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thread: Getting rid of the dummy

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Jul 2004
    5,756

    Getting rid of the dummy

    DD is 3.5 years old and still has a dummy. We need to get rid of it though as i am pretty sure that is what is causing her to have a lisp. Because she talks with the dummy in her mouth all the time.

    The thing is, it's her comfort and security. I've tried taking the dummy off her and saying she doesn't really need it, she's a big girl now. But she will cry until she get's it back. So i tried a different tactic by saying she is a big girl and doesn't need it and did she want to throw it in the bin. So i gave her the option, instead of taking her choice away. She actually did throw it away but half an hour later she was crying for it again. We've tried this numerous times, asking her if she wants to throw it away only for her to want it back again after she has. I've even tried saying that it's only for bed time (since she doesnt talk when asleep) but it doesn't work. She's just really attached to it.

    I'm not sure what else to do? I don't want to take away her security but it needs to go!

  2. #2
    Ellibam Guest

    i had a friend that went to a place that had possums that you feed at night time and told her daughter that maybe the baby possums need her dummy now! cos she is a big girl!
    she quite happily gave it to them. and from then on whenever she asked for it they just reminded her that the baby possums have it!

    probably not helpful but i thought i would share it cos i thought it worked really well

  3. #3
    smiles4u Guest

    Oh, ELLIBUGS ... That's a super idea

    I'm gonna remember that one for my dummy loving two year old

    Yeh, I reckon it's a better idea to take it where they can't get to it again.

    I have seen on a TV show where they buried the dummy in the backyard BUT the child a day later just went back & dug it up

    ... My friends daughter just gave up her "Dummy" this year at the age of 7 ... Um, lets just say she is going to need some major work on her teeth & gums ... So, sad ... That's my greatest fear right now

  4. #4
    paradise lost Guest

    My SIL said to my niece, everytime she asked for it, "ew, yucky" with a grimace and then gave her it. One day Niece announced "ew yucky" and threw it in the bin. She never asked for it back but SIL had fished it out and sterilised it JIC and was planning to go on with "ew yucky" until it sank in.

    You could also restrict when she has it? If she talks to you with it in say "I can't understand you with your dummy in" and do not respond to her request until she takes the dummy out to ask? My parents did this to me over my thumb, which i used to have in all the time while talking, and after a few reminders i learned people understood me better without it. Make the dummy a bedtime thing and make sure it stays in the bed, so no dummy in the daytime?

    It's a toughie though. Luckily my DD sucks her thumb, which never caused me any dental issues, so i have hopefully escaped the dental stress/bills!

    Bx

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    adelaide
    48

    I had the same problem with my 2 year old. We went away camping and i forgot his dummy! He freaked out and the camping trip wasnt much fun but it got him off the dummy.He cryed for his dummy the whole time but because i didnt have one there with me i couldnt give in to his tantrums

  6. #6
    Registered User
    Add C~Q on Facebook

    Oct 2006
    By the sea
    2,191

    We took DS down to the beach when he was 2 and told him that the sand fairies wanted it now. He buried it in the sand and the fairies had some smarties waiting for him at home!

    He never even asked for it again. DD2 has a dummy now which i'm wanting to get rid of but not till we get back from England

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Sep 2004
    Sydney's Norwest
    4,954

    Tegan, when you find the answer let me know. Tehya still has hers too and I hate it with a passion. Never agani will I look down my nose at someone elses kid that looks too big to have a dummy. Well, unless their 7

    I am alot firmer with Tehya than her dad is. I refuse her to take it out of the car if we go somewhere. She know's she has to leave it in there. Whereas he doesn't bother argueing with her. Lately I have even been managing to get out of the house without it. She's funny though because quite often when I think we've left it at home she has hidden it in the nappy bag

    I have tried telling her that she's a big girl now, that only babies have dummy's, you name it.

    Abbey has just started having a dummy now too, so there lies another issue. If I get Tehya to get rid of her's, I have to keep her away from Abbeys.

    Goodluck hun, I really do feel your pain

  8. #8
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    I had heard that if you cut the end of the dummy slightly that is becomes less enjoyable for them to suck and eventually bit by bit will choose not to have it?

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Jul 2004
    5,756

    She never takes it when we go out, i make her leave it in the car and she soon forgets. It's mainly just at home.

    I am so so glad Charlie hated the dummy, he doesn't even use his thumb which is a blessing.

    I've hidden it right now because i found it laying on the floor and she didnt see me. She hasn't asked but she probably will. Maybe i will just say i don't know, where did you leave it? lol

    Once when she was around 2yo, she did give it up for about a month. But we then went to QLD and drove and she was quite distressed so we gave it to her just for then, but ever since then she has been more attached to it than ever! I should never have given it back to her.

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Aug 2007
    N.S.W
    503

    There is stuff in the chemist to stop kids sucking their thumb, I think its called 'thumb off'. You put it on kids thumbs it make them taste yucky, it can also be used on dummies.

  11. #11
    paradise lost Guest

    LOL, i wore thumb off for YEARS. You can suck it off very quickly. I used to "save" spit in my mouth, suck the horrid stuff off, then spit it out. Then suck my thumb...lol

    Bx

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Jul 2004
    5,756

    lol Bx! I've heard it is sour? DD loves sour food so i don't think it'd work!

  13. #13
    paradise lost Guest

    Mine was bitter more than sour. Don't get me wrong, it is revolting, but it distresses you too, and how do you comfort yourself...sucking! Maybe it works for some kids, but it never worked for me.

    Bx

  14. #14
    Registered User

    Jul 2004
    5,756

    Well since i hid it, she has not asked for it. Bl00dy amazing lol.

  15. #15
    BellyBelly Member

    Jun 2005
    Sydney
    2,121

    Antheia, my dd#1 didnt give up her dummy till she was 29 months....i look at photos of her then, compared to now, and i reckon her whole jaw has changed in shape since she has given up the dummy ....(for the better...).

    Anyway, i was going to tell you how we weaned her......we bought a 'pretty' box. LIke a gift box you get at newsagencies...... She had numerous dummies, so we popped them all in there. Every night (and like your DD, only had it at night in bed) she would pick just one to suck. Giving her the option seemed to help her think she was in control..... Gradually, over the space of 2-3 weeks she stopped asking for the box, and the option to choose a dummy. I think she just simply forgot....outta sight outta mind kinda thing. Easter eventually rocked around and the easter bunny took the box away.

    I think giving her a bit of control over the dummy made it easier for her to give up IYKWIM ???.

    Good luck anyway....

  16. #16
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    Sunshine Coast
    746

    I can offer the tip my mum used to get my brother and sister off the dummy but it's a tougher approach...

    My sister one day spat out her dummy saying "yucky". It had gotten blanket fluff on it so of course it was horrible to suck. That got Mum thinking so she got my sister's dummies and wet them and rubbed them up and down on cotton wool. Then when my sister wanted the dummy she did the "ew yucky" approach mentioned above and then my sister found that the dummy was indeed "ew yucky". Mum says she didn't have her nap that day but crashed at 5.30pm for the night and that was that.

    Then when my brother came along, when she decided it was time the dummy went she did the cotton wool approach again and said it worked like a charm.

    I reckon this is a last resort approach though - my mum's a tough customer! I'm nowhere near as tough.

    In case you are wondering I was a finger-sucker (and yes I needed extensive orthodontic work). Interestingly, my brother's and sister's teeth were never as bad as mine.

  17. #17
    Registered User

    Jun 2005
    Perth
    1,454

    DD was 2 and a bit when we decided to get rid of it. Lucky it was close to easter time so the night before we laid out all her dummies and told her the easter bunny would take them and replace them with easter eggs. She laid them out duitfully and the next morning was so excited to see the little eggs there waiting for her. She only asked for her dummy once after that and that was when a week later she hurt herself at playgroup and was quite distressed. Worked a treat.

    I have heard of others using the same tactic at birthdays or xmas or even taking them outside on your rubbish day and giving them to the rubbish truck/man to take away.

    Good luck.

  18. #18
    Registered User

    Nov 2006
    Somewhere Over The Rainbow
    3,094

    DD was 2 and a half when she fell in love with scooters. I psyched her up for 6 months - "If you get up on your birthday, and chuck your dummy in the bin, you will get your scooter"

    Worked a treat (oh, and the garbage man just "happened" to come before she had a chance to retrieve it!)

12

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