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Dummies

(81 Posts)
majorcagirl Wed 07-Mar-18 18:49:07

My daughter was a fractious baby and never seemed to need sleep!. At night she had what was then called a "dinkie" It basically was a small container into which I put rose hip syrup in and it had a teat. This always comforted her, but the rule was never out doors and not when she was in her pram. My question is, and I'm not being patronising. Why do modern mums have beautiful babies asleep in their prams with a ginormous dummy in their mouth?Why don't they remove it once the baby is asleep?Also why do they have photos taken with a child not necessarily a baby with the dummy firmly in place?
I'm sure there are good reasons, I'm just curious.

whitewave Sat 17-Mar-18 18:05:12

Question

Is the child loved?
Are you doing the best you can for your child?
Nothing else matters.

DeeWBW Sat 17-Mar-18 17:39:52

In or out - what difference does it make? I alweys call the dummy the world's best invention, with sliced bread coming second.

gulligranny Thu 15-Mar-18 10:23:13

My grandson used a dummy until he was almost four. His parents were told that this use was weakening muscles in his mouth and that he'd have future speech problems but because he threw such tantrums when they tried to take the dummy away, they gave in and let him keep it. He himself declared that on his fourth birthday he would give it up for good - and he did! He does have a slight lisp still, but it is rather endearing ....

OldMeg Tue 13-Mar-18 16:44:22

I think that’s a given humpty

humptydumpty Tue 13-Mar-18 14:05:59

Isn't the relevant thing in relation to the OP really that babies shouldn't go to sleep sucking on a bottle full of sugary liquid?

Surely waking time it's a matter of what suits the baby?

OldMeg Tue 13-Mar-18 13:50:55

There’s a tradition around here that at a certain age the dummies are left at the local petting farm for the baby goats. They are placed on a designated wall by the children and collected each night by the staff.

Slightly batty I know but it works ?

trisher Tue 13-Mar-18 11:21:51

I never used them but if you want a professional's opinion who is now a mum- read this.http://www.toothfairyblog.org/ditching-the-dummy-a-personal-journey/
It is harder than most people think and all babies are different

Blondiescot Tue 13-Mar-18 11:12:50

I was very "anti-dummy" when I had my daughter and she never needed one. However, when I had my son, he used to feed until he made himself sick (I breastfed both) and my health visitor said he was sucking for the comfort after he was actually full, and to try a dummy instead. I was reluctant, but it did the trick. He now has a baby of his own and he is just the same. I'm still not particularly keen on them - especially when they get a bit older - but sometimes they do the trick. Each baby is different and it's a question of what works for you...

Jalima1108 Mon 12-Mar-18 20:56:15

I was behind a young couple in a queue today; mum was holding the baby and when he turned round I smiled at him but he couldn't smile back because of the dummy in his mouth.
Of course, I could have frightened him and he needed the dummy for comfort
hmm

watermeadow Sun 11-Mar-18 19:04:31

Aren’t dummies very outdated now? I hardly ever see a child with one, though this is a posh area so thumbs are more acceptable.

mh58 Fri 09-Mar-18 19:07:17

My daughter was another baby given her dummy while in a special care unit. She went blue every time a feed was attempted, so the dummy was there to preserve the sucking reflex until medical problems were resolved. She now has a successful career and children of her own. Her teeth did not suffer, but would not have been a consideration at a time when survival was what was on our minds.

CrazyDaisy Fri 09-Mar-18 19:02:50

Until my newborn (adopted) son came home, I was adamantly anti-dummy. However he had colic (like Witzend's no. 2) and I discovered the only way to keep him less agitated was to give him a dummy. No. 2 baby was fine and didn't need one, but sucked her thumb until she was three. No. 3 had his ruggy to suck. No.4 came to us at six weeks and had had a bottle shoved in her mouth every time she cried so was overweight for her age. The solution was, you guessed it, a dummy. At about 11 months old, I stopped giving it to her and she didn't cry for it. About two weeks later, I offered it and she just laughed and spat it out.

My only objection now is seeing a parent picking up a dummy off the floor and putting it back in the child's mouth. Yeuch!! It's easy enough to have a spare clean one on hand.

grammargran Fri 09-Mar-18 18:12:59

‘Dormal’ Storynanny - now that’s a word I haven’t seen for years and I recognised it immediately like an old friend .......

Milton1951 Fri 09-Mar-18 16:33:41

To be quite honest, I don’t think it’s anyone else’s business what one chooses to do with one’s own child. In the old days, groups of nosey women would stand around commenting/offering opinions to young mums, undermining their confidence. The older I get, the more I think we should have moved on from that. Being a young parent is difficult enough without feeling disapproval from the older, so knowing, generation.

trooper7133 Fri 09-Mar-18 16:21:40

This ?

BlueBelle Fri 09-Mar-18 15:29:13

One grandson was so dummy orintated that he used to find spares like a pig snuffling for truffles and would then have one in each hand plus his sisters when his mum helped him post his dummy for another baby as he was such a big grown up boy he was fine but the thumb went in the mouth and stayed there she tried everything from star charts to nasty tasting stuff (he liked the taste) sonetimes, night times upset times kids just need to comfort themselves, his teeth are fine Is it such a bad thing in the scale of things all kids are different his sister had a dummy till she was about 2 gave it up automatically and never sucked a thumb finger or comforter they’re all different, go with the flow

Franbern Fri 09-Mar-18 15:01:58

My mother was very anti dummies. So, I did not use them for Nos. 1 or 2. However that second one - a girl, found her thumb, and continued to suck that for the next 16 years causing her teeth to be pushed out of shape. Only when she had a brace did she actually stop sucking that thumb.
As I fostered small babies, besides my own I soon discovered that some small babies really have such a strong sucking instinct that they are not happy unless they have something to suck. I happily used dummies (not those which could be filled with sugary drinks as even back then it was obvious that would cause early tooth decay). So, sometime the baby I had around would have a dummy and sometimes not. Once they were a year old I would encourage them only to have the dummy to go to sleep at night, and somewhere round 2 or 3 yrs it would be 'be donated' to a nursery!!!!
Do think it is so easy to be judgemental. As long as bubs and Mum are happy and well looked after what difference does it make if they do or do not have a dummy.

Envious Fri 09-Mar-18 14:58:00

When I gave my only child a dummy for the first and only time I put it in his mouth and it went flying across the room!

bluebellwoods Fri 09-Mar-18 14:45:05

None of my 4 had a dummy & granddaughters only until about 18 months for getting to sleep. I hate them & have often heard children trying to have a conversation with one stuck in their mouth & wonder why the parents don't remove it!!

tavimama Fri 09-Mar-18 14:18:38

My twins had ‘diddies’ As we called them - they voluntarily gave them up when they started nursery school at 3 years by sending them to the Diddy Fairy with thank you notes!

At almost 14 they are bright, articulate and, unlike many of their peers, have never had a filling.

To be fair, they only really had them at bedtime, as ‘soothers’.

I don’t really have an opinion as to their use today - some babies need them more than others - as do their parents!

stella1949 Fri 09-Mar-18 14:12:48

I hated dummies in the 70's when my daughter was born, never gave her one. She ended up sucking her thumb until she was 9, her teeth were pushed out of alignment and she needed braces to correct them . I wish I'd given her the dummy !

Saggi Fri 09-Mar-18 13:25:37

When my daughter was born I was convinced dummies caused all sorts of stuff in children.... but she never never never slept . She would doze for 20 minutes then wake... doze and wake...doze and wake all through the first two months of her life. My husband refused to get up to her and told me to "get her sorted woman"... he was a shift worker so she also had to be kept quiet during the days as well sometimes!! I was at my wits end with no sleep.. no help... and no hope of any. Then my mum came to stay as I think she'd heard the desperation in my voice on the phone to her!! She charged in pulled a dummy from her pocket ... told my husband to bugger off to work... sent me to bed and there I stayed for 18 hours...while she coped with baby and my over demanding husband. Baby slept for 4 hours...then 5 hours... then 6 hours through the night. Mum saved my sanity that day and many after. My daughter has never in her life slept more than 6 hours even now at forty. I'm the same and manage on approx. 3/4 hours a night! She is not retarded ...she has not got crooked teeth ... she's never had a stomach infection... also she is a psychiatrist with a brain the size of a football! So despite all the twaddle that's talked about dummies they are a godsend. When I had my son 4 years later it was the first thing I bought. Although having said that he hardly used it, he slept from day one and always needed waking! my mum had six of us kids and knew a thing or two , some of us needed dummies some didn't. She was a wise woman.... a belated thanks mum, I'm sure ididnt say it at the time!!

Sheilasue Fri 09-Mar-18 13:24:29

My two never had dummies not that I didn’t try they just spat them out. They do look awful those big dummies and they are bad for their teeth when they are coming through.
I had reins for both mine but round the shoulders and tum.
Don’t like the one that you clip round there wrist think they look awful.

Summerstorm Fri 09-Mar-18 13:19:20

My son was born with a cleft palette in the seventies, the hospital gave him a dummy to encourage him to suck. He only got it at bedtime once he was feeding successfully. Later when they set a date for the repair, we thought we had better train him if it as thought the hospital wouldn't approve. It was a struggle for a few weeks before the repair took place. First thing the hospital did when he came out of surgery. Yes you've guessed it they gave him a dummy. The rest of my 4 children all had them at night to get of to sleep, but never to run around with during the day.
5 of my 9 grandchildren did the same 3 never had them and 1 seemed to have it permanently in. As she got a bit older she knew grandma didn't like her running around with it so would take it out and give it to her mum to hide it when she seen me coming. She knew I would take it from her unless it was bedtime

Barmeyoldbat Fri 09-Mar-18 12:45:43

My gd has just had a baby I was unable to go and see due to illness so she put a photo of this lovely little 2 week old baby on Facebook for me to see and he had a dummy in his mouth. It was almost as big as his face. Horrible. But if it does no harm and baby is happy what does it matter. Just a shame she couldn’t have taken it out for a few seconds for the photo.