Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He hasn't made the connection between needing to pee and initiating going to the potty because you are using a timer and going so often. Put him in charge of it. I mean, definitely have set times you go (first thing, before leaving the house, before nap/bed, before meals), but otherwise tell him it's his job to tell you when he needs to go--and then have a reward for every time he initiates going and goes (something that he will think is good, for our kid we did various things including m&ms, fake tattoos, small cheap toys, stickers, etc.).
Thanks for the suggestions. Question -- how do we keep the little reward from turning into too much of an incentive, in that he'll want to keep going/trying all the time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He hasn't made the connection between needing to pee and initiating going to the potty because you are using a timer and going so often. Put him in charge of it. I mean, definitely have set times you go (first thing, before leaving the house, before nap/bed, before meals), but otherwise tell him it's his job to tell you when he needs to go--and then have a reward for every time he initiates going and goes (something that he will think is good, for our kid we did various things including m&ms, fake tattoos, small cheap toys, stickers, etc.).
Thanks for the suggestions. Question -- how do we keep the little reward from turning into too much of an incentive, in that he'll want to keep going/trying all the time?
Anonymous wrote:He hasn't made the connection between needing to pee and initiating going to the potty because you are using a timer and going so often. Put him in charge of it. I mean, definitely have set times you go (first thing, before leaving the house, before nap/bed, before meals), but otherwise tell him it's his job to tell you when he needs to go--and then have a reward for every time he initiates going and goes (something that he will think is good, for our kid we did various things including m&ms, fake tattoos, small cheap toys, stickers, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:Rewards. Good ones. Get a mesh, see-through beach bag and fill it with Hot Wheels. Every day he stays dry for the day, he gets to choose one. If he doesn’t stay dry, commiserate with him and tell him tomorrow he can try again. Stay positive and tell him you believe in him.
Also, stop taking the lead. Let him decide when he needs to go and tell him you trust him. When he pees his pants make the clean up take longer than a trip to the potty. And absolutely no more pull-ups.