First and foremost: WELCOME to the forum and congrats on your new fid

! I LOVE my M2. Also we want pics (we all love pics).
Now down to business: How long have you had the bird? Toos are very sensitive birds and need extra time in order to adjust to their new environment. Heres some tips: Don't even expect your bird to do anything other than just sit there and observe you for the first month or so. It takes time for parrots to acclimate when they change homes. Some come right to you, others are more sensitive and take longer. I give a minimum of a month before expecting anything from the bird and I give it a full year for them to acclimate to see if its going to work out or not (NO MATTER HOW ROUGH the transition is, anything less than a year is unfair to the bird). These guys take time, don't rush things, be patient. Allow your new bird to come to you on its own terms, not yours. Keep in mind that you will more than likely own this bird for the rest of your life, so you have nothing but time for the bird to step up. Approach it this way and your bird will build a strong bond with you. Birds are not like dogs, you can't just tell them what to do and expect results. Birds are very intelligent, you have to respect your bird and respect it's space and it's wishes. If the bird doesn't want to be bothered then don't bother it. This will send the signal to the bird that you will allow it to have a say in what is being done to it (Also your bird is very unstable and nervous right now, by backing off you are showing the bird that you are not the cause of its stress - you don't want your bird to associate you with the reason why its scared). This is a major life change for the bird. Birds will show passive physical signs (like not stepping up, or moving away from you) that they are not comfortable with you yet, if you keep persisting then you will end up getting bit. If you ask the bird to step up and the bird shys, then back off and respect the birds wishes. You have to build a relationship with the bird first, it takes time (think months not days). It has to get to know you. It has no idea who you are or what you intentions are. You know what they are but your bird doesn't know you from Adam yet. Patience will pay off. If you allow your bird to come to you on its terms, you will be suprised at how fast your relationship will develop, if your putting pressure on the bird to develop a relationship it will take longer and it will be a more stressful process.
Also allow the birds cage to be its safe haven. Dont reach in and pick it up from inside of the cage. A good technique is to leave the door open on the cage. Only pick up the bird from the cage door, and no where else. This teaches the bird that it can relax when your around it, that if it wants to interact all it has to do is come down onto the cage door and if it doesnt then all it has to do is not go onto the door. This way you can be around the bird without forcing yourself onto the bird. If your constantly pushing the bird then the bird is going to associate you with being uneasily pressured. Not good, this equals bites. Bites from an M2 equally are not good.
My best advice to you is to be PATIENT. Allow the bird to determine how fast your relationship develops. What you do have on your side is the fact that you have a Too and its very young. Toos love physical attention, of almost any kind. This usually makes a Too transition a little quicker (most of them really dont like change). Their kind of like the popular girls at school, you ignore them and they will worship you, if you are constantly trying to get them to like you and to notice you then they will ignore you.
And PLEASE PLEASE give your new Too one FULL YEAR before determining whether it will work or not. It takes a while for them to fully acclimate to a new home. The first year can be very difficult, by this I mean screaming and temper-tantrums (I'm not kidding). Usually around a year they start doing really well (sometimes two).
Toos thrive off of routine. Whatever routine you want your Too to follow you need to set up now and be consistent with it (your bird will feel more secure with a set routine as well and will become more comfortable with you). For instance Rome's routine: Awakes at 8(ish)am and is put directly outside, stays out until around 4-5pm and then comes in and goes to bed around 8pm. It took her 9months to adjust to this routine. 9 months of a very unhappy bird - was screaming all the time, all day. Now she only does her sound off if I'm late bringing her in and completely entertains herself during the day (foraging, destroying toys etc.). If you promote independence in your Too then you will have an independent Too. If you dont encourage independence you will have a clingy bird.
Sorry this was long, its just my opinion and what has seemed to work the best for me. Good luck
