24 answers

Pacifier and Talking

My two year old likes to use her pacifier alot, and i am okay with it, in principle. She is very grown up in so many ways, I want to allow her her "baby things" as long as she reasonably needs it. But she also talks ALOT, and it is hard to decipher through the pacifier. I spend the ENTIRE day saying, "Take your chupa out so mama can understand what you are saying." Over and over and over. She usually just says the same thing 57 times and i respond asking her to take her chupa out until I think I am going to lose my mind, and then I yank the paci out if I can reach her. Then I respond to her request, and tell her how much easier it is to understand her without the chupa in her mouth. I try really hard to pretend I don't understand no matter what if she still has it in, but I can not always tell without looking at her, she is that good. I am not really wanting to try to break her of the paci, just put an end to the ceaseless frustration of trying to interpret through it. Any ideas?

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I think we both know it's time to face the inevitable. It's time to get rid of the pacifier. You're getting too frustrated about it & there is no reason for a 2 year old to have a pacifier in her mouth all the time. I will tell you my youngest had it at night for 2 years. It was laziness on my part & he was my "baby". In reality you need to move on & enjoy the next stage of her life.

Hi J.,
Good luck, I also had the same problem with my now 4 year old daughter. I started taking it when trying to understand her when she was about two. Then she didn't want it anymore until bedtime. Then once I didn't give it to her and it stopped all together. I understand that you aren't trying to wein her, but if you are having a hard time with the talking(understanding) her then maybe she would feel kinda like a big girl without it?
Also, I feel for you with the roomate thing, it has to be hard to raise a baby and three grown up kids?

you can try to wean her off of it by only letting her have it at certain times, but for most people I know that doesn't work.
Usually the only thing that works is to take it away and do not replace it. She will eventually get over it. I've seen a lot of parents on here say that they just had to take it away.

More Answers

Mine learned to talk just fine and she was a paci-user.

Once they get around three to four years of age, the paci can actually start to affect their teeth! You might try to encourage the idea that paci's are only for nap/bedtime and not for the rest of the day - again, I only say this because it will begin to affect the teeth after a point, not because I think she shouldn't have a paci.

Just know that, whenever you decide to try to stop the habit, it can be a hard thing to break, depending on the child. When my daughter was three, I ended up taking her to the dentist and having them tell her that the paci's were not good for her teeth. They also discussed the "Paci Fairy" with her. We then had the "Paci Fairy" come to our house within the next several days. It worked wonders.

1 mom found this helpful

I started having the same problem and it is annoying.
My son only uses his for naps and bedtime and he understands this. His daycare class (18-24 month olds) only allows them to use them during nap time so that makes it easier for me at home.

Lose that paci!!!She'll never learn to fully talk without it!!
Why does she have it anyway?? Is she inconsolable???Doesn't sound like it. Just be the parent slowly get rid of it.
Good Luck
R.

All of our kids were rid of the paci by this age, but my neice had one until she was almost in Kindergarten. It was hard on my husband and myself because personally we don't think kids that old should have one, and my sister and brother in law would always complain about her having it, but never take it away. We each (my husband and I) told her one time that if she wanted to talk to us she needed to empty her mouth. After that we would simply ignore her if she had it in. It only took a short while for her to remove it before talking to one of us, funny thing is...she never removed it to talk to anyone else, because they weren't consistent. WHATEVER you decide to do, consistency is the key! Good Luck

I J.,
I look at the "big picture" when dealing with things like this. The issue is not really your daughter having her paci as it is her beginning her dependence on "cruches" that may very well carry over into later years with other things. I know at first hearing this it seems far fetched, however, I have a friend who has custody of his 6 yr old son and 2 yr old daughter. His daughter has a blankie that she affectionately calls her "kitty" and because she is a 2 yr old girl, it's cute. His son, on the other hand, carries around one of his mom's silky, flowered robes, calling it a kitty too. He says he does this to feel closer to his mom (who lives in the same city, just not with them). Personally, I don't think it is ok for a 6 yr old boy to carry a girly robe and call it a kitty, but he's not my child and his dad doesn't think anything is wrong with it. My point is that what is ok for a 2 yr old girl is not ok for a 6 yr old boy. He gets teased because other boys his age don't run around dragging their mom's flowered robes. I suggested to my friend that he cut a piece of the robe and let him carry a "hanky" which is more acceptable. I say all of this to say that as moms our job is to raise our kids so that they will be able to function in the society in which they live. There are standards, unspoken rules and every kind of pressure imaginable in society. This applies even to two year olds. It may be ok for some parents to allow their child to bathe with them, sleep with them, suck a paci until they are in kindergarten...but if any of this behavior affects their growth and development we have to improvise (hence carrying a "hanky" instead of a "kitty"--he still gets to have something of his mom's with him but we have alleviated the teasing and emotional/self esteem damage that comes with it). For your daughter, her paci seems to be getting in the way of her communicating clearly. If it is being confirmed that it is ok for someone to ask her the same thing 57 times at two years old, it won't be different when she's 5 and in kindergarten, or 15 or whatever age. It is far easier to break the cycle now, set standards that are both acceptable in the home and in the society she will live and grow in than to re-teach at every stage of her development. I have seen children who kept their paci until well after three, and then replaced it with their thumb which costs the parents thousands of dollars down the line in braces. Anyway, my point is that whether you choose to allow your daughter to keep the paci or not is your decision. You could institute boundaries such as those suggested by another mom to only have it while laying down. It's just important that you do something that will balance her development so that she understands that mommy will ask you 57 times to repeat yourself but mommy may be the only one with that much patience. I'm not really talking "far" in the future when she's five and in school--even now, when you and your husband want to go out for dinner and you have problems finding family and friends who will have the kind of patience that you do with your child. Please don't think I am being judgemental here. I just faced the same issue (of the big picture) with my grandaughter. I think it's cute to snap pictures of her with my digital camera with her hair in a soap ponytail while I bathe her in the kitchen sink. Someone else told me it was pornograpy! But that is the society we live in!

Only let her have the pacifer when she is sleeping or needs consoling from a fit.

I have a four year old who loves, loves her binky. I try to only let her have it at night and for naps. Sometimes she wants to hang on to in the mornings. If she tries to talk with it in her mouth I simply tell her I can not hear her when she talks with it in her mouth. I'll even talk like her so she can see how hard it is to understand her. I don't know if that'll work with a two year old. But I can tell you my daughter wants to be heard and will immediately pop it out of her mouth and tell me wants on her mind! Hope that helps. Peace.

It is about time to pitch the pacifier. With her teeth coming in the pacifier can cause her teeth to start bucking out if she continues on it too much longer. The best thing to do is to start weaning her from it. It is going to be frustrating for you until she is broken from the pacifier because she is going to always want it in her mouth and she won't talk without it. I would tell her she is not going to get what she wants until she takes out the pacifier herself and tells you what she wants. Tell her she is getting to be a big girl now and she doesn't need the pacifier all the time. Try to keep it away from her during the day and just give it to her at night. It is a hard habit to break but she needs healthy teeth and the longer the pacifier is there the more issues she may have down the road.

D.

I am 31 and have been married for almost 12 yrs. My husband and I have 3 boys ages 10,7 and 4.

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