3 Year Old and Accidents

Updated on October 04, 2010
C.M. asks from New Baden, IL
6 answers

Hey mamas!! Bear with me here, this may be long!!

I am in need of some of your experiences with potty training. I am not look for 'solutions' or 'fixes' (although feel free to offer them as I know you will anyways!). I am more looking for mamas who have been through what I'm going through and can tell me how long this may last or what to expect (kind of a silly question as all kids are different, I realize that!).

Background - my three year old daughter's potty training journey began around 18 months when she started showing interest in the potty. We bought one and from 18 months - 29 months she would go a few times a day, wouldn't go at all, would only go when we put her on there, etc. Her baby brother was born in there so for about a month she stopped showing interest so we stopped trying to train her.

When she was around 30 months old, she really showed interest and in about a week or two, was out of diapers and in underwear all day (except nap and bedtime). She had a good month or two where she wouldn't have accidents or would only have a few per week. But then for the last six months or so, she has at least 1 accident per day.

99% of the time at daycare when she has an accident it's during naptime (she wears underwear during naptime at daycare). I do not mind this - I understand it because she doesn't stay dry at home at bedtime either. I haven't asked about putting her in a pullup during naptime yet.

At home in the eveings, she rarely has accidents.

BUT on the weekends, she has anywhere from 1-5 accidents on Sat and Sunday. Often times we are outside, playing, having fun, out somewhere (zoo, airshow, etc) and even if we take her every hour or so, she'll still have an accident. She will either not tell me about it (most times) or will tell me right after (if it's visible like on the floor or couch). Like yesterday, she came into the kitchen and sat down with her clothes on and looked behind her to see the puddle.

I KNOW she can feel when she has to go because she does it all day at daycare. I know she can feel it because a lot of times, she'll run to the bathroom saying "I have to go potty!"

So I don't get why ON the WEEKENDS she has so many. I've though to myself - maybe it's because she's out of her routine like they have at daycare? Maybe it's because there are not other kids around that are going potty too? Maybe she's having fun and doesn't want to stop because she fears she wont' be able to come back to the fun thing she's doing?

Here's what we've TRIED -

*Rewards (candy, stickers, etc). She doesn't care about them and even when offered, tells me she doesn't have to go.
*Doing the Pee Pee in the Potty dance - that worked when she was younger.
*Setting the timer (this does work but I was trying to steer her more towards telling me when she has to go or just GOING by herself).
*Putting her in a diaper after a few accidents and telling her if she cannot stay dry or go in the potty, she has to wear a diaper.
*Taking her when I go and telling her I have to go too. Trying to get her to go in the other bathroom while I do and we count together to see who finishes first (but expressing it's not a race...)
*Trying to get her to go before I count to 20

Here's what works but we haven't been doing because I figured as she gets older, we do not need to do incentives anymore:

*Taking off her underwear / pants after the first accident and letting her run around with no pants on. She seems to have less accidents when this happens. My husband is not a fan of this and also in the winter I do not want to do this.
*Setting the time for every hour and telling her she has to go on the potty.

Here's what I told her we are going to start doing:

1st accident - I'll go back to setting the timer every hour and she has to try even if she doesn't think she has to go.
2nd accident - going in a diaper

I don't know what else to do. I do not think I'm expecting too much of her because of her past history. I know she CAN do it. I know she KNOWS when she has to go. I just think she's being lazy about it. I do not believe in any type of physical punishment, time outs, etc because I just don't think that is going to fix this problem. I keep telling her I believe in her, I know she can do it, I remind her of her friends who are her age and do not have accidents, etc.

Have YOU been through this? How long did (or does) your child take to stop having daily accidents?

My husband and I feel like we are out of options....

Thanks for reading!

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R.R.

answers from Dallas on

Here is what I did for all 4 of my kids, and I suggest it to anyone that is getting frustrated by potty training. She is old enough to be trained. She understands it, she knows what it is about. Use natural consequences. Her whole life will be filled with natural consequences. For example: If she accidentally spills a bucket of legos, she has to pick them up. If she purposely dumps it, she has to clean them up. If she accidentally spills some water, you hand her a towel to clean it up. If she purposely pours a class of water on the floor, same thing.

What I've done with my kids is teach them how to clean up their own messes. When they potty in their pants, I good naturedly say "Oh, my, you had an accident. Now you need to clean yourself up". The first few times, I would guide them through the motions, show them where their wet clothes go. (I usually kept a bucket in the bathroom for that) - then show them where their dry clothes were. After the first few times, I expected them to do it completely by themselves. If they poo'd, I would put them in the tub to clean themselves up. (Then I would have to follow behind to make sure they were clean, but it's the principal here of cleaning up after yourself). Honestly, when I used this approach, I didn't feel so frustrated. If they were doing it for attention, teaching them to clean themselves up nipped that in the bud right away. If they were doing it out of laziness, it took care of that. It didn't take them long to figure out it was easier to just go and not clean up. And even when they wet at night, they had to clean up in the morning. Not out of meanness, but because it is a natural consequence. If they wet the bed at 18, it would be the same thing - they have to clean themselves up.

Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful
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R.F.

answers from Harrisburg on

You're right. She knows exactly what she's doing, except maybe when she's napping. My son did the same thing - started at 18 months - on and off again, was really good at 3, but then quit and had lots of accidents at a time when the routine changed (husband went away for 2 weeks on military duty). Got to the time preschool was going to start. Kids in the 3year+ class had to be potty trained. Gave him the ultimatum - do it or you don't go to pre-school. He did it. Almost identical with my daughter (she's more stubborn though). She took interest at 18 mo, stopped, started, etc. and so it went on. Same scenario. In June when she was 3, I told her that if she didn't decide to do it on her own, she wouldn't be allowed to go to school the following year. We were on our way in to talk to the executive director (who my daughter liked a lot) to tell her the reason why we would need to withdrawl, when we say my daughter's favorite teacher, who would also be her teacher the following year. We explained together that she would not be able to come to school in the fall. Well, her teacher looked at my daughter and said so kindly, "you mean you don't want to join the big girls club? Once you show that you want to do it all by yourself all of the time, you can join the big girls club". Well, that was it! Didn't matter what Mommy tried - when that favorite teacher told her that, it was a done deal. Maybe one or two accidents after that, but my daughter made the decision. They're the ones who have to want to do it. They have ultimate control. I did put her in pullups at night only for a while after that, but that was it. Good luck!

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T.F.

answers from New York on

Other parents have had this problem and some of the answers included talking to your daughter to see if she can tell you why it's happening. It sounds like she's having too much fun on the weekends to stop and use the potty! I think the idea of setting the timer and rewarding her if she goes before it goes off might work for her, but I think talking to her might help you figure this out. Instead of you imposing the consequences as you listed, see if you can both figure out a solution and consequences together.

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C.J.

answers from Dallas on

my son is three and he did this for the first six months of his 3 yo potty training. He really just wasn't that into it. He was on a schedule at school, but as you pointed out, weekends are zoo, playground, road trips, swimming, etc.
I guess what you have to decide as parents (which is what my husband and I did) is if you would rather put her in pull ups and avoid the "accidents" or keep at it and not get frustrated when it happens.
I don't know if you can have it both ways right now. At least that is what my husband and I resigned ourselves to at the time. We chose to just suck it up and use pull ups at naps/nightitme and underpants all the other times. - guess what six months into that process we have been able to drop the nap time pull up and he is going very well in the potty at home, zoo, school, public restrooms on road trips, etc.
So hang in there, choose your course and give it time:)

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D.W.

answers from Philadelphia on

I am a fan of running around without underware. When we are out and about, I tell him come on lets go to the bathroom. We did well with that. It is not good to threaten them. It is also good to not punish them either. I would have the daycare watch her liquid intake,especially before she goes to sleep. I would have her go potty before she goes to sleep. Have her go potty any time she drinks excessive amounts of liquid. She may also have a small bladder. Do not do pull ups they are like diapers. You have to stay on her for lack of better terms like white on rice. After a while she will get it. Hang in there. This too shall pass

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R.B.

answers from New York on

I guess I would say she is too young and you might want to try backing off a little. Maybe get some pullups and just give her a break. Sorry that is probably not the answer you are looking for.

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