My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Get advice and support with infant feeding from other users here.

Infant feeding

SO how do you stop breastfeeding a clingy 2 year old?

70 replies

popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:10

He has a morning and night time feed and an occasional one before or after a nap (I usually try distracting him from having this)

He would be distraught with 'cold turkey' - he is very much still into his feeding. He is going through a stage of demanding it all of the time and, coupled with tantrums, and still poor sleep, I think I I just about ready for him to stop.

I try to do the 'don't offer' thing already.

How do you cope with the meltdowns when you stop?

OP posts:
Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:11

give him to someone else to do bedtim routine?

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:12

and how do you cope with that meltdown???

OP posts:
Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:14

i dont. i leave it to dh.

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:14

so!
how should dh cope with it
lol

OP posts:
Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:15

dh does cuddles, then puts her dowen to bed.

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:16

so has dd3 totally stopped mow misdee?

I thikn our time has come and

OP posts:
Report
vikkiuphill · 08/04/2007 15:16

My mother breast fed me for 3 years and i as the same, i was a poor eater and wanted my breast milk more. At the age of 3 my mother thought it best that i stopped and she left me with my grandmother for a few days. In that time my mothers milk had dried up. It worked for me anyway.

Report
FrannyandZooey · 08/04/2007 15:17

I think the book "How Weaning Happens" is very good.

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:18

you see - no one will have him!
MIL said she would have both boys for a few days from tuesday but a few days ago she backed down as she 'really doesnt think she can cope with ds2's sleeping'

I have never EVER been away from him at night

OP posts:
Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:18

will look that up franny
I don't want to make him really upset but it feels, at least for me, that the time is right...

OP posts:
Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:21

she only feeds in the morning

Report
FrannyandZooey · 08/04/2007 15:28

This page might help?

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:34

franny - that pagge is brill - have bookmarked to read later - interesting about quadrupling birth weight....
of to weigh ds2 lol

OP posts:
Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:42

hmmm
he was 8lb 11 at birth.....he will be feeding for a long time yet then!

OP posts:
Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:43

lol i was just trying to figure that out for dd3, long way to go.

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 15:45

it did saying for girls it is more like 3 times their biorth weight

OP posts:
Report
SenoraPostrophe · 08/04/2007 15:49

popsy I knew this would be your thread. Your ds2 is so like my ds1 it's uncanny.

anyway I weaned him at 15 months in a hurry (you may remeber there was a child free wedding involved). It was scarey, but actually, it was a lot easier than I thought it would be. But then I think my mnind has blanked some of it because I cannot for the life odf me remeber what we did at bedtime. I think we just had an extra big cuddle and long story, with cup of water.

good luck!

Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:52

ooo she is there then.

Report
FrannyandZooey · 08/04/2007 15:55

Popsy can you link me the page which mentioned quadrupling birth weight please? It must have been a link from the kellymom page I linked to, rather than the page itself, I think

Report
misdee · 08/04/2007 15:57

here

Report
FrannyandZooey · 08/04/2007 15:58

Ah thanks Misdee

I love that Dettwyler article, should have guessed it was from there

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 17:29

need to think it through but think that i may try a gentlry gentley approach next week
ds1 is away at PILs for a few days and dh is off so may be an ideal opportunity

OP posts:
Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

popsycal · 08/04/2007 17:30

It is the logistics of it all that concerns me tbh. While I don;t really want to do cold turkey, I don't think he would get the 'sometimes' thing.

It is only in his bedroom already although he has spent the last week constantly asking for 'juice baba' () during the day too

OP posts:
Report
Boco · 08/04/2007 17:47

I'm really confused about this at the moment. I have a 2 year old i'm still breastfeeding.

Sometimes, when she shouts loudly in public that she needs 'booby', or when she climbs into my bed at 5am and scrabbles about trying to latch on ,i wonder what i'm doing and think it's time to wean. Then i read an article like that, and get all confused.

My dd is so attached to breastfeeding - i don't offer, and i refuse if we're out, or i'm trying to cook, but she feeds at bedtime, first thing in the moring, and its' the only way i can still get her to have an afternoon nap (which i think is my main reason) I've loved breastfeeding, i think it's part of the reason she's so confident, secure and independent. It's been so valuable lately when she had to have a general anaesthetic and it was instant comfort and reassurance when she was so distressed.

But, i am starting to feel a bit wierd about it, like i have to justify myself to people all the time and feel a bit embarrassed about it.

I have no idea how to stop though, my dd1 weaned at 14 months and i was expecting it to be the same this time.

Report
popsycal · 08/04/2007 17:51

boco - my reasons for both giving up and continuing are identical to yours
I could be you

OP posts:
Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.