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Brushing a 2 year olds teeth
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We have same situation with our (nearly) 2 year old daughter, but never had the problem with our 3 and a half year old. Sometimes my daughter will cooperate and other times she won't. She has chosen her toothbrush and is sometimes allowed to put the toothpaste on, allowed to brush them herself afterwards etc - all of which work sometimes but not every time. What works best in our house is to help my son with his first, praising him and having a game with him (we do aaaaahhhhhhh and eeeeeee noises for mouth open and teeth together respectively). My daughter is then keen to copy (although not every time!!) Another thing that tends to work is after a bath, I wrap her in a towel on the floor and she is normally happy to have her teeth cleaned then.
A few ideas of how we do it - but I freely admit they don't work all the time and I sometimes have to resort ot the 'holding her down' approach, as upsetting as this is for us all.
Good luck.
I also find that if I gently but firmly hold their chin and look into theie eyes while singing to them they don't seem to notice what I'm doing.Sounds daft,I know, but it works.
It might also be an independence thing - maybe he wants to do it himself . My two used to be like this and we made a deal that I could do it for a minute or two then they could 'finish it off' or vice versa.Either way it gave me the chance to have a good scrub at them and they still felt happy that they had done it themselves.
Good luck.Remember none of these phases last forever!(Although it can feel like it)
You should not give children and food with added salt either.
The salt can cause distended kidneys and blood vessels.
more advice on salt can be found here:
http://www.foodcomm.org.uk/salt_may_03.htm