Joanna Fortune: Our four-year-old still sucks her thumb and won't leave the house without her toy bunny
If she needs her bunny with her, so be it. File picture: iStock
Similarly, speech-and-language professionals may urge caution at this age, as ongoing thumb-sucking cancontribute to speech sound difficulties.
- — offer lots of validation when she can relax without sucking her thumb;
- — I lean into this strategy most. When you see her sucking her thumb, rather than saying ‘no’ or ‘stop’, call her to help you with something that would require her to keep her hands busy and occupied, such as finding you a tin in the cupboard, counting something out for you, washing veggies at the sink, etc;
- — treat her to a mini-manicure at home. Soak her hands in warm, soapy water, dry them with a soft towel, and rub lotion into her hands while you notice any special marks, like freckles, paper cuts, bumps, and trace the lines on her palms, doing some positive fortune-telling. For example, you could trace each line with your finger, naming them her play line, her friend line, her clever line, and her kind line, and give an example of how she is good at each.
If you have a question for child psychotherapist Dr Joanna Fortune, please send it to parenting@examiner.ie


