Anonymous wrote:I have no dog in this fight, but had a laugh remembering my son at 8 months basically GRABBING food out of my hands. Kid would have downed a burrito if he'd had the teeth to gnaw on it. My little one wasn't as intense but they both loved food early on. Don't worry, they got plenty of breast milk and formula too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:bm or formula alone is not enough to satisfy most babies that long. At 6 months is when solids should be introduced
Not really. The child will let you know when they're ready and it can be at 5mos or at 9.5 mos. Any time between 5 and 12 months is "normal".
The jarred purees industries make you believe you should feed your child that tasteless mush and then the clumpy stuff and then struggle with puffs and chicken nuggets until they're old enough to use utensils.
What OP is talking about is called BABY LED WEANING or BABY LED SOLIDS and you feed the child stuff from your plate as soon as they show interest for what you're eating - the biggest sign they're ready for solids.
Once they're reaching for your plate when you eat, you use a fork to mush up what you're eating or cut it up in small pieces to let them have it on their own. There are wonderful websites where you can learn about it. My child refused purees and I learned about it when doing some research. Our ped was useless so I had to find it on my own.
OP, read about it, it's very interesting and it's amazing to watch our 20mo old eating Indian food... DH feeds her from his plate and I'm in awe every day. I can't for the life of me eat more than a few spoons of his food because it's so spicy and she just LOVES his food. She eats adult sized portions already!
Anonymous wrote:
The culture where I was raised is centuries old, too bad you prefer to listen to such sources that have their "studies" paid by the industry that makes you believe that your children need tasteless mush produced in a plant that has little to no regulation. Obviously you can make your own organic baby food but they will either say it's hard and time consuming or they'll try to make you believe you need to buy all the gadgets to get the "perfect texture".
It's not about being crunchy (whatever that means), it's about knowing your child and following their signs. We started late with one child but the other one was grabbing food from my plate at 5 months and we went with him.
And, honestly, giving them rice cereal and watch them choke or spit it out didn't seem like it help with all the allergies your children have been suffering (something almost unheard off where I come from.) I guess it's time to review your concepts...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son started at 4 months per his pediatrician's recommendation. He took right to it and hasn't looked back. He is very healthy and LOVES veggies. Now that he is a year old he wants to feed himself and doesn't like me to help until the very end. Which is messy, but great! Thank goodness for wipes!
I hope u are not using baby wipes on your child's hands and face to clean up food! THat would be unhealthy and expensive and wasteful! Use a washable cloth with JUST WATER
Anonymous wrote:"The culture where I was raised is centuries old"
What?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son started at 4 months per his pediatrician's recommendation. He took right to it and hasn't looked back. He is very healthy and LOVES veggies. Now that he is a year old he wants to feed himself and doesn't like me to help until the very end. Which is messy, but great! Thank goodness for wipes!
I hope u are not using baby wipes on your child's hands and face to clean up food! THat would be unhealthy and expensive and wasteful! Use a washable cloth with JUST WATER
Maybe she's using wipes on the highchair and table. Love how people jump to conclusions around here to get in a dig at someone else.
Anonymous wrote:My son started at 4 months per his pediatrician's recommendation. He took right to it and hasn't looked back. He is very healthy and LOVES veggies. Now that he is a year old he wants to feed himself and doesn't like me to help until the very end. Which is messy, but great! Thank goodness for wipes!