Parenting

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

How to Potty Train an Active Toddler

By Annie Mueller

Limitless energy and intense curiosity make it a challenge (to say the least) to get a toddler to sit still long enough to make any progress with the potty. Don't make it a battle. Take advantage of that curiosity to perk your toddler's interest. Then incorporate quick and frequent potty trips into your routine.

Step 1

Include your toddler in your bathroom trips. Yes, you'll have to say goodbye to privacy, but you haven't really had that since she was born anyway. When you're at home with your toddler, announce your bathroom breaks: "Mommy's going to the bathroom now!" Make it sound thrilling. Don't tell her to come in with you. Just leave the door open. Curiosity, in this case, is a wonderful thing. Keep up a little running monologue about the potty process every time you go. "This is the toilet paper. This is how we get clean after we go potty. This is how we flush when we're all done."

Step 2

Get the gear. Bribery may not be the best training method, but sometimes it is the most effective. Buy your toddler a shiny new pack of underwear with his favorite cartoon character on them. Tell him they're his to wear once he learns to go potty. Purchase a toddler-sized potty seat (that goes on the toilet) or potty chair (the free-standing version) and leave it in the bathroom. Explain it briefly: "This is where you can go potty so you get to wear your new underwear."

Step 3

Use repetition. Start making it part of your toddler's normal morning routine, bathtime, before-dinner handwashing to have a quick potty break. It's okay if she's still wearing diapers or pullups. Don't make a big deal out of it. Just help her get her pants and diaper down. Sit her on the potty, give her a minute or so and then proceed. She may go, or she may not. When she does, praise her. When she doesn't, just move along. Say, "Maybe next time" or something else encouraging.

Step 4

Reward your toddler when he does go to the potty and produces something into it. Don't offer a reward just for sitting on the potty. That act is great, and you can give verbal praise. But save the tangible reward, a sticker or a small piece of candy, for when he actually goes in the potty.

Step 5

Make frequent trips. As the potty becomes a normal part of the daily routine, add in more potty trips. Try to make it at least once an hour. Don't ask if she needs to go. Just say, "It's time to go potty!" like it's the best thing in the world. Help her through the process. Praise her or reward her when she does go. Then carry on. The whole thing can take less than five minutes once you both get used to it.

Step 6

Save the new underwear for when significant progress has been made, such as when he is asking to go to the potty and actually going, or when he is staying dry through naps. You might use the rewards as a way to let him know when the underwear is an option: "Once you get five rewards for going potty, you can wear a pair of underwear." If it's warm enough, let him run around in the new underwear or sans clothing of any kind on the lower half. Expect an accident. Sometimes toddlers need to see the process to understand how it works and that they can exercise some control over it. If you can handle a few clean-ups, you'll probably find that your toddler is much more aware of the need to go potty.

Tips and Warnings
  • Purchase a potty book that stays in the bathroom beside the potty. Everybody likes to have some reading material handy in the restroom. Try flushable wipes rather than toilet paper to help your toddler learn how to clean himself after going potty.
  • Don't make it a big deal when accidents happen, since they inevitably will. Reassure your toddler: "That's okay! Let's clean up!" and let her help clean up.

How to Potty Train an Active Toddler originally published on Modernmom.com

Related Pregnancy & Parenting Articles:
When Should I Start Potty Training My Toddler?
5 Ways to Make a Potty Training Chart
How to Potty Train a Child With Autism

Annie Mueller - Annie Mueller is a writer, editor, professional blogger, website designer, and tutor. She has written extensively on parenting and personal growth for women, and specializes in providing information to help women succeed as moms and entrepreneurs. She is the mother of three young children. Find her at http://www.AnnieMueller.com.




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From the Community…

Comments 1-9 of 9
  • miss my family's Avatar
    Posted by miss my family Mon Sep 28, 2009 8:15pm PDT

    While these are all good tips if you KNOW (and you can tell by how the kid acts) that the kid knows when he/she needs to go then they need to know it's not a game. They have to use the potty even if they are busy playing. The biggest problem I saw with kids at the daycare was after they learned what to do and how to tell if the had to go they would just ignore it if it was snack time or they were playing. I'm not suggesting you start punishing the minute they start potty training I mean if you've been doing it for awhile. What sucks is teaching a 4 year old boy who has NO medical problems that just because he's playing it doesn't give him the right to pee his pants. While his younger brother had no issues whatsoever. That's what sucks. I never want to go through that again. If he'd of been mine (being as he was tested and had no medical issues) and he kept peeing his pants just because he didn't "feel" like going to the bathroom I'd have spanked him each time he did it. But he wasn't and his parents said he was "just young" like a 4 year old doesn't know where to pee. Memories of that makes potty training the least of my favorite activities.

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  • LisaR's Avatar
    Posted by LisaR Mon Sep 28, 2009 8:55pm PDT

    I say put the kid in underwear once you determine he/she is ready to use the potty. My daughter wouldn't use the potty when she wore disposable training pants. Once she was put in underwear she was trained in a week. She realized how awful it is to wet her pants and leave a puddle on the floor. It's uncomfortable to be wet and it's embarrassing to make a mess. Her friend learned the same way. She was three when her daycare dictated all 3 year olds must wear underwear. She had two accidents at school and a few at home and that was it.

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  • Jamie's Avatar
    Posted by Jamie Tue Sep 29, 2009 2:48pm PDT

    i have a 2and 1/2 year old that doesn't want to use the toilet to go poop he ask for a diaper if i don't put one on him he will put one on .He is potty trained (pee) even at night ,he'll wake me up if he has to go

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  • miss my family's Avatar
    Posted by miss my family Tue Sep 29, 2009 9:56pm PDT

    I'd spank my kid if he pooped his pants when he was potty trained. At least in your scenario. There is no excuse for that. Another thing: just don't buy diapers and if you have to don't put them where he can't get to them. I'm not kidding you I wouldn't play his little game. If the kid had a medical condition that's one thing but you make it sound like he's perfectly normal. That's sick. He should be taught this isn't a game. I can't imagine letting my kid get away with that.

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  • miss my family's Avatar
    Posted by miss my family Wed Sep 30, 2009 1:43pm PDT

    I'd like to apologize for my last statement. It's just that it put me in such a shock to read that statement and I still have potty training memories of a 4 year old who was never forced to use the toilet so I know how it can escalate from 2 and 1/2 to 4. (the little boy wasn't mine because if he was he'd have certainly known how to use the toilet.) Anyway sorry to sound like I was attacking because now that I look at it that was rude. My apologies. :(

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