5 big benefits to letting baby feed themselves – Mumspick

5 big benefits to letting baby feed themselves

5 big benefits to letting baby feed themselves

Did you know that babies as young as 6 months can learn to feed themselves? They can work on steering a loaded spoon to the mouth, finger feeding and even drinking from an open cup or straw. Here are 5 big benefits to letting baby feed themselves from the start. Allowing your baby to feed themselves from the start. Allowing your baby to feed themselves is great for healthy infant development and worth the mess.

Letting Baby Feed Themselves Sensory Experiences

Mealtimes are one of babies’ most sensory-rich experiences - new tastes, smells, and textures. Touching and feeling food - especially sticky, messy, wet foods - is a great way to fully engage baby’s senses in the process of eating. These early sensory experiences help your little one learn that these new sensations are not threatening, instead they’re associated with yummy food.

Letting Baby Feed Themselves Nurtures Independence

Babies and toddlers crave autonomy and independence and, not given enough, will do their best to claim it - often through tantrums, defiance and other challenges to our patience as parents. By giving your little one control over when he takes a bite, how much he puts in his mouth and when he’s done eating, you meet his innate “do it all by myself” desire. Ultimately, a parent’s “control” at mealtime is an illusion anyways. Even if you’re the one in control of the spoon, your baby or toddler is in control of what he allows in his mouth and swallows. Side-step mealtime battles by letting your baby lead the way.

Letting Baby Feed Themselves Helps Oral Motor Development

When parents deliver food to baby’s mouth, we have a tendency to deposit it right where it belongs, help baby take it from the spoon or our fingers and clean up after ourselves. But in feeding himself your little one learns through trial and error what it feels like to open his mouth wide enough for the spoon, how to close his lips to clean food off a spoon, how to get that bite of cereal from his lips to his gums for chewing, and how to lick his lips clean or wipe that drip that he feels on his chin.

Letting your baby learn to feed herself will be messy. But the developmental rewards far outweigh the messes. With a little prep - smocks or bibs, a drop cloth on the floor or mop nearby - you can minimize the mess and allow your child to fully experience mealtimes.

Letting Baby Feed Themselves Helps Grasping & Coordination Skills

Chasing cereal around a high chair tray is a great opportunity for your baby to refine newly developing grasping skills. In fact, often food is the smallest manipulative safe for our babies to interact with, so mealtimes afford valuable practice coordinating those adorable chubby fingers.

Letting Baby Feed Themselves Teaches Body Awareness

In the process of practicing feeding herself, your baby will be learning where her mouth is, how much force it takes to bend her arm to bring her hand or spoon to her mouth, how to get that applesauce off her upper lip and how to use two hands together to hold her cup. These skills require your little one to coordinate the motor systems and sensory processing systems of the brain. Mealtimes offer multiple practice times each day to help create a foundation of lifelong awareness and coordination of the body.

ezpz recently launched 2 new products that can help your baby achieve the above 5 benefits. Introducing the ezpz Tiny spoon and Tiny Cup.

THE TINY SPOON HELPS BABY LEARN HOW TO SELF-FEED. The ezpz Tiny Spoon is designed to help baby learn how to feed independently. Designed for infants 4+ months. Comes in a pack of 2.

THE TINY CUP HELPS BABY TO TRANSITION FROM BOTTLE TO CUP. Learning to drink out of an open cup is an essential developmental milestone. The Tiny Cup is designed to help with babies with that. Designed for infants 4+ months.

They are now open for pre-order from now till 10th February with 20% off the retail price! 

 

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