My son would have practically no accidents if we stayed home all day, every day. He started wearing underwear last Monday, and he has only had two accidents at home...one I think his tummy hurt, and he just didn't know what to do about it. The other was a case of us waiting too long to get him to a potty, and he was about ten seconds from being on it when he couldn't wait anymore.
How do you get them to go potty in public? My son can hold it for quite some time, but he refuses to go in public. For now it works OK because MDO just ended today (he had accidents three out of the four days he was there in underwear), and we can stay home more. But I don't want to be stuck at home! I have taken him into one public restroom in the last two weeks, and he looked petrified. The other times I have asked, he always says he doesn't have to go.
Any tips to make it less intimidating other than just keep trying?
Re: Potty training expertise needed!
Mine are 5 and 3 and they still always tell me they don't have to go, every single time I ask. It may take some time before he feels comfortable going potty in a public bathroom. Potty training is very much a process, so you could try getting him to go right before you leave the house, do a short outing, then come home to potty. This at least will reinforce learning how to hold it.
I can remember just putting mine in a pull-up if I knew we needed to be gone for a long time and I was going someplace where bathrooms were hard to come by. I can't tell you the number of times the girls have had accidents in public places though! It's all part of the process but I found it to be nerve wracking.
I know CharlotteL kept a little potty in the back of her car that her kids could use if needed. Something like that might give you peace of mind when you're out and about.
Is he scared or just stubborn?
If the autoflush scares him, you can put toilet paper over the sensor to keep it from going off. Definitely have him flush the toilet even if you're the only one using it, just to get used to the sound.
If he's scared he's going to fall in, you can squat in front of him and hold the small of his back (which is what I did) or you can sit behind him or have him sit backwards on the toilet.
If he's just being stubborn, tell him he doesn't have to pee, but he has to sit on it and try (9 times out of 10, DD will go if she actually sits down!)
I also keep a cheap IKEA potty in my car for when she just has to go and we're still in the mall parking lot or whatever. We use it less these days, but it still gets used. And it's nice to have when we're at the park for hours where there is no bathroom.
I sure did. Joshua was petrified of big potties and just flat out would not use them. Eventually he grew out of it and we haven't needed it. Gabriel refused to use anything but a big potty. Crazy kids.
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