I will start by saying my 2.5 year old told me she was done with bottles at around 1 and we stopped binkys around 2 by weening her off so it was in separate parts. I still put her to sleep but no longer rock her. Rocked her until around 2 years old though. For stopping the binky, we explained to her that we were no longer going to use the binky for nap time but we could hold her fav stuffy and still allowed binky for bedtime. Once we felt comfortable there, we did the same for bedtime and she no longer uses one. (We have a 2 month old so there are binkys around and she does not care to use them) For the rocking to sleep, we transitioned to me laying in bed with her and holding her, sometimes rubbing her back to help her relax. We just recently have her sleeping in a big bed with her 1.5 year old sister and they love having the company so that helps a lot - they’ve been sleeping through the night completely because of it
@Kira oh wow. Okay, maybe it's not that simple. I think my daughter is just more easy going. I don't know then 😔
ALSO, because I’m in the dental world, I must say it would be ideal to get the binky and bottle habits gone around 3. The long term effects can cause malocclusion
Does he have a favorite toy? My son will choose a toy every night that he wants to snuggle in bed and that honestly has helped him fall asleep on his own.
For my son, we did binky out of sight out of mind, and only gave it to him for sleep, Then eventually binky just disappeared. That was 1.5 I believe. For bottles we were giving him the Dr.Brown transition bottle, but he took interest in our cups so we bought him sippy cups and then the sippy cups without nipple and spouts.
@Mikayla I wish it could be like that. My kid feels things very strongly and whenever we have tried these methods he cries until he vomits. Literally. Then it's a whole thing to clean the crib and sheets and him. Which ends up waking him up more and makes it even harder to get him down.