A.B. asks from Spooner, WI on December 06, 2007
Pacifier - Spooner,WI
My daughter is 1 1/2 and very attached to her nuk and blanket. I would like to get her over her dependency on them, especially the nuk. She would have it in her mouth all day if we let her. Any suggestions would be great!
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V.D. answers from St. Cloud on December 11, 2007
A.,
When my son was little, he had a pacifier. When he was about one, I cut off the very tip of it. He still used it. A few days later, I cut off a little more.....a few days later, a little more....you get the idea. Soon, he didn't want it any more and it was HIS idea.
C.G. answers from Cheyenne on December 09, 2007
My son LOVED his "Miney"....first of all I recommend that she not have it in the store, or anywhere for that matter if she is satisfied and happy. When my son was happy his miney was in my pocket. I eventually weaned him down to naps and bedtime. By 20 months, he would talk about it a lot and we talked about it as if it were a toy. one day we couldn't find it...I mean really coundn't find it. I asked him if this other toy would do..(it actually was a motel key) and he said yes...He asked about miney a couple of times and I just told him it was lost...that was the end of it. Just keep having her put it up on the counter when she is busy and happy and eventually she'll be too busy talking to notice it is gone.
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K.D. answers from Salt Lake City on December 06, 2007
We limited use to naps and bedtime. Our son seemed to be using it more and more and tried talking with it and we couldn't understand him, plus I was tired of the "Where's the binky? Do we have a clean one?" etc. So we limited it to naps and bedtime, then just bedtime and then we just told him that he didn't need it anymore. He cried for about 3 nights and that was it. He was about 2 1/2 at the time.
I had another friend who slowly cut a bit of the tip off each day until there was basically nothing left and he gave it back to her. (However, I've since read that that can be a choking hazard.)
Another friend gathered them all up and had her daughter pick out a new toy and she had to use her pacifiers to "pay" for it and they gave them to the clerk at the store.
I also read about the Binky Fairy where you put the binkies in the window for the fairy to take to the new babies who need them and in the morning, the Fairy leaves a present in return for the binkies.
As for the blanket, I say let her have that. It's not harming her teeth or speech. My son also has a "lovey" and we only let him have it at home. He's not allowed to take it anywhere (so it doesn't get lost) unless we are traveling. It makes a world of difference to him if he has it at night. Even his younger sister will take it to him if she knows he's upset. It's very sweet.
Good luck in whatever you do.
1 mom found this helpful
B.W. answers from Grand Rapids on December 06, 2007
DO NOT cut the rubber end off, it is a major Choking hazard!
V.D. answers from St. Cloud on December 11, 2007
A.,
When my son was little, he had a pacifier. When he was about one, I cut off the very tip of it. He still used it. A few days later, I cut off a little more.....a few days later, a little more....you get the idea. Soon, he didn't want it any more and it was HIS idea.
A.F. answers from La Crosse on December 12, 2007
We had the same thing with our two kids. My mother in law recommended cutting a hole in the pacifier as it would not have the same texture as it caved in, and my nephews and nieces spit it out because of the change.
I didn't have as much luck, and after we left a pacifier at the beach in Florida and my youngest screamed the whole way back to the hotel (2 hours). I decided as soon as we returned from our trip it would be gone. It took about two painful weeks but it never came up again. We got home, threw every pacifier away, and ignoring and redirecting attention for almost exactly two weeks was what it took before he just realized he didn't need it. It is painful (for a very short time) but was smooth sailing after that.
L.B. answers from Sioux Falls on December 07, 2007
My now three year old was about 27 months when I finally got her to give up her pacifer. I figured with all the new changes we had coming, plus the possibility of heart surgery that summer, she would need all the security she could get. At 2, we were able to reason with her better and we offered her a trade, a new purse for all her pacifers. Worked like a charm. However recently, she has start sucking her thumb, again she has had some major changes coming, including starting preschool, which was the start of the first time away from me. Its was tough at first for her, but now she loves it. As for language skills, she is in the top for her age group, in fact her preschool teacher is very happy with her skills and thinks she will really help out the other kids her age who might not have the same skills. She was only allowed her pacifer at nap and bed times, and it is the same with her thumb. Good Luck!
J.O. answers from Boise on December 06, 2007
I wouldn't worry about it at that age another mom posted the same Q ahead, but I don't see what the big deal is other then it can be annoying at times for the parents. It is just a form of comfort when everything around them is constantly changing. I have a pillow that I have been using for 15 years it started out lookin like a bear, I have cut out the stuffing every 2 years and make a new cover, and goes anywhere I am going if I am not going to be home at night, (I wash the stuffing regularly) and I am a perfectly normal and well adjusted person......most of the time Lol, my kids might not agree, but half are teenagers and don't always like me. I say relax she is only a year and a half, leave her be you will have other more challenging issue to deal with and a binkie and blankie are really minor.
S. answers from Salt Lake City on December 06, 2007
As I just told anohter mom today, what we did with my daughter, after failing with other things, is I cut the rubber off the end of the pacifier and gave it back to her. After a couple of days she realized it was not the same and left it alone. We had a couple of long days and nights but it was worth it.
I have left her attached to her blanket- she is now 5. We did not make a big deal out of it and she likes to still have it but does not make a big issue about it. the only restriction on it is that we do not travel with it, Ducky stays home!
S.
A.I. answers from Lansing on December 06, 2007
let her have it for a little longer it won't hurt
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