Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people feel the need to respond to an anonymous troll who is asking you to defend how you handled potty training your child?
Don't feed the troll - she's not asking for any advice here, she's just looking to work everyone up into a lather and sitting back enjoying her popcorn.
OP here. Actually, not the case at all. I was honestly wondering how some children are trained at 2 and some are in diapers at 4. How many people train before 3 and how many people wait for the child to train themselves.
Bullshit. Here is your original post:
I know I'm going to start a debate here, but I really want to know how it comes to be that an able body/mind 4 year old is still not fully potty trained. I am a mother to an infant and am genuinely curious how that happens.
I'm a long time nanny and have potty trained two children, for what it's worth. I know how hard it is. But, I wasn't about to let a 3 year old go on not being potty trained. It seems to me that if the child can ask to be changed ("I need my diaper changed") then they're probably too old for a diaper. Is that not true?
Is it laziness? On the part of the parent and child to not start earlier?
Did you start and then stop?
Is 2 years old too young?
Is it just too darn hard so everyone waits until the child can basically do it all themselves, even if that takes until they're 4?
Sorry if this is all too harsh. I really want to know why your 3/4 year old isn't potty trained.
You knew full well that this would be seen as a criticism of parents who don't potty-train on the schedule you think appropriate. And honestly, why do you care?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people feel the need to respond to an anonymous troll who is asking you to defend how you handled potty training your child?
Don't feed the troll - she's not asking for any advice here, she's just looking to work everyone up into a lather and sitting back enjoying her popcorn.
OP here. Actually, not the case at all. I was honestly wondering how some children are trained at 2 and some are in diapers at 4. How many people train before 3 and how many people wait for the child to train themselves.
I know I'm going to start a debate here, but I really want to know how it comes to be that an able body/mind 4 year old is still not fully potty trained. I am a mother to an infant and am genuinely curious how that happens.
I'm a long time nanny and have potty trained two children, for what it's worth. I know how hard it is. But, I wasn't about to let a 3 year old go on not being potty trained. It seems to me that if the child can ask to be changed ("I need my diaper changed") then they're probably too old for a diaper. Is that not true?
Is it laziness? On the part of the parent and child to not start earlier?
Did you start and then stop?
Is 2 years old too young?
Is it just too darn hard so everyone waits until the child can basically do it all themselves, even if that takes until they're 4?
Sorry if this is all too harsh. I really want to know why your 3/4 year old isn't potty trained.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't push potty training on my son and he was trained by 3.5. He's 8 now and wears a pull up at night no big deal. My 2 year old is still in diapers. I'm doing the same with him and not forcing the potty. Less stress for everyone.
Sounds pretty stress free right until he gets invited to a sleepover or someone sees his pull-ups. Kids actually get embarrassed by those things even if you don't feel weird about having a kid in diapers way past the norm. Do the kid a favor.
He wears jammies at sleepovers. Wearing a pull up is no big deal for him I've never made it an issue. We don't live our lives to impress others or seek acceptance.
8??![]()
So, the fear of having an 8 year old in a pullup is exactly what caused me to make sure that hell or highwater, we started potty training before 2.5. Maybe some people don't mind, that's great, but I would mind. I have clear memories of being 8.
I also have clear memories of being 8, and being a serial bedwetter. I remember changing and cleaning my wet sheets every night, and I remember my parents trying every bedwetting alarm or product to train me out of it. I remember feeling like crap about it a lot of the time. Frankly, I wish someone had just let me wear a pull up until I grew out of it.
Aw, PP. night wetting has come a long way since we grew up (unlike this first poster who is obnoxious). pediatricians understand that this is a hormonal thing, and also genetic, and can take kids until 10 or 11 to grow out of bed wetting. i'm sorry you felt like crap about it, that sucks. my DD is 7.5 and is wet 6 out of 7 nights (DH's family all wet the bed). thankfully DD has a healthy self esteem and we don't make a big deal of it.
Anonymous wrote:For me it is because I wanted them to learn to read first so they can read on the toilet. We're a zero screen time house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't push potty training on my son and he was trained by 3.5. He's 8 now and wears a pull up at night no big deal. My 2 year old is still in diapers. I'm doing the same with him and not forcing the potty. Less stress for everyone.
Sounds pretty stress free right until he gets invited to a sleepover or someone sees his pull-ups. Kids actually get embarrassed by those things even if you don't feel weird about having a kid in diapers way past the norm. Do the kid a favor.
He wears jammies at sleepovers. Wearing a pull up is no big deal for him I've never made it an issue. We don't live our lives to impress others or seek acceptance.
8??![]()
So, the fear of having an 8 year old in a pullup is exactly what caused me to make sure that hell or highwater, we started potty training before 2.5. Maybe some people don't mind, that's great, but I would mind. I have clear memories of being 8.
I also have clear memories of being 8, and being a serial bedwetter. I remember changing and cleaning my wet sheets every night, and I remember my parents trying every bedwetting alarm or product to train me out of it. I remember feeling like crap about it a lot of the time. Frankly, I wish someone had just let me wear a pull up until I grew out of it.
Aw, PP. night wetting has come a long way since we grew up (unlike this first poster who is obnoxious). pediatricians understand that this is a hormonal thing, and also genetic, and can take kids until 10 or 11 to grow out of bed wetting. i'm sorry you felt like crap about it, that sucks. my DD is 7.5 and is wet 6 out of 7 nights (DH's family all wet the bed). thankfully DD has a healthy self esteem and we don't make a big deal of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't push potty training on my son and he was trained by 3.5. He's 8 now and wears a pull up at night no big deal. My 2 year old is still in diapers. I'm doing the same with him and not forcing the potty. Less stress for everyone.
Sounds pretty stress free right until he gets invited to a sleepover or someone sees his pull-ups. Kids actually get embarrassed by those things even if you don't feel weird about having a kid in diapers way past the norm. Do the kid a favor.
He wears jammies at sleepovers. Wearing a pull up is no big deal for him I've never made it an issue. We don't live our lives to impress others or seek acceptance.
8??![]()
So, the fear of having an 8 year old in a pullup is exactly what caused me to make sure that hell or highwater, we started potty training before 2.5. Maybe some people don't mind, that's great, but I would mind. I have clear memories of being 8.
I also have clear memories of being 8, and being a serial bedwetter. I remember changing and cleaning my wet sheets every night, and I remember my parents trying every bedwetting alarm or product to train me out of it. I remember feeling like crap about it a lot of the time. Frankly, I wish someone had just let me wear a pull up until I grew out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people feel the need to respond to an anonymous troll who is asking you to defend how you handled potty training your child?
Don't feed the troll - she's not asking for any advice here, she's just looking to work everyone up into a lather and sitting back enjoying her popcorn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't push potty training on my son and he was trained by 3.5. He's 8 now and wears a pull up at night no big deal. My 2 year old is still in diapers. I'm doing the same with him and not forcing the potty. Less stress for everyone.
Sounds pretty stress free right until he gets invited to a sleepover or someone sees his pull-ups. Kids actually get embarrassed by those things even if you don't feel weird about having a kid in diapers way past the norm. Do the kid a favor.
He wears jammies at sleepovers. Wearing a pull up is no big deal for him I've never made it an issue. We don't live our lives to impress others or seek acceptance.
8??![]()
So, the fear of having an 8 year old in a pullup is exactly what caused me to make sure that hell or highwater, we started potty training before 2.5. Maybe some people don't mind, that's great, but I would mind. I have clear memories of being 8.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't push potty training on my son and he was trained by 3.5. He's 8 now and wears a pull up at night no big deal. My 2 year old is still in diapers. I'm doing the same with him and not forcing the potty. Less stress for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't push potty training on my son and he was trained by 3.5. He's 8 now and wears a pull up at night no big deal. My 2 year old is still in diapers. I'm doing the same with him and not forcing the potty. Less stress for everyone.
Sounds pretty stress free right until he gets invited to a sleepover or someone sees his pull-ups. Kids actually get embarrassed by those things even if you don't feel weird about having a kid in diapers way past the norm. Do the kid a favor.
He wears jammies at sleepovers. Wearing a pull up is no big deal for him I've never made it an issue. We don't live our lives to impress others or seek acceptance.
Anonymous wrote:God, this shit again?