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Baby Refusing Bottle? How to Get Baby to Take a Bottle + Deal with Bottle Rejection - What to Expect 4 года назад


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Baby Refusing Bottle? How to Get Baby to Take a Bottle + Deal with Bottle Rejection - What to Expect

If you're lucky, your little one will take to the bottle like an old friend. Or he may stubbornly snub the bottle, refusing even a taste. Learn more about bottle feeding at WhatToExpect.com: https://www.whattoexpect.com/first-ye... Download the What to Expect app: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pregn... https://play.google.com/store/apps/de... Heidi Murkoff, creator of What to Expect, is here to guide you through every stage of your baby's life. Watch all of our first year videos:    • Your Baby's First Year   FOLLOW US: Facebook:   / whattoexpectwhenyoureexpecting   Twitter:   / whattoexpect   Pinterest:   / whattoexpect   Instagram:   / whattoexpect   Transcript: Maybe you never got around to introducing a bottle or you were too busy getting breastfeeding on track. Or, you didn't see the point of offering a bottle since you could always count on your baby and your breast being in the same place at the same time, or close enough that you'd never miss a feed. Or, you figured you'd get around to introducing a bottle when you needed to, and you just realized, you need to. Either because you're going back to work or trying to schedule your first date night in months, or both. If you're lucky, your little suckler will take to the bottle like an old friend, eagerly lapping up the contents. Or he may stubbornly snub the bottle crying indignantly every time you push the nipple between his unwilling lips, refusing even a taste. Sound familiar? Let's face it, your baby wasn't born yesterday, and unlike a relative newcomer, she's already developed a strong sense of what she wants and what she doesn't want. What she wants is mommy's soft, warm nipple. What she doesn't want, synthetic substitute you're trying to woo her with. Enter bottle rejection. The bottle intro is most easily made in the first few weeks of a baby's life. But if that ship has already sailed, it doesn't necessarily mean you've missed the bottle boat entirely. So, let's get started. First, choose the right nipple. Look for ones that resemble those made by nature with a wide base and a slow flow. Keep in mind that some babies are pretty picky about their nipples, so you may have to experiment to find one that your little bottle snubber will happily accept. Then, pick the right fluid. Some infants will open wide for a bottle that's filled with familiar breast milk. Others, reminded of breast milk's original source, are more open to formula or a combo. Warming the contents so it mimics straight from the tap breast milk can help too. Time it right. Babies are usually more receptive to the bottle when they're in the market for something to eat. Your hungry baby's not taking the bottle bait, in fact, offering a bottle when he's looking for a breast just plain makes him mad? Offer the bottle for dessert or as a snack between feeds. Let your baby get to know the bottle before getting down to business. To explore it, play with it, who knows, even put it in her mouth as she does everything else. Or, try sneaking it in during sleep as your little dreamer is drifting off, or just before he wakes. Once you've gained sleepy acceptance, you can try when baby's alert. Remember too, that your baby is more likely to take a bottle when breasts aren't in the picture or within sniffing distance. So for best results, anyone but mom, baby's favorite milk machine, should offer the bottle. Still facing resistance? Try persistence. While your breastfeeding baby may be puzzled by, or even furious at, this unfamiliar milk dispenser, chances are she's eventually going to open up her horizons and her mouth. In the mean time, keep the pressure off. Even an infant can smell desperation. Offer the bottle once every couple of days, but don't push it. Try to appear blase' about the bottle, even if you're so not. Here's to happy bottle feeding.

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