My baby has had a dummy since about 2 weeks old (now 5 months) and over the course of the last month we weaned her off it during the day only for naps and night (which was fine) and then 5 days took it completely away during the day.
The first day no dummy was fine, the second bit rougher. But now it feels impossible she just moans and cries all the time it takes ages for her to go down to sleep (she’s always been an amazing sleeper)
I thought it was meant to get better as time went on not worse. I’m at my wits end I dunno what to do.
Currently typing this as she screams uncontrollably in the car and I cry with her cos I can’t do anything.
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What made you decide to wean her off it? Some babies have a stinger sickle reflex than others and with teething and other things causing them discomfort dummy may help a lot.
If you’re really committed to weaning her off it, may take at least a few days of preserving and a lot more physical comforting from you. X

Hey hun that sounds so hard!
When she had the dummy in the day was it to wind down? Or was she having it in whilst playing etc? My girl has hers only when rocking to sleep and the she spits it out half way through naps and sleep

Would like to update this by saying she has now fallen asleep in the car x

We just weaned our paci at 2 years 4 months. The dentists weren't really concerned with it at all. Yes ideally it would be nice to not have one, but it helped our sleep immensely, and we were only using it for naps and bedtime - the real problem is when they use it frequently during the day and always have it in their mouth.
At 5 months the suckle-comfort reflex is still pretty strong, and baby is still figuring out sleep, so there will be teething, regressions, etc. hence why the pacifier can help.
We had no issues really weaning our toddler. Yes, she was attached, and she cried, but we could talk through her emotions and explain that babies need pacifiers but big kids don't, and help her understand it's okay to feel sad. It's a different process when they are older but not necessarily more difficult.
For taking it out at night and not being able to put it back in, that's normal, and it takes typically a few weeks to learn how to put it back in again. Once they figure that out, they can do it themselves.

I took it away around the same time. I just nursed him a little more but like not a full feed. He’s A LOT better now and he’s not dependent on anything 😊