Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents wait way too long IMO. Using the potty should be a process that starts well before 2 years of age. Start early don't stress the kid out. Where I am from, the practice used to be that kids were potty trained by age 2. My own kids were potty trained before they turned 2. I didn't have to read a book or buy a travel potty or whatever. We never had 1 poop accident. Let's not act like a 2.5 year old is not able to learn to control his bowels. Of course if you bring a potty everywhere, you are not helping him.
You clearly didn’t take your kids out of your yard enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents wait way too long IMO. Using the potty should be a process that starts well before 2 years of age. Start early don't stress the kid out. Where I am from, the practice used to be that kids were potty trained by age 2. My own kids were potty trained before they turned 2. I didn't have to read a book or buy a travel potty or whatever. We never had 1 poop accident. Let's not act like a 2.5 year old is not able to learn to control his bowels. Of course if you bring a potty everywhere, you are not helping him.
Lol to shaming both anyone whose kid isn’t potty trained by two AND anyone using a portable potty. Everyone is the worst!
Anonymous wrote:Parents wait way too long IMO. Using the potty should be a process that starts well before 2 years of age. Start early don't stress the kid out. Where I am from, the practice used to be that kids were potty trained by age 2. My own kids were potty trained before they turned 2. I didn't have to read a book or buy a travel potty or whatever. We never had 1 poop accident. Let's not act like a 2.5 year old is not able to learn to control his bowels. Of course if you bring a potty everywhere, you are not helping him.
Anonymous wrote:Parents wait way too long IMO. Using the potty should be a process that starts well before 2 years of age. Start early don't stress the kid out. Where I am from, the practice used to be that kids were potty trained by age 2. My own kids were potty trained before they turned 2. I didn't have to read a book or buy a travel potty or whatever. We never had 1 poop accident. Let's not act like a 2.5 year old is not able to learn to control his bowels. Of course if you bring a potty everywhere, you are not helping him.
Anonymous wrote:Parents wait way too long IMO. Using the potty should be a process that starts well before 2 years of age. Start early don't stress the kid out. Where I am from, the practice used to be that kids were potty trained by age 2. My own kids were potty trained before they turned 2. I didn't have to read a book or buy a travel potty or whatever. We never had 1 poop accident. Let's not act like a 2.5 year old is not able to learn to control his bowels. Of course if you bring a potty everywhere, you are not helping him.
Anonymous wrote:"You can't go to the playground until you start pooping in the potty"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get the urge to go every time I went to Barnes and Noble in my 20s. The playground is a poop trigger for your kid OP. Stop taking him for a while as others have suggested. And quit with carting the plastic potty around. Gross.
What is with this anti-plastic potty thing? It's so helpful when they are little and much less gross than having them wear diapers. OP, ignore these fools.
I do think the portable potties are gross for poop. I also think the push to potty train earlier and earlier, and to do it fast so that families can keep going out as much as possible, is what drives their popularity. We never used a portable potty because we stuck close to home when potty training and also didn't rush it -- we were just never in a position where my kid was young and inexperienced enough with potty training that they couldn't make it to a nearby bathroom to go. I didn't really consider her potty trained until she was capable of realizing she needed to go with enough warning for us to get to a bathroom. And yes, that meant that for a while we had to stick to playgrounds at rec centers with toilets, or close to home. It was like 6 months -- not a huge sacrifice.
The upside is that my kid never pooped herself at the playground. YMMV.
Are you kidding? No, the recent push is to wait and stay home, not potty train your kids young.
FWIW, I potty train between 18 and 24 months. My family trained 12 to 18 months. I don't work with kids who are 24 months or older if they're not already trained or I'm not allowed to do it asap.
~nanny
My sense is that you are not from the US. In the US, somewhere between 2 and 3 has been the standard for decades. It was probably younger before disposable diapers became so cheap, but in the last 30 years or so, it has been normal for people to start sometimes after 2 but before 3. Plenty of kids train after 3. And that's not a recent trend. It was how my mom approach potty training in the 70s and 80s, as well as pretty much every mom in our neighborhood.
But in the last 10 years or so, the push to train earlier and to train via "bootcamp" has really taken off. Oh Crap! was published in 2011, and that's part of it. Before that, parents just kind of assumed potty training was a process that would take at least a few months and up to a year, and there was less pressure to get it done. The main pressure would be from preschools that wouldn't allow kids with diapers, so parents planning to send kids at 3 would want to get it done before then. This pressure is compounded by more childcare workers immigrating from countries where early training and elimination communication are the standard, and encouraging or teaching kids in their charge to train earlier. But in the US, this is a relatively recent phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get the urge to go every time I went to Barnes and Noble in my 20s. The playground is a poop trigger for your kid OP. Stop taking him for a while as others have suggested. And quit with carting the plastic potty around. Gross.
What is with this anti-plastic potty thing? It's so helpful when they are little and much less gross than having them wear diapers. OP, ignore these fools.
I do think the portable potties are gross for poop. I also think the push to potty train earlier and earlier, and to do it fast so that families can keep going out as much as possible, is what drives their popularity. We never used a portable potty because we stuck close to home when potty training and also didn't rush it -- we were just never in a position where my kid was young and inexperienced enough with potty training that they couldn't make it to a nearby bathroom to go. I didn't really consider her potty trained until she was capable of realizing she needed to go with enough warning for us to get to a bathroom. And yes, that meant that for a while we had to stick to playgrounds at rec centers with toilets, or close to home. It was like 6 months -- not a huge sacrifice.
The upside is that my kid never pooped herself at the playground. YMMV.
Are you kidding? No, the recent push is to wait and stay home, not potty train your kids young.
FWIW, I potty train between 18 and 24 months. My family trained 12 to 18 months. I don't work with kids who are 24 months or older if they're not already trained or I'm not allowed to do it asap.
~nanny
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get the urge to go every time I went to Barnes and Noble in my 20s. The playground is a poop trigger for your kid OP. Stop taking him for a while as others have suggested. And quit with carting the plastic potty around. Gross.
What is with this anti-plastic potty thing? It's so helpful when they are little and much less gross than having them wear diapers. OP, ignore these fools.
I do think the portable potties are gross for poop. I also think the push to potty train earlier and earlier, and to do it fast so that families can keep going out as much as possible, is what drives their popularity. We never used a portable potty because we stuck close to home when potty training and also didn't rush it -- we were just never in a position where my kid was young and inexperienced enough with potty training that they couldn't make it to a nearby bathroom to go. I didn't really consider her potty trained until she was capable of realizing she needed to go with enough warning for us to get to a bathroom. And yes, that meant that for a while we had to stick to playgrounds at rec centers with toilets, or close to home. It was like 6 months -- not a huge sacrifice.
The upside is that my kid never pooped herself at the playground. YMMV.
Are you kidding? No, the recent push is to wait and stay home, not potty train your kids young.
FWIW, I potty train between 18 and 24 months. My family trained 12 to 18 months. I don't work with kids who are 24 months or older if they're not already trained or I'm not allowed to do it asap.
~nanny
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get the urge to go every time I went to Barnes and Noble in my 20s. The playground is a poop trigger for your kid OP. Stop taking him for a while as others have suggested. And quit with carting the plastic potty around. Gross.
What is with this anti-plastic potty thing? It's so helpful when they are little and much less gross than having them wear diapers. OP, ignore these fools.
I do think the portable potties are gross for poop. I also think the push to potty train earlier and earlier, and to do it fast so that families can keep going out as much as possible, is what drives their popularity. We never used a portable potty because we stuck close to home when potty training and also didn't rush it -- we were just never in a position where my kid was young and inexperienced enough with potty training that they couldn't make it to a nearby bathroom to go. I didn't really consider her potty trained until she was capable of realizing she needed to go with enough warning for us to get to a bathroom. And yes, that meant that for a while we had to stick to playgrounds at rec centers with toilets, or close to home. It was like 6 months -- not a huge sacrifice.
The upside is that my kid never pooped herself at the playground. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you tried putting a slide and/or swing in your bathroom?
I love you, this is my favorite suggestion ever. You win the internet. (Unless you are being serious, in which case I will say my bathroom can't fit two people brushing their teeth at the same time, so no that is not an option we can try, but thanks!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to get the urge to go every time I went to Barnes and Noble in my 20s. The playground is a poop trigger for your kid OP. Stop taking him for a while as others have suggested. And quit with carting the plastic potty around. Gross.
What is with this anti-plastic potty thing? It's so helpful when they are little and much less gross than having them wear diapers. OP, ignore these fools.
I have never seen this and honestly it's disgusting. I don't want to see anyone pooping in a public place. A kid pooping his pants regularly is not potty trained and needs a diaper.
Anonymous wrote:I'm just reading this and realizing: this is one of the reasons potty training is so hard. People have such weirdly intense feelings about it, and so many people disagree. Like I've heard people say that a child in diapers over the age of 2 or 2.5 is "gross" -- it's a common attitude on here because people are very in favor of early training. But now we see people who think the portable potties are gross and inappropriate. Of course, if you train early, you pretty much have to use a portable potty, because as PP's have noted, kids that age can't hold it for however long it will take you to find a bathroom. And if you don't use a portable potty, you pretty much have to train later when your kid has more ability to wait for a potty when you are out of the house.
Maybe it's just that potty training involves poop and pee and is, by nature, kind of gross, and maybe we should all cut each other some slack instead of shaming one another for the somewhat unpleasant aspects of teaching our kids to put waste in a toilet? Like maybe diapers are kind of gross AND portable potties are kind of gross and everyone is just trying the best they can.