Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell her if she isn’t going to the bathroom when she needs to she will need to have diapers. She won’t like that idea and she will decide it is better to just use the bathroom when she needs to.
Yeah, threaten a kid who is struggling with a punishment like wearing diapers! That'll teach her!
Anonymous wrote:Tell her if she isn’t going to the bathroom when she needs to she will need to have diapers. She won’t like that idea and she will decide it is better to just use the bathroom when she needs to.
Anonymous wrote:Tell her if she isn’t going to the bathroom when she needs to she will need to have diapers. She won’t like that idea and she will decide it is better to just use the bathroom when she needs to.
Anonymous wrote:How difficult was potty training? Do you think it would help to go back to the beginning and try again?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t need more reminders you need fewer. And those reminders can’t be “do you need to go?” They need to be let’s take a break and go now. Who needs to pee every 30 minutes? You’re not teaching her to listen to her body but rather the clock. Then you say things like “I’m not playing with you until you go. Just sit on the toilet for 30 seconds with the water running.” If she says I don’t have to, but it’s been 2 hours since she last did “ok I’ll wait. Prove that you don’t have to”. If you make her go every 30 minutes she’ll hate the toilet. Also it’s not a potty anymore, it’s a bathroom.
I do need to be more strict when it comes to not asking her but telling. She always says she doesnt have to go. Then when she does at least try, she will pretend to go but I know she didnt. I am going to start setting a timer for 30 minutes and go from there.
Every 30 minutes is a nuisance. Who goes to the bathroom every 30 minutes? That's 8 times every 4 hours. How do you go from "Do you need to go?" to "let's go try." It will start to annoy her and doesn't teach her to listen to her body, but rather a clock. That's not a good idea, do it no more than once an hour.
She doesnt actually go every 30 minutes. I just make her try to go. Like I said before, 95% of the time she says she doesnt have to go but I make her try anyways. What irritates me is that she will fight me when I ask her to at least try. She doesnt want to put forth the effort to want to help herself stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t need more reminders you need fewer. And those reminders can’t be “do you need to go?” They need to be let’s take a break and go now. Who needs to pee every 30 minutes? You’re not teaching her to listen to her body but rather the clock. Then you say things like “I’m not playing with you until you go. Just sit on the toilet for 30 seconds with the water running.” If she says I don’t have to, but it’s been 2 hours since she last did “ok I’ll wait. Prove that you don’t have to”. If you make her go every 30 minutes she’ll hate the toilet. Also it’s not a potty anymore, it’s a bathroom.
I do need to be more strict when it comes to not asking her but telling. She always says she doesnt have to go. Then when she does at least try, she will pretend to go but I know she didnt. I am going to start setting a timer for 30 minutes and go from there.
Every 30 minutes is a nuisance. Who goes to the bathroom every 30 minutes? That's 8 times every 4 hours. How do you go from "Do you need to go?" to "let's go try." It will start to annoy her and doesn't teach her to listen to her body, but rather a clock. That's not a good idea, do it no more than once an hour.
She doesnt actually go every 30 minutes. I just make her try to go. Like I said before, 95% of the time she says she doesnt have to go but I make her try anyways. What irritates me is that she will fight me when I ask her to at least try. She doesnt want to put forth the effort to want to help herself stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t need more reminders you need fewer. And those reminders can’t be “do you need to go?” They need to be let’s take a break and go now. Who needs to pee every 30 minutes? You’re not teaching her to listen to her body but rather the clock. Then you say things like “I’m not playing with you until you go. Just sit on the toilet for 30 seconds with the water running.” If she says I don’t have to, but it’s been 2 hours since she last did “ok I’ll wait. Prove that you don’t have to”. If you make her go every 30 minutes she’ll hate the toilet. Also it’s not a potty anymore, it’s a bathroom.
I do need to be more strict when it comes to not asking her but telling. She always says she doesnt have to go. Then when she does at least try, she will pretend to go but I know she didnt. I am going to start setting a timer for 30 minutes and go from there.
Every 30 minutes is a nuisance. Who goes to the bathroom every 30 minutes? That's 8 times every 4 hours. How do you go from "Do you need to go?" to "let's go try." It will start to annoy her and doesn't teach her to listen to her body, but rather a clock. That's not a good idea, do it no more than once an hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t need more reminders you need fewer. And those reminders can’t be “do you need to go?” They need to be let’s take a break and go now. Who needs to pee every 30 minutes? You’re not teaching her to listen to her body but rather the clock. Then you say things like “I’m not playing with you until you go. Just sit on the toilet for 30 seconds with the water running.” If she says I don’t have to, but it’s been 2 hours since she last did “ok I’ll wait. Prove that you don’t have to”. If you make her go every 30 minutes she’ll hate the toilet. Also it’s not a potty anymore, it’s a bathroom.
I do need to be more strict when it comes to not asking her but telling. She always says she doesnt have to go. Then when she does at least try, she will pretend to go but I know she didnt. I am going to start setting a timer for 30 minutes and go from there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t need more reminders you need fewer. And those reminders can’t be “do you need to go?” They need to be let’s take a break and go now. Who needs to pee every 30 minutes? You’re not teaching her to listen to her body but rather the clock. Then you say things like “I’m not playing with you until you go. Just sit on the toilet for 30 seconds with the water running.” If she says I don’t have to, but it’s been 2 hours since she last did “ok I’ll wait. Prove that you don’t have to”. If you make her go every 30 minutes she’ll hate the toilet. Also it’s not a potty anymore, it’s a bathroom.
I do need to be more strict when it comes to not asking her but telling. She always says she doesnt have to go. Then when she does at least try, she will pretend to go but I know she didnt. I am going to start setting a timer for 30 minutes and go from there.
Anonymous wrote:You don’t need more reminders you need fewer. And those reminders can’t be “do you need to go?” They need to be let’s take a break and go now. Who needs to pee every 30 minutes? You’re not teaching her to listen to her body but rather the clock. Then you say things like “I’m not playing with you until you go. Just sit on the toilet for 30 seconds with the water running.” If she says I don’t have to, but it’s been 2 hours since she last did “ok I’ll wait. Prove that you don’t have to”. If you make her go every 30 minutes she’ll hate the toilet. Also it’s not a potty anymore, it’s a bathroom.
Anonymous wrote:My kid did this too. No medical cause we could find. It stopped when she wanted it to stop, which was around 8.5.
I set a rule that if she had an accident, she had to shower immediately. Not as a punishment but as a consequence because no one wants to smell like pee. That annoyed her enough to incentivize stopping. Took about 6 months though. Also, I suspect she just matured socially enough to realize that if she did this at school - and she used to - she'd be very embarrassed. That is probably what finally did it, but I didn't ask and she didn't say.