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Breaking The Bedtime Bottle Habit


I met a mom at the park the other day and before I knew it, we were talking about my business...well, then the questions started flowing:

“My 11-month-old goes has a nightly bottle habit. She goes to bed with a bottle and wakes for a bottle in the night. How do I break her of this bottling feeding to sleep habit?”

This is a pretty common question, and I just happen to have an answer!

When you put your baby in bed at night, it’s fine to include the bottle in her routine. You could start with a bath, and then pajamas and then her bottle and a story or two. What you really want to avoid is giving her the bottle until she falls asleep or putting her in her crib with the bottle. You do not want your baby to fall asleep with a bottle in her mouth because if she wakes up in the middle of the night she thinks she needs that bottle again to sleep. If you come with her bottle and feed her to sleep or put it into the crib, she sucks herself back to sleep with the bottle.

Not only is that hard for her sleep strategies, it is also very damaging to her teeth coming in. So, maybe start the bottle a little earlier in your routine. You can have a bath, then her bottle, then brush her teeth and then some stories. But you should be putting her into the crib awake and without a bottle. If you follow the guidelines from my 5 best tips (located on my website's homepage), I will give you some strategies to deal with the two weeks it is probably going to take to get her on track, learning a new strategy for getting herself to sleep.

You don’t have to leave the room; you can stay with her if you like. But she really does need to start connecting the steps that are involved in putting herself to sleep independently so that she is not relying on that bottle! Otherwise, she will most likely keep waking for that bottle. It could go on well into the second year so you really want to make sure you break this habit now. Then when she wakes in the night requesting a bottle, you’ll have to just decline that request.

You can go in, you can stay with her and “ride it out”. She will learn a new way to sleep and she will start sleeping a solid night which will be better for her. It is going to be better for her in the sense that she is not falling asleep with the bottle in her mouth and so, it may take about two weeks, but it is definitely for the best.

If you’re interested in learning some easy strategies for getting your child to sleep and stay asleep without requesting the bottle, drop me a line! I can help!

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