Anonymous wrote:No neurotypical or developmental issues at all. We cannot night train our 6 year old. We have tried everything. Limiting water. He goes right before bed at 8. We get him up at midnight and again at 5am and still wakes up wet. We have tried various ways- getting him up one time, not at all. Any advice or similar experiences?
Zero developmental concerns otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Up to 7 is common. After 7 is not “normal” whatever that is supposed to mean.
No.
My pediatrician wouldn’t even entertain looking into it until after age 9.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes patience, time, positive encouragement, and dedication to train your kid to use the “potty” and then the toilet by 3y.
Yep. And staying dry all night has zero correlation with how patient, positive, and dedicated a child's parents are when it comes to daytime potty training. Believe me, I wish it did. Heck, I wish staying dry at time was correlated with how nasty, judgemental, and downright vicious parents were about staying dry at night, because then maybe I wouldn't have emotionally suffered for years. But it's not. A child will stay dry overnight when their body has matured enough to do so, and there is an extremely broad range of "normal." And for the kids who can't (and it definitely is can't, not won't), they wish they could.
How old were you when you stopped?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes patience, time, positive encouragement, and dedication to train your kid to use the “potty” and then the toilet by 3y.
Yep. And staying dry all night has zero correlation with how patient, positive, and dedicated a child's parents are when it comes to daytime potty training. Believe me, I wish it did. Heck, I wish staying dry at time was correlated with how nasty, judgemental, and downright vicious parents were about staying dry at night, because then maybe I wouldn't have emotionally suffered for years. But it's not. A child will stay dry overnight when their body has matured enough to do so, and there is an extremely broad range of "normal." And for the kids who can't (and it definitely is can't, not won't), they wish they could.
How old were you when you stopped?
Anonymous wrote:Up to 7 is common. After 7 is not “normal” whatever that is supposed to mean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes patience, time, positive encouragement, and dedication to train your kid to use the “potty” and then the toilet by 3y.
Yep. And staying dry all night has zero correlation with how patient, positive, and dedicated a child's parents are when it comes to daytime potty training. Believe me, I wish it did. Heck, I wish staying dry at time was correlated with how nasty, judgemental, and downright vicious parents were about staying dry at night, because then maybe I wouldn't have emotionally suffered for years. But it's not. A child will stay dry overnight when their body has matured enough to do so, and there is an extremely broad range of "normal." And for the kids who can't (and it definitely is can't, not won't), they wish they could.
Anonymous wrote:It takes patience, time, positive encouragement, and dedication to train your kid to use the “potty” and then the toilet by 3y.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS wet the bed until 10. When he turned 10, it was like a switch went off and his body was ready. I was relieved. We did pull-ups nightly and had special washable and disposable pee pads that were placed on top of the sheets so we wouldn’t have to change sheets daily.
We had previously tried waking up at midnight and limiting liquids but that never worked. We didn’t bother with the alarm.
If he had a pull-up then you shouldn’t have had to put down anything else. Was he peeing so much that the pull-up couldn’t hold up?