7 Year Old Son Purposely Peeing on the Floor.

Updated on April 09, 2019
L.B. asks from Belmont, WA
9 answers

So my son 7 years old is purposely peeing all over. Tonight marks the eighth time. I am his father and looking for advice. First time lies and clammed it was the dog but his sister watched him do it. Sister was five at the time and told on him for it. Eventually he admitted to it and got a talking to about lying 🤥. Second time caught him in the act peeing on the living room carpet. I was extremely upset 😡. I cleaned it up and explained that if he didn’t understand that it was wrong that now he won’t have any misconceptions. I told him next time it happened he would have a consequence and that he was a big boy and if he wanted to ack like a baby than we would go back to diapers. Caveat we had ruled out being an accident. Also after researched the diapers threat not good and that if it was for attention the negative attention would only fuel the behavior. Brings us to the 3rd 4th 5th 6th and 7th time he has peed on the floor. Made him clean it up and was punished for the lying. Video Games and iPad taken away for the lying....... blamed it on the dog. And yes I’m absolutely positive it wasn’t the dog. Each time dog was out in fenced yard, or in kennel etc etc.... my son would finally admit to it, have to clean it and than punished for lying. For these times he stated he did it because he was mad at his mother. When he not with me he is supposed to be with her but he is not. She promises him to spend time with him and than leaves him with her parents the week he’s not with me. She lies to me and says she has had him and when I pick him up and drop him off from the grandparents they lie for her and always make an excuse..... oh she had to run and do something so she just dropped him over here an hr ago etc etc. son is seven and when I pick him up first thing he says is they are lying and momma lied once again and didn’t pick him up. Sorry this is lengthy and I’m venting I don’t want to raise my voice with him well at the moment I would like to but I know it will not help the situation. Now that you have the canapsis. This morning he peed on the cabinets, the walls, the floor, and on the mats in the bathroom. HELP!! What should I do here? Yes he gets attention, possibly to much? Do home work with the kids, go for bike rides, gymnastics, video games, movies, walks, boating, playgrounds. I’m fortunate that I have a good job and am home from work most days by 330. I ask him what he does when he’s at the grandparents and he tells me he does nothing. Doesn’t play with other kids and they pretty much leave him be in his iPad. Here he does have a half sister and they do have their friends over for sleep overs etc. he doesn’t get much alone time. He also doesn’t get one on one time. Is it ok to take him to do something and tell my daughter no she can’t come? I feel there isn’t anything I wouldn’t take her to do that she wanted. I hunt and if she said she wanted to hunt I would take her. I also feel like if it they were both boys no one would ever suggest excluding activities. I don’t know. Thank you in advance. I did see simalar posts but not quite the same situation or maybe it is and it one of those time the parent thinking it’s the first time in the world this has ever happened and the situation is different when it was not. Oh and last thing he told his sister today that he thought I was stupid and that he hates me and hates having to come stay with me. I asked him if he wanted me to take him to his moms parents and he said no. I told him that he wasn’t in trouble and asked if there was something he didn’t like when staying with me. He said no.

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So What Happened?

Thank you for your input. Half of me understands and knows that he needs positive emotional support. The other half worry’s that I have a duty to teach my children that they have control of their destiny and that bad decisions lead to bad outcomes. I have childhood friends that where enabled and babied and are now addicts and products of the system. I’m feeling like as long as it’s happening in my house no reaction. If he starts doing it at school or other places consult a professional for corrective actions??? It’s not happening outside my house as far as I know so maybe don’t speculate over something that’s not happening.

Yes I agree on the not taking hunting or shooting. Point was I support any activity my daughter shows interest in ie I have a tough time telling her I’m going to do something alone with brother and she can not go. Hunting was a stereotypical example of taking the boy but not the girl. Yes as far as positive activities we do and have done most likely everything that could be imagined. Constant positive outings. No he should not be peeing in front of sister. Peeing has happened when I go downstairs to change over laundry, or am in the kitchen making kids lunch breakfast etc.
i have thought about martial arts or wrestling. My concern is he has bad behavior at school and bullies other children. Yesterday took them to the park to play soccer and he took another kids ball and called the kid a looser, I was ten feet away.

As far as custody we have no court order. I have pettioned for full custody. The mother did not respond so it defaulted. The grand parents retained an attorney. My attorney is working on it. I told him to file the default he said that the other attorney contacted him and said if we file the default the grand parents will fight it and our order will have more success if mediated and both parties agree. Sons mother is an addict and her brother is in late 20’s and lives with the grand parents doesn’t work etc. so yes it’s a messy and not easy one. I make sure to keep a stable enviorment at my house for my son and make sure he’s getting a positive role model. I worry I have a 50/50 chance he follows moms and uncles path if I don’t nip this in the bottom, as he’s starting to exhibit acting out. His mother’s boyfriend was recently released from prison for heroin distribution. Ugh.

Thank you everyone!!! The situation is feeling like a lot to handle alone and the concensus sounds like I need some professional assistance. I hate the idea of paying my hard earned dollars for attorneys and therapist as that would be money to go towards vacations for the kids or expensive toys like four wheelers etc. but I just want for him to be happy and live to his potential. Quality time and tools to make everyday a better one are more important than a vacation or a tangible object.

More Answers

S.T.

answers from Washington DC on

i get how frustrating this is, and how tempting it is to up the punishment. teach him a lesson. get it through his thick head. parent with parameters. stick to your guns.

i really do.

butwhat i'm reading here is that this is a very troubled young fellow. i'm sorry his mom isn't momming up, but it happens all the time. the parent who is parenting has to parent even harder.

and that means look away from punishing and find ways to help him. more attention is great, and no, i don't think you need to purposefully start leaving his sister out of things.

but what i'm not seeing in here is any sort of counseling. i'm sure you're coping very well with the pressures of single parenting, and of balancing time with his mom (or her parents, as it sounds), but he's only 7 and he needs more.

get him to a good child therapist, and get advice for ways to empathize with and support him. you can still have rules and consequences, but clearly you need more.

good luck!

khairete
S.

4 moms found this helpful

E.J.

answers from Chicago on

Sounds like your son has a lot of confused, pent-up emotions regarding what is going on with his mother, grandparents and you.

The difference is he feels safe enough to vent these emotions with you (peeing).

Margie is right. Getting upset when he does this reinforces the power he has of doing that (sense of control).

You need to detach from the incidents and help him find other, healthier ways for him to manage these feelings. Especially since it doesn’t sound like this situation with his mother will resolve soon.

So when he does it, don’t react, keep neutral face and tone. Give him supplies to clean up. See if he wants help from you, but do not talk about it. Then once it is done show him other ways to cope.....go for a walk with him, exercise together, throw a baseball, play checkers, color....

You can even talk, using phrases like...’you sure seem upset by something, I wonder what we can do to make you feel better’ in a nice supportive tone.
Or
Supportive, with humor ‘what did the cabinets (floor, wall)do to deserve that. Let me help you clean up’.

Honestly it sounds like there is a lot of confusing dynamics going on with your son right now. It sounds like he could benefit from a positive adult who is neutral to the dynamics to your family but can help guide him as he deals with these feelings. Maybe a therapist, coach, teacher, but someone outside of the family who can be neutral. Sometimes it’s hard for a parent to play counselor and parent roles, especially with other children involved.

Hope things get better for your son.

4 moms found this helpful
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M.G.

answers from Portland on

He's upset so getting upset at him is not the right reaction. If he was upset and reacting in another way, just telling you he was upset, (if he had the words) you wouldn't be getting mad. You'd be comforting him, being his safety net, and helping him problem solve so he could handle it - while taking steps yourself to make him feel secure.

So that's what you have to do. Sure it's causing problems/mess for you, but look at underlying issue. Solve/address that.

It obviously involves in some part the going back and forth between parents. Maybe he needs to see a therapist/you too to see what can be done to make situation better. That would be my suggestion. I have no idea what he needs/what would be helpful.

Just listen though - and stop getting angry. Just clean it up for now, don't punish, and just make light of it. Start there. I think it will get better - no attention for it.

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G.A.

answers from Aguadilla on

Please read this....taking your child to see a therapist will be money spent wisely and the best investment you will ever make, not buying him expensive toys. Toys will not make him happy nor mentally in a better place. Professional guidance will. Save him from a grim future and/or even a short life if he doesn't get professional help soon. By no means accept to give him to his grandparents since they seem to be enablers and a toxic environment for a child.

3 moms found this helpful
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N.C.

answers from San Diego on

Negative attention is better then no attention.
Your son is peeing everywhere to get the attention he desperately wants and needs from his mother. He is in emotional distress and this is his outlet. Take him to therapy. Go on a trip alone with him. Take a time out and really talk with him. I had a dog who was passive aggressive and would pee on my pillow when I would leave him home.

2 moms found this helpful

C.T.

answers from Santa Fe on

I can see you are being a great parent and are trying very hard. Good job with all you have done and for not giving up no him. My advice is to find a really great therapist who specializes in anger and acting out. Plan to have him see her/him long term and you meet occasionally one on one too. I do one on one things with both my kids. I don't make a big deal out of it but sometimes I plan for my son and I to go do something he likes together. Another time I take my daughter to do something she loves. I don't announce, I'm going to have one on one time with so and so...so you cannot come. I also will sit with my son and do something with him that he loves. It used to be him teaching me to play a video game. We still play occasionally today. Today we spent an hour together doing an art project on Photoshop...him taking the lead but he also teaches me things. We enjoy this, I praise his skills, he teaches me how to do something he likes, and I learn about his interests. I HIGHLY recommend this. You may have zero interest in Minecraft or whatever (I sure didn't), but you fake interest and sit there with your son having him show you how and you play together, laugh, make jokes, tell him wow, you know all this stuff! Crazy! It's just an idea. It really helped my relationship with my son. DEFINITELY start him in therapy. (We found an excellent psychiatrist who specialized in tweens, teens, anger, ODD, ADHD, ADD, and behavioral issues. I've heard other people on here recommend a psychologist. Don't be afraid to shop around and switch therapists if your son is not clicking with them). GOOD LUCK.

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E.M.

answers from Louisville on

Get him to a therapist. And maybe a urologist. Put him in a diaper, make him clean it up take things away he likes. DO NOT GIVE IN. This is a battle of will power

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*.*.

answers from New London on

He needs to be seen by the pediatrician/urologist to see if this is medical. If it's not, he needs a therapist with a specialty in family.

He needs one on one time. He needs to clean up his accidents.

Do something with him alone 2x a month (At least). You are done working by 3:30. Tell him that starting in May you two are going to be having time together 2x a month and use April for planning to see what he wants to do. He is at the age that he can help plan an outing (Not shooting) the beg and the middle of each month. Get a big paper calendar and give him that visual. Lots of things are free---Walks , riding bikes, the park, the library, etc,,,,,

Therapy is intervention and parenting is guiding and it is needed to help this situation. What if things get worse? If they do it will not be pretty! I know theraphy is not always acceptable for some....Theraphy before a vacation. He is 7 and should not be peeing on the floor. If he was 2, that would be different!

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M.P.

answers from Portland on

First, has he been seen by the doctor to rule out a physical reason?

Then, I suggest the consequence needs to be related to the offense. Cleaning it up is a consequence in it's self. No need for an additional consequence. Lectures/talking to him will not help. He already knows what you expect. I suggest trying an compassionate approach suggesting he feels bad about this. That he knows not to pee on the floor. Ask him to help you figure out how to stop it. Most important is to remain calm and respond with a more neutral
voice.

Saying he would have to wear diapers like a baby is also not helpful. You want him to be a big boy. Expect him to learn how to be a big boy. (Here is an experience that I remember when I was 3-4. I accidently wet my panties. Mom told me I'd have to wear a diaper like my baby brother. I can still see where I was, feel my Mom's anger, and how I felt humiliated. I cried and cried.)

I suggest he is needing more attention. Negative attention is better than not enough attention. How much time do you spend with him? Do you know what interests him? How much time do you spend time with him doing fun things?
Do you think he feels loved? Is this a reaction to change and/or stress in his life?

I suggest rewards work better than punishment. If he uses the toilet, you'll get ice cream, go to a movie, watch TV with you. Find out what he likes and make doing it a reword.

When you know or strongly suspect he's lying dom't ask if he's lying. In a matter of fact way, say I don't believe you or sure sounds like lie. If the lie is obvious and you can use humor. Humour distracts from the tense situation. "You really think I didn't see, then put fingers around eyes and in a joking manner say something like "I'm the great seer' I see everything in a dramatic way. Both of you laugh.

Sometimes it helps to just calmly stand with him while saying do you want to watch this show or go play? You can do that when you tell me the truth. This has to be said without anger. Be confident and use very few words. Expect him to eventually tell the truth or enough of the truth that you can add to what he says.

In some situations you can say, "that would be fun nevertheless you must do....."
My granddaughter at five, would tell tall tales. One was that her aunt lives in that house and points to it. Let's go see her. My response would be something like, that would be fun but she doesn't live there. If she continued the fantasy, I would say, you really want to see aunt..... then we could talk about the aunt and why we'd like to see her. She forgets about the house. Similar with "I didn't peel on floor." Your response could be, I wonder if you wish you hadn't peed on the floor.

Taking away somethin that's unrelated to the lie, does not teach him how to tell the truth. It's apt to make him mad instead.

I suggest you read How to Talk So kids Will Listen and How to Listen so Kids Will Talk by Adele Farber.

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