29 answers

Ready to Potty Train but Not Walking Yet!

My 17 month old is already showing signs of readiness to potty train. Every time she wets herself or otherwise, she takes off her dirty diaper and says "ca ca" one day during nap time she took of her diaper and went poop in her crib "yuck". She definatly doesn't want to go in her diapers. But, here's my problem she still refuses to walk!I've tried everything!!! She won't use her little push walker(too fast) or push a chair (too difficult). She will only walk while holding both of your hands or holding onto a piece of furniture. If you let go at all while walking with her or try to only hold one of her hands she sits down. I definatly don't want to potty train until she is capable of walking herself. Any advice? (Since the first couple of moms responding wondered about developmental delays I just wanted to update this to mention that late walkers are common for us. My husband walked at 14 months and my oldest daughter walked at 15 months). My 17 month old is doing really well in every other aspect. Her legs are strong and she will walk with assistance she just doesn't want to walk on her own for some reason, which conflicts with the desire to potty train.
H. T.

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

Hi H., you have already received some good advice. My experience is that you can start with getting them familiar with the potty concept well before they walk. I bought a Baby Bjorn little potty when my daughter was 6m old because she was VERY obvious when she needed to poop and always peed about 5 sedonds after I took her diaper off to change it. I began when she was able to sit on her own. I would sit her on the potty (on the floor on a towel next to the changing table) after every diaper change and she would actually pee about half the time. I knew it was just because she would be peeing if still on the table, but it at least got her familiar with the concept of sitting on a potty. Now at 9m old she regularly poops in the potty before her nap (I went almost 2 weeks once without having to change a poopy diaper) and gets excited when she pees in it. I clap and sing the "yay! peed/pooped in the potty!" song if she goes, and if she doesn't I just pick her up and put on her diaper. I'm also using the sign for potty so she can learn to let me know before she can talk. We also use cloth diapers at home (but Im lazy and use disposables when out and about). I'm hoping this all will help her potty train easier when she is able to recognize her need to go and more easily communicate it to me. Good luck with whatever you decide to do...but I say give it a shot now!

Right now I only do this at home. I don't worry about it when she's at grandmas or at the sitters (1 day a week). My best friend who watches my daughter also does it too when watching her here at home. As she gets older I will start being more consistant with taking her between diaper changes and when not at home. Right now it's not for "training" per se, just to get her used to the potty so training later will be easier. Oh yeah, and not changing poopy diapers is a big benefit!

2 moms found this helpful

I pottied both of my girls starting at birth - well before they could walk. I highly recommend that you read the book "The Diaper Free Baby" by Christine Gross-Loh since it highlights how to start the "Elimination Communication" method with young toddlers (whether walking or not!) and highlights how to use the method part-time or occasionally. You don't have to do it full-time or ditch diapers completely until/unless you're ready to.

My older daughter was completely out of diapers by 13/14 months old and I never coerced her at all :) My younger has just started signing "toilet" in ASL and is well on her way to being diaper-free as well!

Best wishes!
~B.

1 mom found this helpful

You say that her walker toy goes to fast. We had the same problem. My sons P.T. suggested tying a 5 pound bag of rice to the bottom of it to help it go slower.

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More Answers

Hi H., you have already received some good advice. My experience is that you can start with getting them familiar with the potty concept well before they walk. I bought a Baby Bjorn little potty when my daughter was 6m old because she was VERY obvious when she needed to poop and always peed about 5 sedonds after I took her diaper off to change it. I began when she was able to sit on her own. I would sit her on the potty (on the floor on a towel next to the changing table) after every diaper change and she would actually pee about half the time. I knew it was just because she would be peeing if still on the table, but it at least got her familiar with the concept of sitting on a potty. Now at 9m old she regularly poops in the potty before her nap (I went almost 2 weeks once without having to change a poopy diaper) and gets excited when she pees in it. I clap and sing the "yay! peed/pooped in the potty!" song if she goes, and if she doesn't I just pick her up and put on her diaper. I'm also using the sign for potty so she can learn to let me know before she can talk. We also use cloth diapers at home (but Im lazy and use disposables when out and about). I'm hoping this all will help her potty train easier when she is able to recognize her need to go and more easily communicate it to me. Good luck with whatever you decide to do...but I say give it a shot now!

Right now I only do this at home. I don't worry about it when she's at grandmas or at the sitters (1 day a week). My best friend who watches my daughter also does it too when watching her here at home. As she gets older I will start being more consistant with taking her between diaper changes and when not at home. Right now it's not for "training" per se, just to get her used to the potty so training later will be easier. Oh yeah, and not changing poopy diapers is a big benefit!

2 moms found this helpful

In China they have a child potty trained by 6 months. If you can get her to tell you before she has to go so you can get her to the potty at least you can get her there and put her on it. Before my son was ready, I got a potty chair his size, he could crawl up to it pull off his diaper and sit on it as it was his size.He also like that when he went it played the potty song.
He had constapation problems, he had a really hard stool that hurt him when he was about a year old so he started to hold it, then he could, or wouldn't go. I never though we would get rid of the pail in the bath tub with soaking underware. So when he did go , we did the potty dance. He is 5 and we still are doing the potty dance. He held it for so long, that the muscules in his little behind didn't know how to release it. He just has been pooping in the tolet for about 6 months.
Good Luck, It's a blessing when they want to go on their own.

2 moms found this helpful

Are her doctors concerned with her not walking yet? Perhaps you can get them to recommend some kind of Physical Therapy of sorts to help her along. Then you should be able to potty train to your heart's content. It sounds like she is raring to go! Can she crawl to the potty? Perhaps you can get her a potty chair rather than a seat insert and she can crawl to the bathroom to use it? That might be one way to get her going into the bathroom by herself. Then at least you could help her get onto it and she wouldn't be so high up. Perhaps getting one would be an enticement for getting her to walk...if she gets to walk to her very own toilet! Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful

You have received great advice about potty training. Don't worry about the walking issue yet. My nephew didn't walk unitl 17 months. My sister-in-law is a pediatrician and she just encouraged him to walk with assistance where ever they went and a lot at home. His issue was walking on uneven terrain and until he had that down with assistance, he wasn't going to try is alone! But he also just knew he could move faster by crawling.

My son walked really early, about 9 months. But he would walk a little and drop down to crawl for speed. Just keep encouraging her and providing goals.

Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

My son didn't walk until 19 months - and i was not the least bit concerned about it...a year later, he runs and gallops like the rest of them. He stopped wearing diapers pretty early (at least from what people say, particularly for a boy) at just over 2 years. I think that your daughter may not want to go in a diaper, but that doesn't necessarily mean she is ready to use the toilet...maybe you need to use duct tape!

I am not sure why it matters, however, if you want her to use the toilet (and if you feel that she really us ready) whether or not she can walk - because I don't know many kids under 2 that can get up onto a toilet by themselves anyway - so you will have to pick her up to get her on, why not pick her up to carry her there.

1 mom found this helpful

H.,

Here are some other considerations as to know when a child is ready to potty train. I took these excerpts from this great book on the subject called "Toilet Training in Less Than a Day." And I would say that I think it will be more of a hassle for you to train her when she can't walk, but that is your decision of course.

Bladder Control: Do you notice that she urinates a good deal at one time rather than dribbling throughout the day? Does she stay dry for several hours? Does she appear to know when she is about to urinate as indicated by facial expressions or by specific postures she adopts? If yes to all three than she is aware of her bladder sensations and is ready to begin training. If she does the first two, she may still be ready for training, since not all children give this visible indication of their desire to urinate.

Physical Readiness: Does she have enough finger and hand coordination to pick up objects easily? Does she walk from room to room easily and without the need for assistance? If she does, she is sufficiently developed physically.

Instructional Readiness: To determine if your child has sufficient social responsiveness and understanding, ask her to carry out the following ten actions: Ask her to show you (point to) 1) her nose, 2) her eyes, 3) her mouth, 4) her hair. Ask her 5) to sit down on a chair, 6) to stand up, 7) to walk with you to a particular place, such as another room, 8) to imitate you in a simple task, such as playing patty-cake, 9) to bring you a familiar object, such as one of her toys, 10) to place one familiar object with another-for example, "Put the dolly in the wagon." If she carries out eight of these ten instructions, she should be considered intellectually ready for training.

If She Does Not Pass the Readiness Tests:
Most children over 20 months of age seem to be able to pass all of three of these tests. If your child does not pass the test for Bladder Control or Physical Development, you should wait until she has developed more coordination and more bladder control. Initial bladder control and physical coordination are very much a matter of simple maturation.

(There is some more about if she doesn't pass the instructional readiness test too if you want me to give you that information, let me know.)

Anyway, these guys did a lot of research on the subject and I think the key here is that if you want her to learn quickly and not have relapses that it is wise to wait until she is completely ready. My son is almost 3 and we still haven't started yet. He is pretty much ready now, but we are waiting until after his birthday for logistical reasons here at home.

Good luck to you! I highly recommend buying the book. My mom used it when she trained my brother and I and said we were both trained in one day without any regression or problems afterward.

Blessings,

H. C.

1 mom found this helpful

Hello.
I'm not so sure she is showing signs she wants to potty train. I think all kids go through what you have described. My son did that same kind of stuff when he was younger but he wasn't potty trained till he was 3 yrs old. I wouldn't too much worry about it. I think she's more just playing with the stuff than trying to potty train.
I would call her pediatrician and she if she needs to be evaluated for the not walking. Some times kids don't have the muscle tone needed. Also, they could give you advice on things to do to help her.
Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi H., I have two girls and they are older now but they didn't want to crawl or walk but as soon we start having friend their age and having play groups of kids their own age one they they surprise me doing all those things by themself. I think they need to see other kids and the desired of playing with others. Then when I saw that I used to placed their favorite toy a little far away so they can make the effor of walking on their own. At first I pretended that I was not paying attention and try to observe what they did to try to get the specific toy. Ofcourse I was always there to make sure that they were not going to fall or something. Yes my kids walk late too. I think they know that there is people around to give then what they want and do not make the effort. After they walk and they were ready por potty train. I did the potty train in three days. My daughter wanted this beautiful panties to wear and she was still in diapers and I've told her, only big girls that go patty on their own wear those. Well that was it. On a Monday I had her with out bottons and walking and playing and sitting in the potty and missing it at times. The next day, I did the same in the morning and it got better in the missing the potty at a time so on the afternon I put her on the panties she wanted. We had a few accidents even the next day, but everytime was less and less. By the afternoon of the third day she pull her panties on her own and went on her own number one and number two. Since you are a stay home mom like I did you can do this. Be ready to clean a lot and do not get upset is the clue. Sincerely, Rossana

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