Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend made fun of me for cutting them for my 2.5 year old . I'm wondering if I'm helicoptering.
You are not helicoptering. Do you know how many children choke on foods such as grapes, hotdogs, cherries etc a year? Keep cutting, ignore your friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend made fun of me for cutting them for my 2.5 year old . I'm wondering if I'm helicoptering.
At 2.5 years old, I don't think that's helicoptering. My DD is almost that age and I cut them to take the pits out. At some point I will stop, but I'm not sure when. Maybe 3. That seems to be the magical number when toy manufacturers stop worrying about choking hazards. Certainly by 4, I'll stop.
I get that you can choke at any age -- even older kids, even adults. There's always a risk. But I do think that at some age it's best to let your child learn to safely eat a cherry rather than always preparing everything for your kids.
Anonymous wrote:I am sleep deprived and read the subject as cutting Cheerios. I thought oh my god do people do that? Should I be doing it? How do you keep from crushing them? Sigh. Maybe my twins will sleep soon so I can too.
Anonymous wrote:My friend made fun of me for cutting them for my 2.5 year old . I'm wondering if I'm helicoptering.
Anonymous wrote:4 almost 5 year old choked on a pit last week. Was terrifying - he was frantically clawing at his mouth and couldn't make a single sound. So, I'm back to cutting them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cutting spherical, airway-sized food for a 2 year old is not helicoptering. It's a recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics based on the large number of preventable, and sometimes fatal, choking episodes in this age group.
+1 same goes for grapes, etc.