When I weaned both of my kids (my son was 10 months, daughter was 16 months) I offered a snack in place of their normal nursing session. For us, the first one I eliminated was the one that I had the least supply for (which was late afternoon, usually around 3pm). For my son I did also give formula in a cup since he was under 1, but for my daughter I just offered a healthy snack, usually fruit and a cup of water. My daughter was much more a nursing addict, so she was much harder to wean. My son had absolutely no problem with it, not the case with my daughter. We did a very gradual wean with her, over the course of a month since it was hard for her to give up. She naturally weaned herself from the mealtime feedings since she ate meals with the family at those times. If you don't already feed your son at the same time as you eat, start doing that before you wean. Get him eating and socializing with the family and he won't miss those feedings. Once I was sure my daughter was eating enough at meals, I stopped offerring her the breast after meals, thus eliminating those feedings. At 16 months I was still feeding on demand though, and that was usually every 2-3 hours during the day. Thankfully she slept through the night starting very young, so I never had to wean her from those night time feedings. Like I said, I started with the 3pm feeding, replaced it with a snack and lots of activities to keep her busy so she wouldn't ask to nurse. The 3pm elimination feeding went very well. I next conquered a mid morning feeding (between 9-10 am) next. Again, I replaced this one with a snack and lots of activities, including lots of cuddle time on my lap reading stories etc. Also important is to keep yourself well covered during these times, so they can't smell it as much and so it isn't easily accessible to them. The next one I eliminated was the before nap (around 1pm feeding). This one was difficult. She was accustomed to nursing to sleep (or to a point of contented drowsiness) so this one was very difficult for us. I didn't want to replace with food, so I again, did lots of snuggling in the rocking chair and lots of singing and rubbing her back to calm her. It took her over a week to adjust to losing this feeding. (She is very stubborn) After I felt that naptime was going smoothly again, I eliminated the first thing in the morning feeding. This meant that we were eating breakfast most days at 6am or earlier, but it was relatively painless to replace this feeding with an earlier breakfast time. Once she got used to no nursing first thing, we gradually pushed her breakfast back to a regular time (about 7am). The last one I eliminated was the before bed feeding. Again, very tramatic for my daughter and for me. I had to have dad handle bedtime for a few nights since she was not settling down for me without nursing. (She was just plain mad at me about this). I wasn't really prepared for her anger, so it was a bit hard to deal with. She did eventually get over it. We did give her milk in a cup at bedtime as a transition for awhile, although she didn't really drink it since she didn't really like milk for a long time. We gave her a cup of milk while we read stories, and then after brushing teeth swapped it out for a cup of water. We continued this for about a month after fully weaning, and then phased this out too. Every experience is different and I think it depends on the child and how attached to the nursing they are. Like I said, I was easily able to wean my son over the course of a couple of weeks, and it was painless. He has always been more flexible about change than my daughter though. Do it at whatever pace you feel is right and just make sure you provide lots of love and cuddling so he still feels nice and secure during the process. Good luck. (Sorry this is so long)