Hold old was (or will be) your kid when you got rid of the pacifier?
Evie is now 14 months old. She loves the thing. I am trying to limit it during the day or just at home. With all her teething it is a comfort and she does love it. She hides them around the house and goes to her hiding places to find one if we don't give her one. But it is just hard when I know that is that she wants, and is very vocal about it. I start the weekend thinking, ok I will really limit pacifier use, then give in about 2 hours into the morning (she is a stubborn little girl, and if she sees one she NEEDS it, even if she doesnt' see it she goes looking and will make the sucking sound and cry).
But now...with all her drooling, she is developing a great rash on her chin because of the paciifer.
So kind of like the bottle / sippy cup post below... Should I be trying to get her off of it? I don't want her to be like my sister who was around 5 when she gave up hers....
Re: Moms - Pacifiers...
Like bottles I just have a personal pet peeve when older kids (say 2-3+) are walking around in public with either so I want to eliminate.
For binkies, I just always limited them. She has never been allowed to have them outside of sleeping (or long car rides). We have a process where I pick her up in the morning, we have a cuddle and then what ever "friends" came out of the crib have to go back. We put blankie back and say "bye bye - see you at nap time or see you tonight". Binkie, same deal.
FOR ME, this is enough. She only uses it for comfort when sleeping, she never uses it in public, and I'm OK with her using it as long as she feels she needs it.
So, I guess it depends on your goal/tolerance. If you're cool with her using it at home, maybe just start slowly eliminating it other places?
Neena Mae. 1/7/10
"A baby nursing at a mother's breast is an undeniable affirmation of our rootedness in nature." - David Suzuki
We just broke Charlie of this two weeks ago (at 15.5 months). At first we were ok with letting him go a little longer, but with new baby on the way we thought it would be harder to expect him to quit if the baby is allowed one.
We decided to cut it out cold turkey starting on a friday after daycare. I gathered them all up, put them in a box and put the box in the basement. That night he cried for it for about 5 minutes then went to sleep. The next nap, same thing. By Monday he had forgotten. I did buy him a couple new teething toys that if he seemed to be looking for the pacifier I whipped out one at a time. I think that distracted him enough from looking and then he was happy to chomp down on other things.
Our plan b, which we didn't have to use, was to do what a friend of mine did. Little by little she cut the nips off of each pacifier until eventually her kid didn't like sucking on it anymore.
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