5 WAYS TO POTTY TRAINING GIRLS and BOYS
Potty training girls can work well with boys too. That is, if you can make your boy sit on the pot, too, when he pees. If you can, then it means less spluttered urine on the toilet bowl seat. If you cannot, then you can choose from lifting the pot to catch his pee or readily set up the pot to an elevated spot high enough to catch his pee. Take note also that how well trained your kids are when it comes to pees and poos, very much reflect the personality of the trainer himself.
The following potty training points have been established from experience and found to be very effective.
1. Potty training must start from birth.
Yes, you can arm your baby with the most comfortable diaper you can find in the market but please buy also the most suitable trainer potty together with your baby's wardrobe. Every time she wakes up for her milk, take off the diaper and put her butt on the pot making sure her skin is in contact with the pot. Newborns usually make pee and poo every time they wake up. The day will come when she cannot make pee if she cannot feel the cold pot put against her butt skin.
2. Use the same pot
If possible, all throughout the training period except when it is broken enough not to hold your kid's pees and poos. You'll notice how children cling to 'their personal' properties and how these properties mold them as they grow.
3. Carry your kid's pot anywhere she goes.
It's not bringing his/her pot everywhere all your life. In fact, you must not let him/her know that you are bringing her pot along. The pot only comes to view like magic when you feel that the toilet facilities in the place that you went to is hygienically unacceptable or is extremely uncomfortable for your child.
4. Establish a fixed time for pees and poos.
Ask your pediatrician how many pees are normal at certain ages of children and make your schedule making that as your reference. Most doctors prescribe a once-a-day regular moving. Prompt your kid to do the 'activity' (even if she cannot and will not) according to your schedule. You'll be surprised one day that she can do it perfectly without your prompting.
5. Acclimatize your kid
with the bathroom and the toilet bowl as soon as she begins understanding all the other things surrounding her. Offer her your alternative and give her a free choice every time and you'll see that her curiosity will bring her voluntarily to use the toilet bowl in lieu of her favorite potty one unexpected day.
These effective potty training was established from a mother's experience. It will save you money, time, and effort ( including embarrassment when your kid cannot hold her pees and poos on inappropriate time and in unexpected places).
The following potty training points have been established from experience and found to be very effective.
1. Potty training must start from birth.
Yes, you can arm your baby with the most comfortable diaper you can find in the market but please buy also the most suitable trainer potty together with your baby's wardrobe. Every time she wakes up for her milk, take off the diaper and put her butt on the pot making sure her skin is in contact with the pot. Newborns usually make pee and poo every time they wake up. The day will come when she cannot make pee if she cannot feel the cold pot put against her butt skin.
2. Use the same pot
If possible, all throughout the training period except when it is broken enough not to hold your kid's pees and poos. You'll notice how children cling to 'their personal' properties and how these properties mold them as they grow.
3. Carry your kid's pot anywhere she goes.
It's not bringing his/her pot everywhere all your life. In fact, you must not let him/her know that you are bringing her pot along. The pot only comes to view like magic when you feel that the toilet facilities in the place that you went to is hygienically unacceptable or is extremely uncomfortable for your child.
4. Establish a fixed time for pees and poos.
Ask your pediatrician how many pees are normal at certain ages of children and make your schedule making that as your reference. Most doctors prescribe a once-a-day regular moving. Prompt your kid to do the 'activity' (even if she cannot and will not) according to your schedule. You'll be surprised one day that she can do it perfectly without your prompting.
5. Acclimatize your kid
with the bathroom and the toilet bowl as soon as she begins understanding all the other things surrounding her. Offer her your alternative and give her a free choice every time and you'll see that her curiosity will bring her voluntarily to use the toilet bowl in lieu of her favorite potty one unexpected day.
These effective potty training was established from a mother's experience. It will save you money, time, and effort ( including embarrassment when your kid cannot hold her pees and poos on inappropriate time and in unexpected places).
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