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well my daughter is 3 and she was really easy to potty train...my son is 2 1/2 and i'm not quite sure how to start potty training him...i think he is going to be difficult so how do i start and what are some good ways to get him to want to use the potty...is it really harded to train boys than girls...he has some interest because his sister goes but its taking the next step and going that is the hard part...anyone with boys...what did you do??

2007-08-05 01:23:52 · 18 answers · asked by jamie l 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

18 answers

I just potty trained my son and daughter and I used The Potty Stool http://www.thepottystool.com I started by just setting it at the toilet. My kids immediately climbed up on the stool and discovered that they could safely use the toilet. This got them very interested in using the toilet and they were potty trained very quickly.

It really helps boys to pee standing up so they can see what is happening and connect the sensations. The Potty Stool lets boys pee standing right into the toilet with no mess.

I like that I don't have to double the steps of potty training by training them first in a potty and then training them to stop using a potty. And not dumping and cleaning a potty each time is great. The best thing is that kids use it for years. I hope this helps you.

2007-08-05 15:38:51 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2016-04-12 23:19:06 · answer #2 · answered by isadora 3 · 0 0

I have just finished toilet training my 2.5yr old son and it was so much harder than my daughter. I think that standing is easier than sitting, it just shoots straight over the toilet seat even with a toddler seat on top.
So start with that. I put the timer on for every 30 minutes and every time it beeped I said "wee wee time" or "toilet time" .
Keep asking him if he needs to go toilet and don't use pull-ups until he is confidently using toilet. Otherwise it just feels like a nappy and he will get confused. Training (terry towelling) undies or just regular undies work well as he will feel when he has wet. Pull-ups are good for car trips when he has got some bladder control, but not quite trained, in case of accidents.
Let him watch daddy go to the toilet as this will help him as well. You can also buy a "wee man" toilet training aid for boys. Its a bowl sort thing that hangs down the side of the toilet at their level. Excellent invention. No need for a stool to stand on but he will still need to learn to poop in toilet.
The only thing though is that he will not toilet train until he is really ready.

Overall just take him every time the timer beeps, whenever daddy goes let him watch and when he plays outside, get a hand sized rock and let him pee on it. They think its hilarious!! The great thing about boys is the abilty to peepee outside whenever they HAVE to go. Buy some of his favourite character undies and just say no more nappy, you're a big boy now.
He'll do it when he's ready

2007-08-05 01:39:37 · answer #3 · answered by Cindy; mum to 3 monkeys! 7 · 0 0

I'm the oldest of 7, so I know exactly what you mean, since I have 5 younger brothers! For each of the boys we had them imitate daddy (and what ever older brothers or sister there were). i.e. "Daddy and (insert older brother name here) pee standing up because their boys. Mommy and (insert older sister name here) pee sitting down because they are girls." etc. This will at least start to get the idea planted into the kiddos head. Then after that start getting him incentives, like new toys etc. Use the daughter as an example, demonstrating that when you potty the way you're supposed to you get rewarded.

I wish you the best of luck!!!

2007-08-05 01:48:32 · answer #4 · answered by Infamous Guitar Heroine 2 · 0 0

Hey guys, The best success that I have ever had was with Bagihot Potty Training (just google it) Without a doubt the most helpful Training that I have ever tried.

2015-12-08 08:36:47 · answer #5 · answered by 海水正藍 4 · 0 0

Let him watch his daddy or grandad go to toilet and tell him when he is a big boy he will do his wee wee in the toilet like grandad/daddy. Buy him a small step so he can reach the toilet comfortably. My son never sat on the potty, but used to stand to aim in that as well.
Pooh training was a bit later and i had a seat insert fort the toilet.

2007-08-05 01:36:42 · answer #6 · answered by bri 7 · 0 0

when I was potty training my first son we started out having him sit on the potty to go and then once he got used to using the potty then he started to stand up like his dad. You can do it either way and they have products out that you can place in the toilet and have them aim at. I will probably use the same method with my second son that I did with my first for it worked very well and I had minimum messes to clean up.

2016-05-18 22:06:40 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i am going through the same thing cause i have a little boy that is almost 2 1/2. Ive been doing this now for about 3 mths. Its not that they dont want to, its just the concept of sittind down. My little boy will sit on the pot for 20 to 30 minutes at a time and wont do anything but as soon as i move him, its over. But if they feel it on themselves they will not like it. I bought my son some training pants(not pullups). He stood their long enough to have an accident on himself, and trust me they do not like the warm feeling going down thier leg. But we cant rush them, they will get it in due time.

2007-08-05 01:47:32 · answer #8 · answered by babysezy 1 · 0 0

i potty trined my son in about a week. i went to walmart and bought a small white poster board and i let him pick out some stickers that he really liked. he loved stickers. i hung the poster board in the bathroom and when ever he would pee in the potty he would get to put one sticker on it, if he pooped in the potty he would put two on it, and if he did both he would put three on it. he loved to go to the potty so he could put up the stickers and within a week he was potty trained. i still had him wear a pull up at night just incase. he was about 2 1/2 years old. you just have to find something that he is really interested in.

2007-08-05 02:11:31 · answer #9 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

I waited til mine was almost 3. He wasn't interested until then, and I don't believe in forcing it. I knew he would do it in his own time.
Check for readiness:
1. Is he telling you when he pees and poops in his diaper? Does he want you to take it off right away?
2. Can he pull his pants up and down on his own?
3. Is he waking in the morning with a dry diaper? Can his bladder hold his pee thru the night?
4. And does he want to go potty? I don't believe in forcing kids. You want it to be a positive experience, not a time when your forcing him to sit and he's crying and upset.

My son learned to pee in the potty quite easily. He was almost 2 weeks pooping in his underwear. He was nervous of the toilet, but he knew he was pooping, because he'd run to a corner in his room every time. (Hiding). So I knew he knew he had to go, he was just afraid.

We used stickers and a sticker poster on the back of the bathroom door. His daddy drew a poster of him sitting on the toilet, and entitled it "Potty Time." Then he drew about 100 squares all around the perimeter of the poster. Every time my son peed on the toilet we gave him a sticker for the poster. As for poop, something he didn't want to do..I filled a gift bag with little toys and treats(Kinder eggs)..so when he pooped he'd get to pick a surprise out of that bag. Eventually he was trying to poop so he could get one.
Worked just fine.

It was only one week learning to pee when he said, "I don't need a sticker, I'm a big boy now." BUT, he needed the sweets and treats after he pooped for about a month..haha But we didn't mind. We even gave him a treat before meal time, just to keep up the encouragement. (Only if he went poopy, of course!)
He hasn't had a poop accident since(about 3 months ago), but has had a few accidents with pee..which we expect.

Good luck :)

2007-08-05 01:39:17 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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