. answers from San Antonio on May 17, 2008
Forget the sippy cups. Teach him to drink from a straw. He will think it is fun. My kids did. First, put your finger on one end holding the liquid in and put the other end in his mouth and let a little out - giving him the idea. Then, once he's got the idea...don't let any out and make him suck. Once he has that down, then let him suck from the straw from the cup. Once you know he can, then only offer him his milk and juices that way during the day at least. You could still give him a bottle in the evening for now. Don't let him snack on anything either until he's finished his milk, etc. He'll get hungry enough...you will know that he is able to and therefore not hindering him...he will eat eventually. They have great "sippy" cups with straws if that's what you're wanting. But, even better, he'll be able to use any cup anywhere that offer straws, which is just about every place.
L.C. answers from El Paso on May 18, 2008
hi
try giving him table food from a jar reduce bottle milk that is filling him up. offer table food first.
B.S. answers from Beaumont on May 17, 2008
Some children you simply have to take the bottle from. You may go through a few hard nights but it will be well worth it to his little teeth in the long run. Give him a sippy before bed he will drink or not when he starts crying hand the sippy back to him. You will have to be consistant but after a few nights he will become adjusted to his new routine. Keep his little sippy setting on the dresser where he can see it is there when he wakes, you ay have to get up a time or so at night but this will break him. Good Luck. B. mother of 3 granmother of 10
M.M. answers from Houston on May 17, 2008
We just started my 9 month old grandson on a 'thinkbaby' sippy cup. It has handles and the drink spout is shaped like the one on a sippy cup but it feels just like a bottle nipple. I think this is a good transition cup. The one bad thing about it is that it is not spill proof.
As far as the bedtime bottle goes, you may want to put water in it instead of milk or formula. He will probably kick the habit himself since it doesn't have the milk. If he doesn't give it up, at least his teeth won't rot.
K.F. answers from Waco on May 17, 2008
Hi S.,
I know this may seem harsh,but let him cry it out or begin diluting it with water! We just went through this same exact thing ( a sippy cup) with our 5 year old son. He has lots of tooth decay and is undergoing numerous visits to the dentist. The assistant is the one who suggested adding water to it a little each night. His was a comfort thing and I'm happy to say after about a month of really working with him, he is off of milk at night!!
Good luck and I know this will be hard, just hang in there and don't give up, you always the faithful MOM's of mamasource!
K.
D.T. answers from San Antonio on May 17, 2008
S.,
When my son who is now a teenager was being weaned from the bottle I did this. I kept one bottle for him and pulled the trash can to the counter. I got all his bottles except his favorite one and had him throw them away. As he did I said "look no more bottle for the BIG boy" everytime he threw one in the garbage. He used his favorite one only in the car when we went on errands. He used the sippy cup at home. At first he wanted the bottle and would throw fits, but he learned that the sippy cup was all he would get he started using it. As for that last bottle. When I moved back here in 1993 coming back from Oklahoma. I had opened the windows down half way because it was a nice day and not to hot. As I was driving down the highway I heard him say "all gone gone." I asked him what was all gone gone and looked over to see him throwing his bottle out the window. I said "yep all gone gone and I am not stopping to pick it up." That was the end of bottles for him. Hope this helps.
K.O. answers from San Antonio on May 24, 2008
I would quit the bottle cold turkey. He may cry it out at night for a couple of nights but he will get over it. Also, I wouldn't worry about his milk intake so much anymore. At 18 months, they don't need that much milk and it just fills them up when they should be eating the table food. I don't know about the baby food thing, except some kids are very texture sensitive, so you may give a new texture with something he already likes. Good luck.
M.H. answers from Houston on May 17, 2008
I only had a problem with my youngest. We were out riding one day and I ask her for her bottle and then just pitched it out the window. I know this is littering, but drive by a friends house and pitch it in their yard notifying them a head of time that you are doing this. When she wanted a bottle, I reminded her that we had thrown it out the window. A few crying times, but she decided if she wanted milk or other beverages, she would use a glass or sippy cup. Do the same with baby food, let him see you throw it in the trash and when he gets hungry he will eat from the table.
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