
Because the end of breastfeeding is a significant change for a toddler, avoid weaning when other major changes (such as toilet training, starting child care or moving house) are taking place.
Here are some different ideas for how to go about the weaning process. Start with the one that you think will suit your toddler best; use a few if that suits you both.
If your toddler is breastfeeding only before bedtime at night and when she wakes in the morning, it’s a good idea to stop the night feed first. Again, distractions such as a sleepover at her grandparents, or someone else reading her stories, can help to break the old routine. If your toddler is used to being fed to sleep this will be tricky. You can break the association between breastfeeding and sleep by feeding in another room, and by not feeding just before bed. Give lots of cuddles at bedtime to compensate for the usual breastfeed.
If you decide to stop the early morning feed, try to be dressed before your toddler wakes up and then distract her with a cup of milk and breakfast.
Australian Breastfeeding Association. (2004). Weaning. Retrieved February 22nd, 2006. From http://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/bfinfo/weaning.html
Foote, K.D., & Marriott, L.D. (2003). Weaning of infants. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 88, 488-492.
National Health and Medical Research Council (2003). Dietary Guidelines for Children and Adolescents in Australia. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service.