41 answers

Pacifier,Potty Training, Big Girl Bed Before the New arrival...where Do I Begin?

I have just received news that I will be the mother of a two year old and a newborn...a little bit of a shock, but trying hard to digest it all! My daughter will be two august 14th and the newest addition will be here no later than sept 1st. I have a pacifier, potty training, and a big girl bed to get her adjusted to(since the baby will need her bed)...where do I even begin?? Help please!

Thanks
A.

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Featured Answers

To prevent resentment, don't go too hard or too fast. I saw one 16 mo. old boy quickly potty train from laid back mom, when 21 mo. old girl was very slow from up tight pregnant mom who was trying to get one out of diapers before baby arrived. Even some children regress when the sibling arrives.

I was in the same boat. My daughter was 20 months when my son was born. Start with what is most important. For me, it was her geting into the big girl bed b/c I needed the crib! We started at nap time in the big girl bed and the crib was punishment (if she didnt' stay in her bed she had to get in the crib. She wanted to be in the bed so badly that it worked! After naps were down, we did night time. I didn't worry about potty training or pacifier until after the baby was born. I just felt like that was a lot of adjustment for her!

I am in the same situation and I am keeping my son in his crib. He has not tried to climb out of it yet. The baby will be in the play yard in my room for a few months and I am hoping when the baby starts sleepimg through the night then they can share a room.

More Answers

Congrats on the new addition. Frankly, it is not such a good idea to make all of the changes you listed with your current child prior to having the new baby.
First, the pacifier is a security blanket and she will need that when the new baby arrives and she is feeling left out and pushed away.
Second, removing her from her bed to put another child in it will make her feel that the new child is more important and she may not be ready to leave her crib. Buy another crib.
Third, there are very few 2 year olds that are mature and ready to be potty trained - pushing will cause undue stress for the child.

I would suggest that everything with her be left just as it is and not make any radical changes for her, adding a new member to the family will be enough change for her for a while.
Yes, it means extra expense on a crib and diapers but that is what having children is about.

Best of luck to you.

2 moms found this helpful

You know, the big girl bed is the only important thing listed here if you want your new baby in the crib. But your girl doesn't need to be potty trained until she is ready. If she isn't ready, don't push it. Just start by putting a little plastic potty next to yours. Every single time you go, she sits on the one next to you. Make it fun. Say, "Let's go potty!" and you go and she goes. Together. Keep it up and if she is ready the light bulb will go off. Read on the potty together. Share stories on the potty together. Then check afterwards and show what you did in the potty and she shows what she did in the potty. Doing it this way is very positive. If she does something, give her an M&M. If she doesn't, say, "Next time!" and go on.

But if your girl isn't potty trained before the baby, that is alright. And if she is, don't be suprised if she reverses it some when the baby is born. That isn't unnatural at all.

The pacifier thing...how attached is she? Is your new baby going to have a pacifier? Is she so attached that she will have jealousy issues with the new baby having one? Will she steal the new baby's pacifier? If you think yes to any of these, let her keep it. Don't strain the relationship between big sister and new baby, there will already be enough jealousy there when your time is divided. A pacifier until 3 is not the end of the world. If she isn't that attached, then just ditch it. I had a friend who was walking with her son and a fire truck went by. She just put it in her pocket and said the fire truck took it. Silly, but it worked. Typically when you just ditch the pacifier, if they are really attached, you will have about 3 really bad days. Then they go on. Sometimes they substitute the thumb/finger which I hate because it is harder to break later and it makes their fingers/thumb smell bad. So don't push so hard. Make it fun and if it happens, it happens. But having two in diapers, with one being that much older, really isn't that big a deal. And the older one will train when she is ready.

V. S

Hey A.. I would start with the passy. I slowly cut the end of her passy off, till eventually there was nothing left byt the plastic shell. Oh, make sure you get rid of all of the passy's except one. Then cut the one passy back. It was a 3-4 wks process for us. She did great and never really missed it. Then I would do big girl bed. They usually do better than you expect. Most kids don't even realize for a while that they can get up out of bed. Get a really big gate for the side of her bed and it's almost like a crib. Then the potty thing...now if she is not showing any ineterest, I don't think I would try this one. This can be a really BIG battle unless they are ready. 17 months is pretty young. Make sure you have a potty in your house for her to use and just talk about it and practice. I wouldn't push it though. Good luck!

My kids are 2 years apart. We had the "big kid's" bed in his room so he could get used to it. We even let him take naps in it so it was special. He was really comfortable with the bed well before the baby arrived and we never told him that he was transitioning because of the baby. I never wanted him to resent his sister for the changes he had to make.

We tried very hard to wean him off a lot of things before the baby arrived, including the pacifier. Our thought was that he would already be doing the things he needs to do because he was a big boy, not because the baby was coming. That worked well for us--he's never blamed his sister for those changes and he really loves her.

I agree that the potty training will be the hardest. Don't push that too hard. I just had to accept that potty training would happen after the baby was a few months old.

Good luck!

I agree with paci first. It's a lesson learned the hard way in our house. Taking the paci away disrupted my son's sleep, and he was already in a bed. so he'd get up, wander down the hall, and throw tantrums when we put him back in bed. That was when I bought a baby gate for his door. So, with my two year old, I plan to go cold turkey with the paci, let it settle, the move to a bed. And,I believe the closer you can wait to 3years to potty train, the shorter amount of time it will require overall. No one really tells you how long the process really is. Seems like it's a full year if you start at 2. GOOD LUCK!

Wow! Sounds like you are going to have a lot on your plate. Do you even have the option to keep her in the crib and buy another for the baby? I ask this because it will probably save you a lot of heartache. If she is still in a crib you won't have the bedtime and naptime issues that you would have if she was able to get in and out of her bed on her own. DO NOT try to potty train her before the baby comes, you will be setting yourself up for failure. Sure, you can force your child into using the potty but if you wait until she is completely ready it will be completely stress free. Just have panties, pull ups and a baby potty available for her and she will put it all together in her OWN time. Give her some instruction so she knows what to do but it takes time. Relax and continue to let your 2-year old do what 2-year olds do, even if you are going to have another baby. You would treat her very differently if you did not have this new baby on the way. Try to keep that in mind so you don't put too many unrealistic expectations on her. Good luck!

Hi,
First, as someone else said, breathe and try to relax, everything will work out. Do not try to make too many changes at this time.
If you are going to change her into a "Big Girl Bed" I strongly suggest that when you get her new bed that you completely dismantle the baby bed so she will not feel that the new baby has "taken" her bed from her. I know this seems like a lot of work but it will make the change easier for all of you.
The pacifier really depends on how attached she is to it and how much she uses it for comfort, etc. Only you know how much she needs or depends on it.
Potty training will be MUCH easier when she is older. When the child is ready to be potty trained, it will only take about 2 weeks. Trying before they are ready, will only frustrate you both.
Don't try to make her grow up to soon, you will miss so much. They grow up fast enough as it is.
You can do this. There will be days that you want to sit down & cry but there will be more good days then bad.
Just remember that the house can be cleaned later and take the time to enjoy your kids.

I have been married to the love of my life for almost 44 years. I am a mother to 3 daughters and grandmother to 7. I also have had an in home daycare since 1979.

I think I am echoing everyone here, but I think the only thing you really need to do before #2's arrival is transition to a big girl bed. I have been told that if you try to potty train that young and then introduce a new baby, the toddler tends to backslide in the potty area anyway. And she may need the paci for comfort once she has to share attention. At such a young age, it's not the end of the world if she still needs a paci for naps & bedtime, if it gives her comfort. If you introduce two many changes at once and then introduce a new baby, she may develop resentment and see the baby as having taken her things...aka, "the baby has my bed, uses diapers, uses pacis, and I can't?! what the heck, Mom?!"

Congrats on the impending arrival, and don't stress out so much. It will all work itself out in due time...

God bless!

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