English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

She's almost a year old, and I'm having some real trouble trying to get her to switch. Usually, she doesn't try to take anything from the cup; she just throws it aside. Today, my attempt resulted in a major temper tantrum, where she was screaming and carrying the cup around. If I tried to take the cup, she'd get mad. If I tried to help her use it, she'd scream more. I finally gave her a bottle to appease her a little bit, in hopes that once she had a little milk in her belly, she'd be more willing to try the sippy cup. No luck.

2007-01-06 07:04:22 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

17 answers

It's pretty difficult for most kids to transition from being a baby to becoming a toddler. I'm certain she is attempting to just feel secure and it's frustrating her for you to force her to do something so unfamiliar. The key is to be patient and consistent. I had trouble with my baby transitioning to a cup because he preferred the softness of the bottle nipple. I did a little asking around and some research to find a brand of sippy cups with a silicone top found at Walmart called "Nubby" This should be the ticket! They are similar to bottles but are no spill sippy cups.

2007-01-06 07:18:47 · answer #1 · answered by Bonita Applebaum 5 · 0 0

At a year old. Using a bottle is fine. Don't force you're child off the bottle at this age. A sippy cup shouldn't even be introduced to her until at lest 1 1/2 years of age. And then, its a combo of bottle and cup while eating. By time she is 2 or 3, she'll be drinking out of cup all the time. So, don't pressure her.

Mommy, don't make you're child grow up faster then she is willing to. Remember that!
Just because your friends 1 year old maybe using a cup, doesn't mean your child has too.

2007-01-06 07:18:17 · answer #2 · answered by asgrafxx 3 · 0 1

It probably would have been best to start the cup earlier. I have a 7 month old and she started on the sippy cup at 6 months. I also work in a child care where we start kids on cups early. I just give them a little with dinner or snack so they can slowly get use to it. I guess in your situation, just keep at it. Be consistent and don't give it. If you give in to her and give her the bottle she will learn that if she screams loud enough and long enough you will eventually give it. Good Luck.

2007-01-06 07:15:38 · answer #3 · answered by Jessica_Bessica 3 · 0 0

I had the same problem with my son. Then we found a great product at http://www.lilybugs.com. They are these cute animal covers that slip right over the sippy cup. They are soft and my son is now really attached to his. The best part is, I was always forgetting to grab a cup when I ran out the door to go somewhere and now he carries it for me. I also like how it keeps his milk cold and not his hands. And you don't have to buy the expensive sippy cups with the handles, I just buy the cheap, take and toss ones and it fits great.

Since your daughter is almost one, she might like picking out which animal she likes best, they have a bunch of them. Good Luck!

2007-01-06 07:39:24 · answer #4 · answered by mommy ~ AL 1 · 0 0

Honestly Hun, it sounds like she isn't ready and if she isn't ready it isn't going to happen give her a bit more time slowly take it away...give her , her morning milk in a bottle...then when it is time for her afternoon milk try the sippy...don't ask her, just give it to her or put on the table the middle bottle is the easiest to get rid of....Give a couple of weeks before u do the next...then switch her morning bottle to a sippy cup....give her all her drinks in exception of her night time bottle in a sippy cup...give the night time one a while...i couldn't get rid of my daughters night time bottle until her second birthday....but remember its a comfort for them give her some time with her bedtime baba before u take it away

2007-01-06 07:14:29 · answer #5 · answered by eyesopen16 3 · 0 0

I see two options:

a) Just wait it out and try the switch later on.

b) Get rid of the bottles except for times when you really use the formula, for instance, bedtime. Only have sippies in sight.

I think that her carrying around the sippy is a good sign. Just let her be with it and let her get on good terms with being around sippies. You will make your life stressful if you turn it into a power struggle.

My son is 14 months and has only recently gotten into using sippies. We weren't having fights, but he was having difficulty getting the hang of it.

2007-01-06 07:09:21 · answer #6 · answered by f319 2 · 0 0

It probibly frustrates her, which is why she's throwing it. Have you tried a regular cup with no sippy lid. It might mean for a messy kiddo, but don't put a whole lot in the cup at a time and you'll be fine. Also, careful with giving into those trantrums, once she realizes she can get you to do what she wants by flipping out you're in for it!

2007-01-06 07:08:20 · answer #7 · answered by Gig 5 · 0 0

be consistent. If you switch back and forth too much shes not going to get used to the cup. And as soon as she learns all she has to do is scream and you'll give the bottle back she will! Put something she likes to drink in the cup eventually she'll come around but it will take time. Good Luck!

2007-01-06 07:07:05 · answer #8 · answered by kelly v 2 · 0 0

At a year old my kids got sippy cups for their birthday! My gift! They got bottles in the morning and at night! The rest of the time they got the sippy cups.

2007-01-06 09:27:52 · answer #9 · answered by suzzieq143 2 · 0 0

There are 2 techniques to ease the transition that helped us: a million) Get a particular sippy cup that you actually use for formulation - it truly is going to resemble her bottles as a lot as achievable (be a similar shade, structure, etc.) she will be able to quickly associate formulation with this cup which she with slightly of success will link lower back to her bottles. She took to the juice/water because it truly is the first motorcar she had for those beverages, likely. She's freaked out because a established fluid (formulation) is now in a diverse format and he or she friends those sippy cups with water/juice. quickly she'll in all likelihood be on cow's milk besides, and this may help in that transition too. 2) As you used to feed her the bottle, "feed" her the sippy with formulation. it truly is how our little guy ultimately stuck on. He'd lean lower back in our lap and be fed the cup...then he began conserving it himself, now he merely sits anyplace and takes his milk. And peculiarly, supply up the bottle and get rid of them. If she is conscious they're nevertheless there, she will be able to be puzzled. in the journey that they are lengthy previous for strong, she will be able to comprehend that extra effective than having the bottles yet not utilizing them. toddlers are so interesting!!!

2016-12-01 22:22:41 · answer #10 · answered by cottom 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers