Anonymous wrote:My sister has a Nalgene sippy to she was a tween. She was a chewer too so i remember the thing was vile with all the teeth marks showing so obviously she was biting on the thing. She chewed her pens too and many other things in the house but it didn’t affect her bite.
I don’t see the fuss with the sippy cup usage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sippy cups aren’t good for their teeth or speech. They recommend switching to a straw cup. I would find a good straw cup instead.
Just curious, Why would you think sippy cups not be good for teeth or speech. Unless they chew on the hard spout to suck on the water. Many kids by OP’s age probably won’t chew water bottles that much anymore?
So would it not be any different from sucking from a straw bottle? Even thermoflask or hydro flasks straws are really hard too?
Camalbaks are slightly softer but have also been used by so many kids and for those straws, it is a must that you will also need to bite them to get water out? Hydro flasks you don’t need to bite on them to get water out and I think for sippy cups too?
Anonymous wrote:Sippy cups aren’t good for their teeth or speech. They recommend switching to a straw cup. I would find a good straw cup instead.
Anonymous wrote:My 10 year old has a munchkin by their bed for drinks at night. It doesn't leak if its accidentally knocked over. One less spill for grandma to clean up makes it easier for her to continue providing free child care.
Anonymous wrote:My kid, she 9. Uses normal water bottles like hydro glass without the straw spout in school. But at home, still likes her sippy cup when she was 7 and is a kiddish frozen character sippy cup. She still likes to bite on the soft straw thing as part of habit and maybe oral soothing or whatever. She doesn’t chomp it the spout straw anymore like in her younger days
but lightly loves to bite the rubbery nozzle. Nothing too concerning that will affect her bite or teeth associated with sippys.
It’s not common but if she loves it so much, we let it go. She keeps it in her room pretty much and only uses it when she is at her desk. Her friends come over too but no one asks about her sippy cup. It is just there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9 year old uses one occasionally. Who cares? It’s not a big deal.
Is it an actual sippy cup or one of those water/sports bottles?
Anonymous wrote:Not a sippy cup. Reasonable to use container with a lid and straw to prevent spills, however.
Supply an alternative, with a lid and a straw — easy to clean and ask that they use that instead of the sippy cup.
It addresses their reasonable concern about spills while being age appropriate.