Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again.
I understand the judgment and the suggestions to just "not tolerate" this behavior. But as his parent who has successfully potty-trained another kid, I don't think that this is a typical issue with typical solutions. We've tried a lot of things.
Does anyone have experience with sensory or psychological issues that might be related to potty training? Because that's really what this seems like to me.
Are we reading the same thread? No one is telling you not to tolerate it. We're all telling you to get rid of the pull ups and deal with the consequences for as long as it takes.
Frankly, I feel sorry for your child that you don't have the faith in him that he is capable of this and that you've relied on status-quo pull ups for so long. I also feel bad for what you're doing to the environment, thats almost 3 years longer than my children wore diapers. And really, stop calling it a pull up, it's just a diaper. That's what it feels like to.your son, there's no difference. Put less of your energy into labeling him with "sensory issues" and just potty train your almost 5 year old.
I have to ask the same question of you...because, as I've stated, we *have* done no pull-ups (except at night) and also no pants at all. Exactly how many weeks and months would you be willing to go with multiple accidents a day and no real progress? How much laundry are you willing to do? Even his school is not recommending this approach.
We may try it again, but I'm also looking for suggestions we haven't already tried. The only new thing is to take everything away at night as well, and try an alarm. We can try that, though he's usually dry in the morning. He just won't go to the potty when he wakes up. This kid has literally sat on the potty for 10 minutes insisting he doesn't need to go, and then peed as soon as he stood up.
during the day? This is crazy talk. Nighttime is a different matter so if you are talking about nighttime then forget I said anything........Anonymous wrote:My successful neurotypucal child wasn't trained until 5. He wore pullups until almost 6. He's doing great today.
It's uncommon, but more often happens in boys than girls. Dont stress it. He'll be there by 6.
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
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've had two boys older than OPs that have had accidents well into elementary school. For one, I think it is a sign of ADHD and he doesn't think to go. For the other, I think its just an unpleasant experience (#2 takes a while and is stinky) that he puts off. I've had to use different strategies for the both of them, none of which were particularly effective. For the second child, I bribed him as one PP suggested, so that was informative that he could do it, he just didn't want to...
OP, and this is also part of it for sure. Maybe that was the initial cause, and we've now managed to turn it into an all out power struggle.
Also, feeling really guilty since I was mostly incapacitated for 4-5 mos this year (illness, then a couple months later broken leg). I wonder if I could have been more on top of it, we could have prevented getting to this point. He sometimes wanted me to wipe etc when I was recuperating, and it was really hard balancing on crutches to do it so I used to rely on DH a lot.