To a lot of people it seems to mean dehydrating your kid so they don’t need to pee at night. I think that’s what the OP wants to hear? Limit her liquids after 6pm or whatever. |
I don’t get it. How is she supposed to go potty during naps or at night if she needs to potty? |
She’s way too young to be night trained. |
Op, different kids are different kids. I day trained my first at age 2 and he nap trained immediately and night trained himself on his own- underwear 24/7 a few months before he turned 3. I trained my second also at 2 using the same method and she was a lot slower to pick it up in general, still wets the bed a couple times a month at naptime and wets herself almost every night. She is almost 3.5. |
Ridiculous. All three of mine were fully trained by two. |
NP. Different kids are different. Just because yours was fully trained at that age doesn’t mean every child is capable of the same. Our pediatrician told us that you can’t night train if the child’s body isn’t ready. They can’t just wake themselves up on command. Some children are capable at that age, but many aren’t, and that isn’t unusual. My oldest trained at 2.5, and we are doing the same with younger DD at similar age. |
I am not the one who locked her kid on a crib and is mystified why she keeps peeing in her crib. |
Only one answer - pullups for naps and night. 2.5 is crazy young to expect them to sleep potty train. |
Irrelevant since OP's child is not fully trained --she's constantly peeing in the bed and has even pooped in the bed. Some kids might be fully trained by two but the child in question is not. Kids are ready for night training at different times. |
I agree that 18 months is a bit too early.
Aside from that, you really can’t have a child locked in a crib when you expect them to be toilet trained. Toilet trained means they can get themselves to the toilet. If you’re doing EC then you need to cosleep and be right on the child at all times. |
Yeah part of potty training is teaching them to get up and go to the potty. If she can't get out of her.crub, how's she supposed tomdotnhat?
But if she's truly peeing while asleep you're just pushing her before she's ready. |
I was training my kids from the time they were 6 months old. What did that mean? I would take off their diapers and make them sit at a baby pot after each meal until they pooped or peed. I had a good sense of when they wanted to poop. My reason was their comfort. I was sure that they preferred to poop in a pot instead of soiling themselves. Then the diaper came back on.
By 2 yrs old, my kids were pooping and peeing in the pot by themselves once they woke up. Of course, I was cleaning them. At home, they were wearing normal cotton underwear. We had baby potty at every level of our home and we also kept it in the yard. When my kids wanted to pee, the pot was right there. When they took a nap or slept for the night or when we were outside our house? Back into diapers, pull ups etc. Diapers and pullups at night went on for several years for my son. My daughter was toilet trained very early. My son would have accidents at night, until I started to pick him up at night from his bed, carry him to the bathroom and make him pee and back into the bed. 2 weeks of doing that, and he learned to get up to pee. And while my kids knew how to wipe themselves etc, I was at home wiping and then washing their butts till they were seven years old. |
What?? ![]() I suggest you keep her in diapers for some time. |
Day and night potty training are not really related.
2.5 yrs old is very young to expect night training (also note that kids with ADHD are very, very late to staying dry at night. This is not their fault.) Why not put on pullups with doublers in them, a pad underneath and wait until your child is ready? You could also wake them right before you go to sleep to give them another chance to urinate but this is miserable for them. Relax. This is not a big deal unless you make it one. Please do not stress your child out about this. |
I still take my almost 5 year old son to the bathroom every night to go potty because if we don't he won't soak through his pull up and drench the bed. I won't limit liquids either because you're purposely dehydrating your child and I happen to have one that needs to be reminded to drink water during the day because he's so busy playing. I'll take him needing to be taken to the bathroom for another 2 to 3 years over him getting constipation from lack of appropriate hydration.
Your kid is two and a half and I'm not sure how you expect for them to go potty which is what you've apparently taught them one) while asleep since that's when they're sleeping at neurochemical process and two) without a potty to go into since they're trapped in the crib. Again this makes sense to you as an adult but you're not logistically setting it up for your child and you're also not responding appropriately to his or her developmental abilities. |