T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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34.1 | Don't rush it | FSHQA1::EDAVIDSON | | Tue Jun 19 1990 09:11 | 14 |
| My daughter used to soak herself nights, so when she started training
during the day, I left diapers for naps and nights. She pretty
much spontaneously started staying dry while sleeping within a couple
of weeks/months. I'd say don't rush it. 2 yrs 4 months is young
to be out of diapers, anyway. I think the daytime control will
carry over to nights by itself. After you've had a couple of weeks
of dry diapers every night, then you could probably handle the
"occasional" wet bed.
By the way, I'd rethink the waking up at night to go to the bathroom.
Isn't your son developing a wake-up habit? I'd vote for a diaper
and uninterupped sleep vs. waking him up and no diaper. (Just my
opinion).
Liz
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34.2 | I think I'd go with training pants if he gets up at night | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jun 19 1990 09:51 | 19 |
| I don't know that there's anything wrong with a wake-up-at-night
habit -- I've been doing it for something around 35 years now, and
for exactly that reason: I drink a lot of water in the evenings
and I wake up in the middle of the night needing to go. I stagger
to the bathroom in the wee hours and stagger back to bed without
ever really waking up. I've never noticed that it causes any
health problems or less restful sleep or anything. In fact, when
I'm so tired I don't get up at night, I usually feel less rested.
So I'd say that if Berk wants to wake up at night to go, it's
probably all right, but it would probably be a good idea to teach
him to do it for himself so you can get some sleep. And training
pants would be easier for a kid that young to manage.
For Kat we used to use the very heavy terrycloth pants with rubber
pants over the top. That took care of all but the heaviest
floods.
--bonnie
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34.3 | | WFOV12::BRODOWSKI | | Tue Jun 19 1990 10:14 | 14 |
| I agree with Bonnie. My daughter was 18 months old when she stopped
wearing diapers at night. We were in Florida at the time and her
cousing who is the same age as her was already potty trained - Adrienne
thought this was neat. We had been training her at home all along
but she still wanted to wear her diaper at night. When we returned
home from Florida, I went to put her diaper on before bed and she
did not want it. So I bought some training panties for her and
never had any problems.
One rule I did and still follow is no drinks at least a half hour
before bedtime.
Good Luck,
Denise
|
34.4 | | BUSY::DKHAN | | Tue Jun 19 1990 12:21 | 20 |
| It's funny, my daughter Aisha (2.5) went "cold turkey" so to speak
with diapers at home. She rarely, if ever wets the bed at night, and
never during naps. But, the sitter puts a diaper on her for her
naps, and she often wakes up wet. I wonder if wearing the pants
makes them more aware that they need to control themselves.
When she decided not to wear diapers at night, she had been staying
dry for a while too....so maybe she was just ready. It's hard to
say. The other thing was that we switched to cloth diapers. I think
maybe they felt different to her...more like underwaer, so she became
more aware of being wet and wanted to control herself.
I also make sure she does not drink anything for an hour before
bed (an hour because she holds it in sometimes...and I don't want
her letting go in bed).
Good luck...just follow his lead.
Dot
|
34.5 | What's a little extra laundry??? | ISE004::MATTIA | | Tue Jun 19 1990 13:26 | 16 |
| I agree with all the replies so far. My son Jason was 2.8 when he was
trained. The entire process took 2 weeks from being taken out of
diapers to total control during the day and evening.
I didn't want to send mixed messages so when the sitter and I took him
out of diapers, that was it. I used extra absorbent training pants
with plastic pants over them. Yes, for a couple of mornings I had
soggy, smelly sheets to contend with; but, it didn't last long. The
most important thing I can say is don't get upset with Berk if he wets
the bed. I don't make a big deal out of it. Jason has probably wet
the bed 3 times since he was trained in October, and everytime he gets
real upset that he wets -- he just feels bad. I just tell him it was
an accident and the sheets can be changed.
Best of luck!
Donna
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34.6 | They know best . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Tue Jun 19 1990 13:36 | 7 |
| Whatever you do don't push it! My 3.3 year old daughter just decided
to stop diapers at night. She did and has had only one accident. She
gets up during the night to use the bathroom when she needs to and is
so proud of herself. I'm not sure I'd like to have a 2 year old
wandering around the house at night anyway.
Good luck!
|
34.7 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Tue Jun 19 1990 15:01 | 6 |
| Ask Berk - when he's ready to go to bed without a diaper he can let you
know. Til then, it's very common for toilet trained kids to continue
with a diaper at night. Both Brazelton and Spock assert that nighttime
bladder control is more likely to come late in the 3rd year,often at
age 4.
|
34.8 | I vote for NO MORE DIAPERS! | MAMIE::POULIN | | Wed Jun 20 1990 11:00 | 19 |
| I would go with the training pants at night. It sounds to me that he
is ready. Everyone even doctors like to assume that children aren't
ready to be fully trained until they are 3 or 4. The point is every
child is different if Berk is doing well during the day and has a few
wet diapers at night I would stop the drinks prior to bedtime like one
noter suggested.
My mom had 7 children and we were all trained between 18 and 24 months
with no pressure I might add. I have 3 children and two of them were
trained before 18 months. So it is possible. When I trained them I
waited till we had two weeks without any accidents before removing the
night diaper. We had a few accidents at night but no as many as I
thought we would have had. I also had my daugter throw away her
diapers which she thought was a "Big girl thing to do ". I hope I am
as successful with my son (7mos.) as I was with his brother and sister.
Good luck with whatever you think is best for Berk.
Carole
|
34.9 | I may post this on my wall | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:48 | 15 |
| I think this is what most of us have been trying to say -- if
Berk's ready, then he's ready, but don't push him -- but 21.21 put
it so beautifully in reference to walking that I wanted to quote
it here:
"It's all the individual kid, and in the overall scheme of things the
age at which they walk bears little reflection on ANYTHING else in
their life, as far as advanced or delayed development. Walking,
talking, teeth, eating, toilet training, all progresses at its own rate
for each child."
Some children are early. Some are late. It doesn't mean
we've done well, or poorly. It just means our child is ready.
--bonnie
|
34.10 | how it went for us | ROLL::ORTH | $IF WEEKEND THEN SET KIDS/WAKEUP=LATE | Wed Jun 20 1990 15:35 | 43 |
| We have three children and toilet training (who trains whom???) has
been ... an experience. Josh, our eldest, will be 5 in August, has been
day trained since he was 3.4 yrs., and is still soaked every nite. We
had him in diapers (we use cloth) up till 3 weeks ago, but he is a very
big boy for his age, and they just wouldn't stretch around him anymore,
and the largest available rubber pants were splitting regularly. Ex.
lg. disposables did not fit either. So we tried going completely
diaperless..just underwear. He had one dry night, but many more just
swimming by morning. We do limit any drinks before bed...usually
nothing after supper, unless he's been playing very hard and gotten
sweaty (we do eat late though). What we finally settled on, because he
was jsut SO wet, was the terry cloth lined rubber pants available at
Sears. They only go up to a size 4, but they fit him even though he's
wearing a size 7 regular clothes (they are BIG). Even that didn't hold
him so now we put those on him with a "diaper doubler" pad inside. This
produces a dry bed 50% of the time. Less laundry for my wife, less
being upset for Josh (we did not make a big deal over it, but he hates
being wet in the morning....he realizes he sleeps ultra soundly, and
that is likely why he doesn't wake up when his bladder is full). I know
personally of several folks who've had kids wet at nite, consistently,
up to about 8-10 yrs. old, or even older, when the dr. can find no
physiological reason for it...just "wait till they grow some more."
Our middle child, Carrie, will be three on Monday (6-25) and decided
about 2 weeks ago she wanted to wear "big girl undies". She wasn't
great (at first) at the using the potty which goes hand-in-hand with
that, though, but now is excellent about it. My wife started by keeping
her in a diaper at nap and at bed, but form the first day that she used
the potty consistently, she was always dry at nap, so she wears
underwear there. At nite, she is dry 75% of the time, but we put on the
super thick training pants with rubber pants over them, for the other
25%.
In general, it seems that there is something about just being in
diapers that discouraged our kids from using the toilet at nap or
nite...they seemed to feel "oh, well, no big deal...after all I am in
diapers". Underwear, whether training pants or whatever, seems to make
them feel a bit more responsible for staying dry. BTW, we do not call
it a diaper doubler to Josh....wanting to avoid the term diaper...but
call it a "pad" and his terry lined rubber pants we call underwear.
We praise 'em for doing there best when they're dry...and we tell them
that even when they're wet, wh are still proud of them as long as they
did their best.
Sorry its a long response....its been a hot topic around here!
--dave--
|
34.11 | | CADSE::ARMSTRONG | | Mon Jun 25 1990 08:05 | 13 |
| Wow....how are you all training your kids at these early ages??
Robin, our oldest, is 4 1/2. He hasn't worn a diaper during the
day for about a year. About 6 months ago, I bought a plastic
mattress cover and we stopped putting him in diapers at night.
We walk him to the bathroom before we go to bed, about 11, and
he still wakes up wet occasionally.
Something I've noticed.....When he wears NO PJ bottoms, no underwear,
just a tee shirt, he never seems to wet the bed. With underwear its
the most common, perhaps feeling sort of like a diaper.
good luck!
bob
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34.12 | kids do it, not the parents | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jun 25 1990 10:42 | 8 |
| > Wow....how are you all training your kids at these early ages??
Bob --
They're not. They happen to have kids who were ready to give up
diapers earlier than some other kids are.
--bonnie
|
34.13 | Yep, don't push | ISTG::DAVILA | | Thu Sep 06 1990 13:46 | 17 |
| My opinion (learned after much battle) is to let the kids guide you. They are
all different. Marisa (4.5 years) was trained when she was 2.3 years in two
weeks. So I expected Lisa to do the same. Well, she's turning three the 13th,
and is now going to the bathroom almost everytime without accidents. The
weird part is, she sopped wetting he night diaper months ago. She could have
worn underwear at night and diapers during the day! She also would scream at
me if I suggested that she go to the potty, so I left it up to her. Also, she
was going to the bathroom for # 1's months before she did for # 2's, which is
the opposite of what I read in the books.
The piece of advice that was the turning point for me (thank God I read this
somewhere!) was: You've never seen a five year old go to kindergarden in
diapers, right? Sooner or later it will happen. When I adopted this as my
motto, I felt much better and didn't push Lisa again.
Mari
|