Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a point to training them earlier than they want? Does potty training at 4 have any negative effect on a child?
Yes, four year olds notice that all the other children can use the bathroom and aren't wearing diapers under their clothes, hanging out of their bathing suits at the pool, etc. Do you think they are like infants and have no social awareness at 4?? Also, they will remember it because also unlike infants, 4 year olds are forming long term memories. Have you ever interacted with a child older than about 12 months?
If they notice other kids, all the better. If the kid isn't trained simply because he's resistant (no other physical or neurological problems), then seeing their peers using the toilet can be a good motivator.
This could apply to everything! Genius! Don't teach your kid to use silverware and hopefully he will feel like the odd one out and a little ape-like and start using it once he sees peers doing so! Shame! Who would have thought of this?! I am going to lay off all the teaching right now! Will save me a ton of effort.
No one is saying that PT shouldn't have at least been attempted by the age of 4. Yeah, the kid knows what a potty is and what it is used for but for whatever reason is not fully trained by the age of 4. I'm still not sure why a parent would owe you or anyone else an explanation as to why it is taking so long. Ironically, many times these issues stem from having attempted potty training too early - before the child was really ready/willing. I know that must be a hard one for the "I Potty Trained my baby at 9 months!" crowd to believe. But it happens.
If you potty trained your toddler - good for you!! But a kid isn't a freak if he/she is still PT in preschool.
It's not your kid, it's you. Someone else could have trained him. No one thinks your kid can't do it...
Gah! So what? It isn't a contest. It isn't a race. There is no competition, there is no trophy for getting your kid PT first. YOU are doing that for YOU and your own sense of accomplishment. If you want to spend a year of year life rushing a 2 year old to a little potty seat and changing crapped on underwear and britches - go for it. If you want your kid to learn to go potty all by themselves - wait until they are ready.
Some might be ready for the whole process at 2. MANY are not ready until they are 3/3.5. Some might not be ready until they are 4. Eventually - they do learn!
Anonymous wrote:I worked my ass off to potty train my first and it still took her until at least 3.5. She was later diagnosed with ADHD. She's very stubborn and just ignored the cues, especially if she was playing. A whole year of accidents at malls, play places, etc. it sucked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a point to training them earlier than they want? Does potty training at 4 have any negative effect on a child?
Yes, four year olds notice that all the other children can use the bathroom and aren't wearing diapers under their clothes, hanging out of their bathing suits at the pool, etc. Do you think they are like infants and have no social awareness at 4?? Also, they will remember it because also unlike infants, 4 year olds are forming long term memories. Have you ever interacted with a child older than about 12 months?
If they notice other kids, all the better. If the kid isn't trained simply because he's resistant (no other physical or neurological problems), then seeing their peers using the toilet can be a good motivator.
This could apply to everything! Genius! Don't teach your kid to use silverware and hopefully he will feel like the odd one out and a little ape-like and start using it once he sees peers doing so! Shame! Who would have thought of this?! I am going to lay off all the teaching right now! Will save me a ton of effort.
No one is saying that PT shouldn't have at least been attempted by the age of 4. Yeah, the kid knows what a potty is and what it is used for but for whatever reason is not fully trained by the age of 4. I'm still not sure why a parent would owe you or anyone else an explanation as to why it is taking so long. Ironically, many times these issues stem from having attempted potty training too early - before the child was really ready/willing. I know that must be a hard one for the "I Potty Trained my baby at 9 months!" crowd to believe. But it happens.
If you potty trained your toddler - good for you!! But a kid isn't a freak if he/she is still PT in preschool.
It's not your kid, it's you. Someone else could have trained him. No one thinks your kid can't do it...
Gah! So what? It isn't a contest. It isn't a race. There is no competition, there is no trophy for getting your kid PT first. YOU are doing that for YOU and your own sense of accomplishment. If you want to spend a year of year life rushing a 2 year old to a little potty seat and changing crapped on underwear and britches - go for it. If you want your kid to learn to go potty all by themselves - wait until they are ready.
Some might be ready for the whole process at 2. MANY are not ready until they are 3/3.5. Some might not be ready until they are 4. Eventually - they do learn!
Anonymous wrote:Is there a point to training them earlier than they want? Does potty training at 4 have any negative effect on a child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a point to training them earlier than they want? Does potty training at 4 have any negative effect on a child?
Yes, four year olds notice that all the other children can use the bathroom and aren't wearing diapers under their clothes, hanging out of their bathing suits at the pool, etc. Do you think they are like infants and have no social awareness at 4?? Also, they will remember it because also unlike infants, 4 year olds are forming long term memories. Have you ever interacted with a child older than about 12 months?
If they notice other kids, all the better. If the kid isn't trained simply because he's resistant (no other physical or neurological problems), then seeing their peers using the toilet can be a good motivator.
This could apply to everything! Genius! Don't teach your kid to use silverware and hopefully he will feel like the odd one out and a little ape-like and start using it once he sees peers doing so! Shame! Who would have thought of this?! I am going to lay off all the teaching right now! Will save me a ton of effort.
No one is saying that PT shouldn't have at least been attempted by the age of 4. Yeah, the kid knows what a potty is and what it is used for but for whatever reason is not fully trained by the age of 4. I'm still not sure why a parent would owe you or anyone else an explanation as to why it is taking so long. Ironically, many times these issues stem from having attempted potty training too early - before the child was really ready/willing. I know that must be a hard one for the "I Potty Trained my baby at 9 months!" crowd to believe. But it happens.
If you potty trained your toddler - good for you!! But a kid isn't a freak if he/she is still PT in preschool.
It's not your kid, it's you. Someone else could have trained him. No one thinks your kid can't do it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a point to training them earlier than they want? Does potty training at 4 have any negative effect on a child?
Yes, four year olds notice that all the other children can use the bathroom and aren't wearing diapers under their clothes, hanging out of their bathing suits at the pool, etc. Do you think they are like infants and have no social awareness at 4?? Also, they will remember it because also unlike infants, 4 year olds are forming long term memories. Have you ever interacted with a child older than about 12 months?
If they notice other kids, all the better. If the kid isn't trained simply because he's resistant (no other physical or neurological problems), then seeing their peers using the toilet can be a good motivator.
This could apply to everything! Genius! Don't teach your kid to use silverware and hopefully he will feel like the odd one out and a little ape-like and start using it once he sees peers doing so! Shame! Who would have thought of this?! I am going to lay off all the teaching right now! Will save me a ton of effort.
No one is saying that PT shouldn't have at least been attempted by the age of 4. Yeah, the kid knows what a potty is and what it is used for but for whatever reason is not fully trained by the age of 4. I'm still not sure why a parent would owe you or anyone else an explanation as to why it is taking so long. Ironically, many times these issues stem from having attempted potty training too early - before the child was really ready/willing. I know that must be a hard one for the "I Potty Trained my baby at 9 months!" crowd to believe. But it happens.
If you potty trained your toddler - good for you!! But a kid isn't a freak if he/she is still PT in preschool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Child development / parenting and financial management should be mandatory in high school.
The widespread ignorance is astounding. Not to mention how many parents are too busy, too tired, or too lazy.
...to parent. After all, it's hard work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:here's my theory -- it's easier to deal with the diapers now in the age of disposables and pullups, so parents aren't as motivated to start the training sooner.
And it's the simple truth!
There is a direct correlation between age of potty-training and availability and quality of disposable diapers. It's been researched. So what it comes down to, is parent motivation. Many are not putting in the hard work anymore.
My son with diagnosed global developmental delay was potty-trained at 2.5, just like his normally developing sister. The percentage of children with medical issues so severe as to make normal potty-training impossible is very small indeed.
If potty training at age 2 typically takes several weeks (or more), and results in lots of accidents, why not wait until it's easier at age 3? You think absorbent diapers make parents lazy. I believe absorbent diapers save parents the stress and hassle of a long drawn out potty training process. I don't see parents on this post explaining exactly what's so important about having a potty-trained one- or two-year-old.
Does the invention of baby formula mean women today are too lazy to offer themselves up as wet nurses? Are children these days lazy now that we don't all live on farms and make our kids do hard labor?
The reasons are:
1) it does not seem to be easier at 3 (lots of kids battle it and develop constipation/only poop in pull-ups issues);
2) some people actually find it empowering for children to learn to do things that are developmentally appropriate and like to teach their kids to do those things;
3) some people actually find changing diapers on older children not to be "easy" but rather revolting (yes, I love my kids, but I did not think that wiping poop off of them when they could talk/swim/do gymnastics was necessary to prove that).
THIS. I've potty trained two children (Im a nanny like OP) The 2 year old was WAY easier than the 3 year old. Yes, the 3 year old understood the process better...but that understanding also came with the ability to be very defiant.
I love my baby, but I really don't want to be changing his diaper when he can walk, talk, and play. Changing a three year olds diaper is just gross. I'm sorry, if you are of sound mind and body with no other issues, then you can use the toilet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:here's my theory -- it's easier to deal with the diapers now in the age of disposables and pullups, so parents aren't as motivated to start the training sooner.
And it's the simple truth!
There is a direct correlation between age of potty-training and availability and quality of disposable diapers. It's been researched. So what it comes down to, is parent motivation. Many are not putting in the hard work anymore.
My son with diagnosed global developmental delay was potty-trained at 2.5, just like his normally developing sister. The percentage of children with medical issues so severe as to make normal potty-training impossible is very small indeed.
If potty training at age 2 typically takes several weeks (or more), and results in lots of accidents, why not wait until it's easier at age 3? You think absorbent diapers make parents lazy. I believe absorbent diapers save parents the stress and hassle of a long drawn out potty training process. I don't see parents on this post explaining exactly what's so important about having a potty-trained one- or two-year-old.
Does the invention of baby formula mean women today are too lazy to offer themselves up as wet nurses? Are children these days lazy now that we don't all live on farms and make our kids do hard labor?
The reasons are:
1) it does not seem to be easier at 3 (lots of kids battle it and develop constipation/only poop in pull-ups issues);
2) some people actually find it empowering for children to learn to do things that are developmentally appropriate and like to teach their kids to do those things;
3) some people actually find changing diapers on older children not to be "easy" but rather revolting (yes, I love my kids, but I did not think that wiping poop off of them when they could talk/swim/do gymnastics was necessary to prove that).
Anonymous wrote:
Child development / parenting and financial management should be mandatory in high school.
The widespread ignorance is astounding. Not to mention how many parents are too busy, too tired, or too lazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a point to training them earlier than they want? Does potty training at 4 have any negative effect on a child?
Yes, four year olds notice that all the other children can use the bathroom and aren't wearing diapers under their clothes, hanging out of their bathing suits at the pool, etc. Do you think they are like infants and have no social awareness at 4?? Also, they will remember it because also unlike infants, 4 year olds are forming long term memories. Have you ever interacted with a child older than about 12 months?
If they notice other kids, all the better. If the kid isn't trained simply because he's resistant (no other physical or neurological problems), then seeing their peers using the toilet can be a good motivator.
This could apply to everything! Genius! Don't teach your kid to use silverware and hopefully he will feel like the odd one out and a little ape-like and start using it once he sees peers doing so! Shame! Who would have thought of this?! I am going to lay off all the teaching right now! Will save me a ton of effort.