Jump to content

Recommended Posts

A few ideas of things people suggested to us that we tried. The first is the one that worked best.


Warm milk (not too warm, obvs) but warmer than body temp

First feed of the day, when he/she is *most* hungry

Let the baby play with the bottle, empty, to get used to it

Try a sippy cup instead - the kind with the valve that's v slow flow

Try other bottles - ours liked the nuk ones best


Good luck!

I would echo that - mine wouldn't take any bottle from me but was happy to from his dad, especially if I wasn't in the room - we concluded that he wanted the breastfeed if he thought it was available but was happy to switch to bottle if he thought there was no other option!

Distraction worked a treat for us, so here's a few things we tried:

- Sneaking the bottle round the side of her bouncy chair when she was sitting in it 'the disembodied arm!'

- Feeding her a bottle while cradling her and walking round the house

- Feeding her when on her playmat or change mat


Once she'd accepted it we soon reverted to more 'traditional' ways of bottle feeding! Good luck

  • 3 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • It would be very difficult indeed to rip it off in passing. However I stand well  away from the edge of the pavement and keep an eye out. Many bus stops don't have indicators of bus times, including the one outside the Post Office, which I use a lot. If I'm going somewhere which is only served by one of the buses from that stop, I don't like not knowing whether I will have to wait two minutes or twenty minutes, and I often forget to look before I leave the house.
    • Either the car was on blues or it wasn't, maybe OP can clarify? But I still don't get why it would be a good thing that the cyclist escaped from two police vans - they would have either arrested or protected him, depending on the scenario. 
    • That seems the more likely scenario, doesn't it? I suspect unwarranted assumptions have been made. What is the evidence that the car was a police car? What is the evidence that two police vans arrived later "to help give chase"? To "help"? If the car was not a police car, other interpretations of the situation are possible, as said above. It could be that the cyclist had done nothing wrong and was trying to get away from the pursuing car for completely other reasons. Who knows? It's very easy to jump to conclusions without knowing all the facts. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...