3/4 Month Old Eating

Updated on April 18, 2011
T.C. asks from Kingsport, TN
5 answers

Ok my son will be 4 months old on the 3rd, i have been doing things differently with him feeding wise than i did my other 2 due to him not being as hungry, and i dont rememer how they were after their dinner feedings my question is he eats at 7 p.m. goes to bed at 9 p.m. (not adjusted to the time change so is an hour behind every one) and dont wake up for another feeding till 5-6 a.m. thats almost 12 hours is that normal? he is solely breast fed and im fixing to start trying him out on cerial cuz he is getting to where he is refusing a bottle while we are eating and eyeballing mine or the husbands food and almost like he is gumming the nipple of the bottle, yes bottle, i pump 3 times a day 2 are after he takes a bottle im trying to have him used to the bottle for when i go back to work so he isnt fighting it, im just wanting to make sure he is ok this is something that started about a month ago give or take not long after his 2 month shots he went to just 1 feeding between his pm one and his breakfast he eats at 5-6 then again about 9 then at 1 and 4 and 7, 2 of those are 8oz bottles at 1 and 7 and not really acting hungry in between meals or wanting to eat any earlier than the usual times so again just making sure that he will be ok going that stretch without eating at such a young age.

What can I do next?

  • Add yourAnswer own comment
  • Ask your own question Add Question
  • Join the Mamapedia community Mamapedia
  • as inappropriate
  • this with your friends

So What Happened?

So thanks for all the info any more is always greately appreciated along with expierences with your own kids, to Pamela, Raven & son, i have absolutely no problem producing out of 5 feedings i nurse him 3 and have a very healthy supply (i turned into a cow) stored up i do pump when i give him the bottle, im trying to make it where he can be fed by others and i leave the room and try not to talk so he dont fight with them and also so that the pump doesnt bother my nipples, but anytime he has his growth spurt the more he wants to nurse the more i nurse him its just the lunch and supper we are usually out and about at those times and a bottle is easier and trying to get him used to it, wonder when that growth spurt is gonna happen, and it sounds like him going so long between feedings is just fine just didnt remember how my other ones did considering that the youngest b4 baby will be 7 this year.

More Answers

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

C.M.

answers from St. Louis on

sound just like my 4 month old. She is breastfed but often takes bottles too - she has to tag along to a lot of her sisters' events and it's just easier for me to give her breastmilk in the bottle.
She eats around 7am, 11am, 3pm, 7pm and a little more at 830pm, then down to bed at 845 and sleeps until 7am. When from a bottle she takes about 6oz. I have not yet started cereal. She's been in this routine since 2 months old and my older two were the same way. She does not fuss or act hungry in between feedings, and my pediatrictian says she is growing and developing right on track.

1 mom found this helpful
Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

J.S.

answers from Tampa on

I had the same concern with my son. He started sleeping through the night at 6wks (10pm-5am) I thought he was waking at 5am because he was hungry, but I tried just rocking him back to sleep and he didn't wake up again until 8 or 9am and ate his regular size bottle, 4oz I think at that time. I asked the doctor if it was okay that he was going that long w/o feeding. He told me that as long as he was making up the missed ounces during the day then it was perfectly fine. I think the accepted norm is 2-2.5 ounces per pound. So a 10 pound baby should be taking in 20-30 ounces a day. If he's happy and growing at a steady pace I wouldn't stress.

1 mom found this helpful
Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

K.P.

answers from Memphis on

He's too young; but after about 4 m/o (preferably after 6 m/o), you may want to give him a bit of table food here and there. I held out till fully 6 mo w/ both my kids, and with my first-born it was easy, but with my second, I was hanging on by my fingernails to get him to that "exclusively breastfed for the first 6 months" gold star. ;-) If I had it to do over again, I would have let him eat table food around 5 m/o, when he was acting like he really wanted it.

I never did baby cereal or baby food - just used whatever was on the table, if it wasn't too hard or spicy. Sometimes I'd mash it up, and sometimes I'd just put small bits of food (soft, and too small to choke, even if it went down whole) like peas or cut-up boiled carrots on the high-chair tray.

But a lot of babies this age are just wanting see the "new and exciting" thing on the table that we call dinner, so just because he's acting disinterested in his bottle doesn't mean he's interested in food for eating, but just something new to chew on, instead of the remote or his baby toys.

P.M.

answers from Tampa on

Do not start solids of any kind so early. Of course he's watching what you and hubby eat - he's trying to learn mannerisms and behaviors - which is normal.

If I was offered a bottle instead of the breast when Mommy was looking right at me, I'd refuse too - and may be why 'he's not eating much'. You should be nursing him more, not less... his growth spurt should have just occurred or will be occurring and that is when he needs to cluster feed at the breast to ensure your body knows it needs to up its production to keep up with baby's growing.

He should be eating a lot more and this sounds like he is showing a preference. If you are present, there should not be any bottles being given. I understand you want him to be used to a bottle... and when you are at work, he will not allow himself to starve. But when you ARE with him, you should exclusively nurse - unless you are using this as a way to sabotage your own milk supply so you have an excuse to wean? I've seen Moms do that before... intentionally set themselves up to fail then complain they tried but in reality they didn't want to breastfeed anyways and needed a way out.

Smallavatar-fefd015f3e6a23a79637b7ec8e9ddaa6

G.B.

answers from Oklahoma City on

He's not old enough to be starting on solid foods. Your breast milk is enough nutrition for him at this age. He will sleep when he needs it and if he is a good sleeper then I am very happy for you. Some are never very good at it.

For Updates and Special Promotions
Follow Us

Related Questions