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My 4 year old keeps peeing his pants and says its because he doesnt want to stop what he is doing to go potty. How do I stop this? And is this related to me returning to work recently and his routine being interupted?

2007-03-31 13:55:55 · 16 answers · asked by Princess 2 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

He is ALREADY potty trained but is acting out with peeing his pants. How do I make this change?

2007-03-31 14:03:22 · update #1

He has been potty trained for 2 years, its not a question of how to potty train him. He is doing this because he is acting out. He did the same thing a year ago when we moved countries, but now he is older im not sure how to handle it. Nothing seems to be working.

2007-03-31 14:07:15 · update #2

Its nothing to do with me being on the computer, as he cant see me on here when he is in bed. Clearly the person who thinks this doesnt have kids. CHANGE affects kids. DUH! Handling the situation is more difficult than watching like a hawk.

2007-03-31 15:54:56 · update #3

If you dont have kids dont PLEASE dont bother adding your stupid comments.

2007-03-31 15:59:08 · update #4

I was at home with my children for years and THATS why ME LEAVING affected them. My Husband is ALSO military and has left on numerous deployments but he wasnt the one at home 24/7 with them. When you are a stay at home mom its a bit different leaving your children than someone they are used to coming in and out of the house.

2007-03-31 16:03:19 · update #5

Thanks for the attempt but I dont want your advice. I dont know you and you dont know me or my situation.

2007-03-31 16:05:21 · update #6

16 answers

It could possibly be. Sometimes when children have a sudden change in there life they tend to regress. Go back to acting like a younger child, in order for things to go back to normal. This will eventually stop. For now all you can do is reassure him that you love him and are there for him even though he is having a hard time right now. My 4 year old started doing the same thing and his pre-school teacher said he is regressing because we are about to have a new baby. Its very normal and it will get better. Good Luck!

2007-03-31 14:06:16 · answer #1 · answered by Katie12 2 · 3 1

I don't have kids, but I do have experiences of my own so I will try to help. I was the exact same way when I was young. Always having too much fun and thinking I could hold it just a little bit longer. As I got older, my bladder started giving up to where I didn't know that I had to go until it was too late. This can become a serious and lasting problem if nothing is done. I remember once having a little device that gave me a slight shock the moment I became wet. It really didn't hurt but was uncomfortable so I rushed to the bathroom every time it went off. I believe it would have worked for me had my mom made sure I had it on regularly, but she didn't and things got worse. Something to that affect may be an idea for your child, I don't know. Otherwise, I suggest taking him to a pediatric urologist; however, don't simply settle for medication as I was given. Make sure they offer a plan that will help his mind and not only his bladder.

2007-03-31 16:46:15 · answer #2 · answered by ssenkniplufiseehc 2 · 0 1

I did the reward system with my daughter and talked to her about being a "big girl." The one thing that REALLY worked like a charm was that I bought a Baby Alive, fed it a bottle, sat it on the potty, and when the water came out, I hugged it and said what a big girl the doll was and praised it, etc. My daughter pushed that doll off the potty with attitude on got on it. When she would have accidents, I would NEVER, EVER, EVER scold her or yell at her or say any unkind or harsh words. Instead, I used sympathy. I told her that I was so sorry that this happened and that I would help her with her problem. I told her that it takes a lot of courage and strength to not pee in your pants and that some adults couldn't even do it. But I knew that she could and we would try again. Always hug him and tell him you love him and that you will help him overcome this problem.

Good luck!

2007-03-31 14:09:37 · answer #3 · answered by ? 6 · 0 1

I ahve a 4.5 year old and a 2.5 year old son. Just show him compassion and patience that is all he really wants from you by his actions. You may be nervous going back to work and he may not like the change it has in his life. When you clean him be loving and gentle to him give him the extra babying he may be looking for. That is what I would do. Maybe even at other times hold him in a chair all snuggled and read him a book or eat a snack like that with him. He just needs to feel security. \
Good luck and he'll be fine soon enough.

2007-03-31 16:20:33 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

What ever you do, don't punish him for this behavior. That will urge him to either continue it or resort to something more violent. What I suggest as a mother of a 4 year old myself is to restrict him to 15 minutes of play at a time. between make him sit on the toilet for 10 minutes. He will eventually change his mind and just go to the bathroom so he is not interrupted by you every 15 minutes. I suggest using a timer with this... tell him if he doesn't want to stop what hes doing, mommy will have to remind him and set a time for him to go... and you should reward all toddler good behavior to reinforce it.

2007-03-31 14:36:52 · answer #5 · answered by Karen M 1 · 1 1

I m a concerned single dad! My son is also 4 and has been doing the same thing to get what he wants! Unfortunately his mother decided she wanted a divorce when he was around 2. I don t care what any doctor or psychologist says, kids that young still understand something isn t right. He to this day ask about why we don t live together and want mommy and daddy to get married. It breaks my heart, because it wasn t my idea and see him like this. Any input if anyone thinks this is contributing, or just a phase?
Thanks,
Concerned Daddy

2016-08-30 15:23:14 · answer #6 · answered by Bret 1 · 0 0

Has he done this always or just since you went back to work? If its just since you went back to work, it probably is very stressful for him. Maybe if you really talked to him about how he feels about his daycare, his new acquaintances, his new routine, you might get at the root of it. He may just have something very deep on his mind that he can't deal with.

It probably wouldn't be a bad idea to take him to the doctor to see if its a medical reason such as infection or something.

2007-03-31 14:09:50 · answer #7 · answered by BekindtoAnimals22 7 · 0 0

It isn't anything bad. He just doesn't seem to have learned to want to go potty, so give him a good reason to go. And praise for when he does! I wasn't fully able to stop wetting the bed [I know, random] until I was almost 10. Sad, but true. Anyway, he just doesn't have any motivation to get up and do it, so give him some motivation! =D

2007-03-31 14:04:35 · answer #8 · answered by [karleyy.] [˙ʎʎǝlɹɐʞ] 4 · 0 1

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2016-05-31 00:17:17 · answer #9 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

1

2017-03-02 00:55:24 · answer #10 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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