He should be eating junior food and drinking his milk out of a sippy cup by now. Feed him well and give him a pacifier. Just say "NO".
2007-03-13 18:04:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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During the day, when the baby is less likely to have a meltdown, put some band-aids over your nipples. Tell him/her that Mommy has a boo-boo (or an ouchie, whatever word you use for an injury) and that the milk can't come out but there is nice milk in the cup instead. Hold him/her and rock her as they drink. Often times, children are looking for the closeness and cuddle-time and not the milk. Keep showing the band-aids every time you are asked to nurse.
2007-03-14 04:25:12
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answer #2
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answered by CuriousP 1
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at 15 months with my son i decided one nite after being bugged to stop right then and there i had also found out i was pregnant a few days before so that helped push me but i put him in bed with me and let him cry for about 10 mins which is forever when listening to your baby right then i was gonna give in and i was like no first that will confuse him and then eventually i am gonna have to go through this 10 min of crying again so i waited and 5 min later he stopped went to sleep and didn;t ask for booby again except i worked 2 days that week and when i came home he nursed for like 2 min each day and that was it by the next week he was weaned i think you need to be around alot though so they are just losing your milk and still feel secure
2007-03-13 18:12:03
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answer #3
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answered by momma 4
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I would contact your local La Leche League group, they will help you find a way to gently wean your baby that is also safe for you (or possibly find out the reason behind your problem if you're interested in continuing your nursing relationship.)
I'm assuming that you're in the US, but here's a link to La Leche League's website to help you find a group in your area that may help (you don't even have to go to the group meetings, you can call a leader and they can help you over the phone):
http://llli.org/WebUS.html
Edited to add: Please don't get your weaning advice from Supernanny, she's never breastfed a child (or even had a child) so she's really not the best source of information on this.
2007-03-13 18:51:49
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answer #4
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answered by Rebecca C 3
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i had this prob w/ my daughter when she was 12 months, the only thing that worked was quitting Cold turkey, and not giving in. After about 2 days of just staying outta her room and letting her cry it out at night, it was done. She stopped waking at night, sleeping a solid 12 hours, it was awesome. ITs sooooooooooooooo hard to let them cry, but its worth it in the end, just make sure baby has lots to eat near the end of the day, so then u know that they arent hungry. Also if u are that worried, maybe give baby a bottle or cup of water (not milk, it will rot the teeth)Good luck!
2007-03-13 18:04:48
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Ok. For every breast feed, give your baby solids. Tell it there is no more breast feeding and if it still cries, it will cry itself to sleep because it will cry that much it will get sick of it and know that crying doesn't help. The reason why it keeps crying is because when it DOES cry, it gets it's on way.
2007-03-13 18:06:19
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I actual have a 4 month previous breastfed daughter too. Has he ever had a bottle? My daughter fought them for awhile, yet now she'll take them from all of us different than me. She likes the similac develop formula, yet she has high priced tastes and likes the waiting-made bottles and not the powdered formula. it rather is nice for now nevertheless bc she basically gets a bottle as quickly as in the previous mattress. additionally, there is not any assure your son will take formula surprising away. you have have been given to lease a pump from the scientific institution for a month and artwork on blending a million/2 breastmilk, a million/2 formula, then develop the formula. It expenses $35 a month to lease a pump right here (I stay in Iowa), so i does no longer bypass out and purchase a pump if I have been you. there's no longer something incorrect with picking to end breastfeeding at 4 months. It does not make you a "undesirable" mom...
2016-10-18 08:16:48
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answer #7
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answered by ? 4
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When you lay her down for bed or a nap try laying with her, put a pillow between the baby and your breasts and offer a sippy cup of milk. Pat and stroke her, try not to talk but hum softly.
2007-03-14 00:40:50
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answer #8
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answered by peach 4
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let him cry it out. he'll get used to the fact that all drinks come in cups. remind him that he's a big boy. since your baby was nursing for comfort only, try other ways to give it to him. he may sense that you are not spending as much time with him.
the crying will pass.
2007-03-13 20:33:51
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answer #9
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answered by KitKat 7
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