just started with my 3 year old son!! thought it was gonna be a nightmare but it isn't he hasn't wet yet and tonight is his 4th night I'm really chuffed all i did was from tea time till bed only let him have sips of drink then told him the baby's needed his nappies now because hes a big boy and i let him pack his nappies away! before he went into bed i put him on the toilet i found about 1.30-2am he needs to go again so i set my alarm get him on the toilet but keep the lighting really low and no noise so they don't wake up to much there still dozing if you don't make sudden movements and then they should go through till the morning
good luck
whichever why you try i hope it works for you xxx
2007-02-18 08:54:15
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answer #1
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answered by sara d 1
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Copied and pasted from another thread with the same question:
Bedwetting isn't really your issue unless you make it yours. It's your daughter's issue, and she likely just isn't physically mature enough yet to stay dry during the night. If you send her to bed in panties, expect, and accept, that she will likely wake up wet and you will have laundry to do. Or put her in pull-ups, and accept that she won't be dry at night until her body is *able* to be dry at night. There's nothing wrong with her; ask around and you will find out how common nighttime wetting is.
If your daughter gets to grade school and it seems to be affecting her self-esteem that she is wetting the bed still, *then* it might be time to find some type of outward solution for her. As long as she's not made to feel ashamed of it, though, it shouldn't be an issue for her. Why *should* a child feel ashamed of something they have no control over?
FWIW, two of my six children (so far-- the youngest is just now potty-learning and not dry at night yet either) have been night-wetters. One, a boy, outgrew it during his kindergarten year. He came to me one day and said he didn't want to wear pull-ups any more. Although I'd tried several approaches several times (including limiting evening beverages and waking him up in the middle of the night to use the toilet), this time it worked. All I can guess is that he willed himself to wake up and use the potty instead of wetting. He was old enough, physically ready, and emotionally determined, and it worked.
The other is my 5 y/o daughter, who will start kindergarten this fall. She still wears her pull-ups, and I've never made her feel like she's any different than the other kids. I've been telling her lately though that bigger kids learn to wake themselves up when it's time to potty, and she has been trying! She's had a few successes, which we praise because it *is* an accomplishment, but there is no negative reaction to a wet pull-up. I know it would be nice if she were dry, but it's just not something I have much control over in the end. I think she's getting close to having dry nights now, but even if she isn't, I don't plan to make an issue of it until it actually becomes an issue for *her*. Until then, it's not really an "issue" at all.
2007-02-18 06:21:47
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answer #2
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answered by LaundryGirl 4
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Some ideas to try:
1. No liquids after 2 hours before bedtime
2. Take her to the bathroom before you go to bed at night
3. Putting a night light in her bedroom and in the hall, so she can see if she needs to go to the bathroom at night.
4. Continue using the special nappies, so they are easier for her to get down if she starts going by herself.
5. If needed get up in the middle of the night and take her to the bathroom.
It might also be possible that she will continue to wet the bed at night for awhile, especially if one or both of her parents were bed wetters.
2007-02-18 07:26:29
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answer #3
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answered by Aumatra 4
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my daughter is the same age, she has been potty trained just before she was two, but no luck with bed times, we've Tried not giving her drink 2 hours before bed and getting her out twice in the night to go to the loo, we have even tried just taking her nappy off completely at night but that didn't work ither, i spoke to my health visitor and she told me at the age of 3 and a half it is very difficult for a child to be dry at night as when she sleeps she is in a very deep sleep almost impossible to wake up, the reason it's so difficult to get her dry is because a chemical in children's brains that wakes them up during the night when the need to go the the toilet and children don't get this chemical until they are about 5 or 6. my cousins didn't come out of nappies at night until they were 5 & 6. hope you understood all of that, good luck.
2007-02-18 08:13:49
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answer #4
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answered by Dreamah 3
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2016-06-02 15:59:44
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answer #5
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answered by Chloe 2
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2016-04-15 09:16:54
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answer #6
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answered by ? 3
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Unfortunately you may just have to wait it out. I think that with girls, it takes longer for there bladder and other things to develop. My daughter wore pull-ups to bed until she was 4. Even when she did wet the bed, she slept so hard that it didn't wake her up. When she turned 4 she just decided that she was a big girl and didn't need them anymore. She has done fine ever since. It may just take her time to decide she's ready. My co-worker's daughter wore them through 1st or 2nd grade. Don't get discouraged.
2007-02-18 06:24:04
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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With my daughter, I just kept on moving her last drink and hour earlier and I would go in and get her up at 2am and take her potty just in case and only did that a few days and she never wet.. she used pull ups and didnt rely on them!
good luck
2007-02-18 06:19:45
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answer #8
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answered by nataliiee1 2
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I'm so glad you asked this question i have a 3 year old boy and am going through the exact same. i used the pull ups but he just associates them with nappies. so i just bit the bullet so to speak, and used proper pants. been through loads of washing but slowly he is getting the hang of it. you just have to be really patient with them and never get angry. good luck
2007-02-20 07:27:27
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answer #9
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answered by ♥♥Cat Lady♥♥ 5
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Before going to bed myself I used to take mine to the toilet tell them to have a wee and put them straight back into bed. They were half asleep and drifted straight back to sleep. Keep the lights dim and dont talk to her too much. Also make a really big fuss of her if she stays dry all night, but dont mention it if she wets the bed.
2007-02-19 01:34:32
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answer #10
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answered by leisa 2
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