Anonymous wrote:Stop buying and putting him in a pull-up. He's 4.5. If he has an accident he can clean it up himself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ditch the pull-up.
+1
Try the naked method.
Anonymous wrote:Ditch the pull-up.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Honestly, we have tried all of these things. Naked time. No pull-ups (well, we never took them away at night). Sit on the potty at regular intervals. He doesn't seem to care. He'll have a few good days, then he'll revert to his pattern of refusing to go. It's a fight to get him to sit on the potty. Sometimes he'll sit on the potty for 10 minutes, and pee after he stands up. DH has been losing his temper, which obviously also isn't helping...but we're so frustrated. After changing wet pants multiple times a day for weeks, we do get exhausted and give him the pull-ups back.
It's been like this for, I don't know, feels like forever. Definitely before the pandemic. I was a little more relaxed about it early in the pandemic, because it was such chaos (not to mention I was sick for two months and trying to juggle two kids and work). Since then, we've tried a new strategy every month and have utterly failed by the end of the month. He's crying about the potty. DH is fuming. I just want to cry. We started pre-school again in November, partially hoping that would help.
Yes, I know this is abnormal. I wouldn't be posting about it otherwise. That's also why I asked about sensory issues, because we can't figure out why he's doing this. He just doesn't seem to care at all if his pants are wet.
Maybe we need to talk to his pediatrician. There were other issues, so this didn't come up at his 4 y.o. check up (also, he was actually doing pretty good at that time).
Anonymous wrote:Have you asked him (calmly) why he does this? He’s old enough to give you an explanation - it’s likely control or sensory related.
Anonymous wrote:
No pull-up.
He helps clean.
If he resists, mete out immediate consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is this even a question? Why does a potty-trained child still wear pull-ups anyway? Or at all?
Most children just go from diapers to potty-trained without using pullups.
If you can't say anything helpful, don't post.
-Not OP
I think it IS helpful for OP to know how far outside the norm this is. Does she not have any friends with similar aged kids? When my kids were potty training it was a frequent topic of mom-friend conversations. We were all well aware who was/was not potty-trained, who was day/night trained, etc. OP doesn't seem to have these relative data points. Why would she think she should leave them in the pull-up after training? She must go to a loosy goosy in-home preschool. Because in our preschool, you couldn't move up to the 3 year old room unless you were fully potty trained. And this was not that many years ago (5.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is this even a question? Why does a potty-trained child still wear pull-ups anyway? Or at all?
Most children just go from diapers to potty-trained without using pullups.
If you can't say anything helpful, don't post.
-Not OP