Anonymous wrote:Don’t @ me this wasn’t in my plan but a lot happened within the past few years and I got lazy/overwhelmed with a chronically sick kiddo. She’s fine now.
We night weened at 2.5 but she still nursed in the am, after daycare and before bed. My goal is to stop this month as she’s about to turn 4. At this point it’s such a highly emotional topic I am deeply considering putting her in therapy to navigate the changes.
Any mention of weening has her actively depressed and very upset. For clarification she was very sick between 18-36 months and at times her only calorie intake was breastmilk. She is 100% physically fine now but still has lingering medical trauma.
I’m so sorry, OP. It sounds like your daughter has endured a lot in her young life and you have also endured quite a bit as a parent.
My third is 2 years 7 months and still nursing. I weaned (stopped) at 12 months with my two older children and never could have predicted this. Every child is different and as a parent your circumstances dictate capacity around nursing. Your experience may not be super common on DCUM, but it is also totally within the norm.
I don’t have a ton of advice here, but I came here to say weaning a child who is four, who can walk, verbalize complex emotions, etc is so different from a baby and I think that talking about her feelings could be helpful. I like the idea of a toy. Another friend gave her older daughter chocolate milk and vitamin water while weaning, so that might be another route to think about. My pediatrician recommended saying the milk was all gone.
Good luck!