POOJA KOTHARIMom of a 8 yr 6 m old boy4 years agoA. Buy more of the foods you want your kids to eat, but still include foods they love so they avoid feeling restricted.Serve small meals at snack time instead of traditional snack foods or incorporate more traditional “snacks” into meals—like crackers alongside soup, for example.When babies aren't feeling their best -- like when teething -- familiar foods provide comfort. Or maybe your baby just isn't ready to try a new food. Make sure you don't give the baby junk food just because that's all they want. Offer healthy foods, and a hungry baby will eventually eat them.The CDC recommends talking to your child's pediatrician if they're not walking at all by 18 months and not walking steadily by age 2 — so you have plenty of time even if your little one hasn't started showing signs by age 1.
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