S.A. asks from Fort Worth, TX on January 20, 2009
Potty Training !
I need help! My 3 yr. old son has been mostly potty trained for about 3-4 months now and he still will wait to go no. 2 until I put his diaper on for nighttime. He doesn't want to do it in the potty. I have tried putting paper in the bottom for no splash and all kinds of other things. And he doesn't even mind staying in a dirty diaper all night long! If I don't ever put a diaper on he goes in the underwear. Hopefully someone out there can help me
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N.T. answers from Dallas on January 20, 2009
My son (who is almost three) was doing that. He would wear underwear all day, then when he knew he need to go #2 he would tell me he wanted a diaper. I did something and it did seem to work. I let him know that if he went on the potty he would get a treat. I put skittles in a jar and when he did #2 on the potty I would cheer for him and let hime get a few skittles. Bribery, I know, but it worked. You might try something like that.
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G.A. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
I have a home day care and I find this to be normal. Most of the kids do #2 after they leave me but parents all have the same complaints. G. W
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K.F. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
My son had the problem of not wanting to poop on the potty and requesting a diaper. I gave him more time and didn't push it. During the interim we talked about where poop belonged and that one day he would do it on the potty like a big kid when he was ready. I got him a book called "Where's the Poop" and he thought that was fun to read. When he pooped in the diaper we would go together to dump it in the potty and flush it. He even said bye-bye poop. This was a 6 month process. Then I decided I would give it another try to see if he was ready to let go of the diaper for poop. I bought him a video called "Potty Power" and he watched it for 2 weeks straight and loved it. Then I said no more diapers and we counted them down together to the very last one. We did a Chuck E Cheese sticker chart and told him we would take him there if he filled up the chart for 2 weeks. Well it worked and he pooped on the potty the first day. I think he was finally ready to do it and felt like we gave him the control he needed. That's what worked for us!
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N.T. answers from Dallas on January 20, 2009
My son (who is almost three) was doing that. He would wear underwear all day, then when he knew he need to go #2 he would tell me he wanted a diaper. I did something and it did seem to work. I let him know that if he went on the potty he would get a treat. I put skittles in a jar and when he did #2 on the potty I would cheer for him and let hime get a few skittles. Bribery, I know, but it worked. You might try something like that.
1 mom found this helpful
M.F. answers from Dallas on January 20, 2009
This is very, very normal and he will eventually get over it. I would let him continue doing it in the diaper, only give him an option. Maybe as part of your bed time routine, or even earlier in the day if it works better, tell him to let you know when he needs to poop and you'll help him get a diaper on, and that you'll change him when he's done. If there's no battle to fight, the thrill of the fight will be gone. Once you get past the battle part, start asking hime if he'd like to try the potty or stick with the diaper. Be very non-chalant about it, and don't say anything negative about using the diaper instead of the potty. As far as rewards, there can be an immediate reward system (stickers, M&Ms, etc.) or delayed reward. Delayed reward might look something like this: go to the store without him and get something awesome for the reward. Something with a lot of parts will be best. Maybe a train set with lots of pieces of track and several engines/cars. Put the box somewhere visible -- on top of the fridge, a bookshelf, entertainment center, etc. Don't say a word until he notices it. When he asks about it, leave it up there and stand with him while you gaze at it in awe. Agree with him that it's great, and tell him that when he's "ready", it can be his. He may say he's ready, or he may throw a fit for it, or (if you're lucky) he may ask if he's ready. Make sure he knows that "being ready" is the goal. You might ask him if he'd like to know what needs to happen for him to be "ready." You can tell him that you'll know he's ready when he's "done with diapers." Ask if he knows what Done With Diapers means, let him know that it's when he chooses to poop in the potty and not a diaper. And, rather than give him the whole thing at once, maybe every time he goes in the potty he can get a piece of the track.
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G.A. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
I have a home day care and I find this to be normal. Most of the kids do #2 after they leave me but parents all have the same complaints. G. W
C.G. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
Hello S.!
Try cheerios! Sounds crazy huh, but place a few cheerios in the toilet and have him aim when he needs to potty. It will turn this chore into a fun game and of course a prize at the end! Let me know how it goes. Good Luck!
C.
Office Manager and mommy of two
M.T. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
Have you tried a "Potty Party"?
Get some party hats, silly noise makers, etc. Tell your son that when he goes in the "big boy" potty, (not in his pants or diaper), then he'll get a big boy celebration. You can go all out the first time but then throddle back once he gets it and the potential apprehension of the potty has subsided.
Also a "Potty Chart" might work. Say one star for going "#2" in the potty. When he gets 2 or maybe even 3 stars then reward him with a trip for ice cream or something cool at his age he can appeciate and then ramp it up. (It should take more stars the next time, but perhaps the same level reward.) You will want to eliminate the reward once you know he "gets it" and explain his reward then is that he is growing up and becoming a big boy with new big boy privelages...
A.K. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
I have a 3 year old girl and was going through the same thing until we just had a breakthrough a couple weeks ago. If he tells you when he needs to go (my daughter would go get a pull up and bring it to me!) instead of saying lets go to the potty chair, or do you want to go to the potty (because of course the answer was always no) I changed the pace. I had her choose a book and I picked her up and took her to the potty and had her sit down on it..she was so distracted by the fact that we were going to read the book that she just started to go the bathroom...so my advice is to distract him from the #2!
P.J. answers from Dallas on January 21, 2009
My son had the same problem. He is two and has been potty trained for about two months. I would take him to the bathroom when I knew he had to do #2 and would just sit in there with him. And finally he started going in the potty because I was there with him. It took a couple of times doing this before he got it. Now he goes by him self!
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