15 answers

Need Walking Tips...

Our son is 10 months old and wants to do nothing but walk while holding on to both of our hands (or sometimes just one depending on his mood). He refuses to crawl, but scoots backwards and can easily get up on his hands and knees. He is desperate to move! Although we don't mind walking around with him, it would be nice if he could gain some confidence to do things on his own and our backs could use a break! We have tried walking wings and a little push car, and he can use both successfully but most often doesn't want to do either (or wants to hold on to us with one hand and push the car with the other). He can also travel reasonably well, and has no problem standing with his palms up on a flat wall in front of him, but again, gets angry if he has to do so for any length of time. Any suggestions for how we can get him to enjoy moving on his own would be appreciated.

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

These kinds of things just happen on their own. Before you know it he'll be toddling all over the place and you'll wonder, now how do I get him to sit still?

More Answers

there is no need to rush this - walking will happen when he is ready... 12-15 months is the normal range... give him lots of floor time, dont always carry him everywhere. Walking early doesnt mean that a child is better smarter or more devloped... some kids jsut walk earlier than others.... my oldest walked at 10 month, my 3rd child walked at 15 months.... my current 10 month old child is 4 weeks into crawling and not really interested in standing up.... there is nothing to do to get him to enjoy moving on his own.. it will all happen in its own time. It could happen very fast. I have seen kids go from just beginning to craw to walking in 6 weeks.... relax

2 moms found this helpful

Thinking about it still recalls the pain in my back. My son did that for 3 of months. We bought all the tools he can hold on. He just wanted to hold our hands. The best buy was a walker and that didn't slow him down as he was ready to walk, just needed the security. He never craw or anything like that. From the "baby-born" or our hands he moved to the walker. I used to hold a toy he will like or a snack and would ask him to come and get it. Getting his attention on something else really worked. He just didn't realized that he was walking by him-self. If I made a big deal out of it he won't do it for couple of days, so I just stopped doing it. I just started increasing the distance without pointing that he is walking by him-self. Well, one day he just got up and started walking by him-self, two weeks later he was running and he loved it. It looks like your little guy need confidence. Good luck!

Hi K.,
My son showed signs of wanting to walk early but still wanted a finger or two to hold onto for a couple months. Now he is independant and doesn't "need" me anymore. :) I would allow this stage to work itself out and hold his hand while you can. Your son is on the young end of the spectrum for walking so I wouldn't worry too much. Just keep doing what you are doing and he'll be off and running before you know it.
B.

These kinds of things just happen on their own. Before you know it he'll be toddling all over the place and you'll wonder, now how do I get him to sit still?

My dd did this at about 8 1/2 months and by 9 she was walking. I suggest just walking him around like you're doing and knowing it'll pass quickly. Sounds like he loves walking!

My understanding is that it is VERY important that your child learns to crawl as there are brain connections that get built during this stage of movement - and that it is the movement itself that makes these connections. My suggestion is to not push the walking and force him to learn to crawl to get his movement.

Best wishes,
Sarah

I suggest you get down and crawl with him. Crawling is important for brain development. He is too young to walk, he should be crawling. I know, babies younger walk, but why force it when he needs to crawl. People who get brain injuries crawl to help their brain. If they are unable to, someone, or some people move their legs and arms to simulate crawling to help the brain. If you get down and crawl with him, he might pick it up. It might take several tries.

I think the suggestions below are great. It sounds like he has gotten very used to you or your partner being there to "help" when he gets frustrated. Perhaps allowing him to experience a little more frustration would be helpful. It might not feel "nice" on your part and of course nobody WANTS their child to feel discomfort...but on the other hand, it might help in the long run. He might get used to you always "coming to the rescue" in other situations, and not realize that he has it in him to control his movements.

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