M.B. asks from Chicago, IL on October 28, 2006
Preparing 2.5 Year Old for New Sibbling
Hi mommies,
In 5 weeks we're expecting a new baby and for now I haven't done a lot in preparing our 2,5 year old son. I have been telling him that mommy has a little sister for him in her belly but he didn't seem to respond to it at all.
Last week I bought a doll and I started explaning to him that this is a baby and kind of pretend play with him and baby. Now he starts pointing at my belly and saying 'baby' and also to the doll and he gives the doll kisses (I showed him and told him that babies are sweet). Please let me know your thoughts on this, has anyone done this with their sibblings? I haven't red any books about it I'm just going with my feelings. I know once baby is there to get him as involved as possible but I hope to prepare him a little to a different routine. I'm also thinking of already taking the doll in the stroller and car seat so he can get used to it.
any advice good and bad welcome! Also any other tips on preparing my son for arrival of a baby. are there any books out there for his age to read with him? I haven't found any yet.
thanks
M.
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A.R. answers from Chicago on October 28, 2006
Hi M.,
I agree with the book and doll. My son was younger when my daughter was born, so we didn't do this, but I think it's a good idea-- go shopping for a small gift he can give the baby when she's born-- something small like a book, a small stuffed animal, a blanket, or a rattle. Also, you may want to buy him a small present to give him in the hospital as well (or a big brother shirt or pin). My son was 21 months when my daughter was born. My sister brought him a little toy car when they were all visiting his little sister at the hospital, and he immediately brought it over and put it on his new sister's belly to show her. It was so sweet!
Good luck!
A.
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D.C. answers from Chicago on October 29, 2006
We just had a new baby, and my 2-and-a-half-year-old son is doing GREAT with her. I'm trying to think of all the things we did to prepare him. I think it helped a lot that he has an older sister and so has always had to share us. But beyond that, we did a few things.
1 - He has a book called, "I'm a Big Brother" by Joanna Cole
http://www.amazon.com/Im-Big-Brother-Joanna-Cole/dp/06881...
that he loved. It was good at explaining things.
2 - I honestly think it helped him to know the baby's name before she was born. We talked a lot about Maggie and what she would be doing and what I would be doing with her.
3 - I explained before she was born, frequently, that I would be nursing Maggie and he would have to help me by being patient and waiting for me to help him or play with him.
4 - I did not make any other changes (like a big boy bed or pressing potty training) as I think the sibling adjustment was enough.
5 - We talked over and over about appropriate ways to touch Maggie ("very gently"), showed him what that means, and also talked about appropriate toys to share with Maggie. Of course once she was born he was still too aggressive with her (loving, but too rough) and still tried to give her his trains, but I think preparing him in advance made it easier to get through that faster. Now he is really good about keeping his toys away from her and always says "I touched her very gently" every time he touches her!
Good luck to you! And congratulations.
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C.A. answers from Chicago on October 29, 2006
Hi M.,
When I was pregnant with my twins, I took my oldest daughter to our local hospital where I delivered the twins. They have a program for older siblings and it was great. They informed the children how their sibling or siblings are going to be here soon, had them color pages, they all got certificates and badges showing that they were the older sibling. What else I thought was great, is that every person got a t-shirt that said, "I am the older sister" or "I am the older brother" which all the kids thought were great. I delivered my girls at Silver Cross Hospital in Joliet, so maybe you could see if the hospital you will be delivering at does this??
Good Luck
C.
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L.B. answers from Youngstown on October 29, 2006
hi!
we just went through a similar situation in our house , my girls were 2.5 yrs old when we had our new baby too, i bought them a book called first experiences, our new baby its made by priddy books they have a website priddybooks.com , it seemed to help , we would all sit down together every night and read the book either i or my husband would take turns , and we would show them my belly and tell them a new baby is coming , i let them go to my dr appts too so when the dr would listen to the babys heartbeat we would tell them thats the baby in mommys tummy getting ready to come out and live with us.
we never practiced with dolls but i know that it helps too.
anyhow everything so far has gone pretty good , when we first brought her home bella had a few accidents in her pants and went back to normal after about a week or two and asha was just a little over emotional/extra sensitive for a few weeks.also they both started acting like babies that was a little tough to get them to stop acting like babies and start being big girls again , giving them little jobs(getting diapers or wipes during diaper changes) to help me with the baby really helped they felt like big girls with responsibilities and its nice to have a little extra help anyway:)
anyhow just wanted to let you know its a little hard the first week or two but everything works its self out (with us it did) and now its great i have little helpers they love being big sisters !
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E.B. answers from Washington DC on October 29, 2006
You may think this a bit too much, but I would watch the "birth day" episodes on Discovery Health with my daughter. She was 2 yrs 5 wks when we had our second. So, she knew there was a "slimy baby" in mommy's tummy. She was actually in the room with us through the entire labor and delivery (my family was getting hit by Hurricane Rita, so no one could come up). I think it helped that she was there to sit on the bed with me and touch her baby sister, within minutes of delivery. It made her involved.
Also, she LOVED receiving packages for the baby. I ebayed a lot, so we'd get baby clothes in the mail. She'd help me open it and sort through them all...talking about how they were for the baby.
Good luck!
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M. answers from Chicago on October 28, 2006
I have a 2 year old and a 5 week old. We read the books "I'm a big brother" by Joanna Cole, and "What a Baby Needs" from the Dr. Sears library to our son before the birth of his sister. WE also told him about the baby in mommy's belly. He would give it kisses before she was born. Afterward, he ignored the new baby for awhile, but now loves the books and to give kisses to his sister. I don't think there is too much else you can do to prepare a 2 year old for a new sibling. Our pediatrician also suggested the doll, so that will probably be a good idea.
Good luck.
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M. answers from Chicago on October 29, 2006
I did similar things with my daughter when her sister was born, she was 3 when her sister was born and I kept her involved the whole time. We would pick out books to read to the baby in my belly, she would kiss my belly, tell her sister good night and when we chose the name, we told her so she would start calling her by name in my belly to get used to it. when the baby was born, we had Taylor with us all the time, she would help change the baby, feed her, get her to bed, we would let her sing bedtime songs to her, color pictures for her, all sorts of things. We let her hold her, with us next to her and supporting her head, but anything she wasnted to help wiht we let her and this really helped, she never felt threatened by her until she started walking, when she was mobile, but that is antoher story.
I hope this helped
M.
A.R. answers from Chicago on October 28, 2006
Hi M.,
I agree with the book and doll. My son was younger when my daughter was born, so we didn't do this, but I think it's a good idea-- go shopping for a small gift he can give the baby when she's born-- something small like a book, a small stuffed animal, a blanket, or a rattle. Also, you may want to buy him a small present to give him in the hospital as well (or a big brother shirt or pin). My son was 21 months when my daughter was born. My sister brought him a little toy car when they were all visiting his little sister at the hospital, and he immediately brought it over and put it on his new sister's belly to show her. It was so sweet!
Good luck!
A.
J.Y. answers from Chicago on October 29, 2006
M., Why don't you try a sibling class at the hospital that you are going to deliver at? My daughter was the same age when my son was born. She went to a class offered at the hospital and it went very well. Your son is old enough for one of these classes. Jen
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