20 answers

My Almost 2 Year Old Won't Give up Her Bottle

My 22 month old won't give up her bottle. She has recently backpedeled and really only will eat a bottle. When she was almost a year, we got her eating jar foods and such. After her first birthday, we got her to eat gerber solids and crackers and such, but now, she will eat her crackers, occasional cereal and sometimes a sandwich. I want to have her off this bottle by her 2nd birthday, but I am afraid she won't eat, as it is, the last time I tried to take all them away, she lost 6 pounds and looked like she was dying! However after talking to her doctor, she said she was fine, just needed a bit more food and less milk. We use sippy cups all the time, she loves them, but she still really only wants real food on occasion, yet we offer it to her every meal and every snack time..Any suggestions???

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Update is good! She has been bottle free for some time now and while she still asks for one, us telling her "its all gone" works and she just asks for something else. One day I just told her that and since then it has worked.. YAY!!

Featured Answers

Hi there B.. I've noticed my 16 month old son has trouble eating too. I asked his doctor how to get around the bottle problem and he told me to cut back. Reduce the amount of milk or juice or whatever in the bottle. Example: an 8 ounce bottle gets 7 ounces. then 6 and 5 and so on. And while you are cutting back on the bottle liquids, increase the amount of food you offer. When I cook dinner, my son gets about a teaspoon of everything we eat. Like teaspoon of chicken, stuffing, veggie, etc. Usually he wants the bottle less because he's full on food. Wow! I hope I'm explaining this right. Good luck to you.

1 mom found this helpful

Hello B.,

I agree with Carie B. Take away the bottle. When my twins were 9 months old, I introduced a sippy cup to them. At that age, they did not like it. The sippy cup had a hard tip and did not feel good in their hands I guess.

So, when they were 11 months old, I found these Nuby sippy cups with a nice grip and sof straw ( http://www.babybungalow.com/nu12ozmesiwi.html ).

My twins love them so much, I now have 6 of them.

What I also did was let my twins watch me sip on the cup to see it was alrigt.

I found these sippy cups at WalMart FYI.

More Answers

Hi there B.. I've noticed my 16 month old son has trouble eating too. I asked his doctor how to get around the bottle problem and he told me to cut back. Reduce the amount of milk or juice or whatever in the bottle. Example: an 8 ounce bottle gets 7 ounces. then 6 and 5 and so on. And while you are cutting back on the bottle liquids, increase the amount of food you offer. When I cook dinner, my son gets about a teaspoon of everything we eat. Like teaspoon of chicken, stuffing, veggie, etc. Usually he wants the bottle less because he's full on food. Wow! I hope I'm explaining this right. Good luck to you.

1 mom found this helpful

If she lost 6 lbs. last time I think it's possible there is a medical reason she won't eat solid foods. I'd check with the doctor. If there is no medical reason for her not eating solids I would only give her milk in the bottle and let her decide when she's going to eat. Just provide a meal and snacks consistently everyday at the same time.

It is true kids will eat when they get hungry. Provide tempting foods and be casual about the whole eating thing. When we make it seem like a big deal to the kid, eating can turn into a power struggle.

My daughter gradually took her son off the bottle by giving him a bottle at bedtime and perhaps one other time during the day. Only milk or water went in the bottle. Juice was only in a sippy cup. Then it was just bedtime and then the bottles just went away. She used, "you're a big boy now" and praise. That combined with him wanting to do everything his big sister did seemed to be enough.

I saw a technique on SuperNanny in which they put all the bottles in a sack and the child put the sack in a trash container at the beach. They lived in Hawaii. They discussed this for a week or two. They said the bottles were going to the bottle fairy. And just before or right after (I don't remember when)he put the bottles in the can his father brought him his very own very special cup from the sea by putting it in a small boat which he pulled in by a string. You could use a variation of this to provide her with her very own special cup; perhaps a princess cup or whatever theme she likes. The boys was 2 or so and the Nanny thought it best to quit cold turkey.

1 mom found this helpful

I have never experienced this problem myself but I have a 3 year old niece who eats like a bird and 3 younger siblings.

When my niece comes to stay with us we offer her food at scheduled meal times and snacks at scheduled times between meals. I offer some food I know she likes and some new or that she may not. She may eat one or two of the 5 times I offer her food. But man does she poop a lot, so I know she is getting something out of it.

As for the bottle thing….. When my brother was about 2 my mom took every bottle in the house and set them on top of the refrigerator. She told him that every time he drank a bottle he had to throw it away. After the first day he realized he was going to have to take it slow and spaced the last of them out for over a week drinking less every day. Eventually he had just one left and went days without asking for it. After he drank it and tossed it he never asked for one again. Putting him in control of the situation really helped her. She said it never work for any of her other kids though. Hope this helps and good luck!

Hello B.,

I agree with Carie B. Take away the bottle. When my twins were 9 months old, I introduced a sippy cup to them. At that age, they did not like it. The sippy cup had a hard tip and did not feel good in their hands I guess.

So, when they were 11 months old, I found these Nuby sippy cups with a nice grip and sof straw ( http://www.babybungalow.com/nu12ozmesiwi.html ).

My twins love them so much, I now have 6 of them.

What I also did was let my twins watch me sip on the cup to see it was alrigt.

I found these sippy cups at WalMart FYI.

My suggestion is to give her the "bottle" as a Zippy cup feeder, looks like a bottle with a sippy top (I found them at K mart) My littlest didn't even notice the change. Used the same words and timing. It soon became a cup with a lid during the day... She now goes to sleep because she is tired not stuffed by a bottle...
Also, don't ridgely follow your pediatitions advice, do what makes sence in your family and your heart...

Just to ease your fears, kids will refuse food, but will eventually succumb to their hunger and eat. Trust me. My sister has an EXTREMELY picky 3 year old who takes a couple bites and is done. She hardly seems to eat anything, but her pediatrician constantly tells my sister that she'll eat when she is hungry. Also, it's good to judge how much a kid should eat by their age, ie: 2 years old - 2 oz.

As for the bottle issue, my daughter was about 25 months old when I finally got her off of the bottle. It was difficult, but her doctor suggested having her say "bye-bye" to her bottles and have her throw them in the garbage herself. She asked for it a couple times, but surprisingly, this worked. You might try that!

Hi B.,
I did not have this problem but maybe you could try giving her only water in the bottle and juice and milk in a sippy/cup. Good luck. M.

Hi B., my name is Kim and I have a 3 year old son. The bottle thing is one of the hardest to break from a child. I broke that bottle from my son at the age of 1 1/2. It was hard, but a friend advised me what to do and it worked. What I did was one night I didn't give my son his bottle and he cried and fussed for awhile until he feel asleep. I did this procedure for three days and that's all it took. Instead of the bottle I gave him a sippy cup, he didn't want it at first, but adventually he gave in and took it. He never asked for the bottle again. You just have to stop it completely in order to break the habit. It worked for me. I wish you luck. Please keep in touch with me and let me know what happens if you decide to try my advice.

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