V.A.
My daughter did the same thing, and I, like you, starting thinking of ways to help her out. We started out waking her up to take her potty, the urologist said to quit, as we were not allowing her bladder to fill up, therefore causing more trouble. Also, cut out the liquids. Didn't help and wouldn't help according to another specialist. They don't wet because they drink too much. We have a wonderful, loving, happy home life, so that wasn't it either. Pediatrician tried her on meds, didn't stop her from wetting at all (and after researching the meds, I would not let her continue to take them-most are types of anti-depressants!) A lot of specialists say it is a sleep disorder that causes this and I believe them, just don't have a way of getting treatment for it in the rural location I live in. I do what the experts tell me, wait it out. They say she will outgrow it, in time....She is 7 now, wears pull-ups nightly and sometimes goes weeks without an accident, other times it is every night for a week. Oh, I also tried a reward chart (sticker for every dry night, after 7 stickers-get a prize, make it to 10, get a better prize, 20-even better, etc. This was also the "wrong" thing to do. I have found that my daughter wants to quit even more than I want her to quit. We don't pressure her is any way, we help her clean up if she wets her pullups and we treat her no differently than if she didn't wet overnight. When she goes to bed, she falls asleep hard and fast and sleeps very deeply. My sister is a sleep and respiratory therapist and states that my daughter does not go through the normal sleep patterns that she should. Neither do I and guess what. . . I wet the bed when I was little, too. She had her first sleep over and guess how surprised I was to find myself being pulled aside by two other moms to explain to me that their daughter's wear pullups and asked if I could help them change privately, etc. I took those two and my daughter to change for bed in a room away from the others (we had 11 girls there) and they were so relieved and happy to know they weren't alone! They have nothing to be ashamed of, this is not controlled by them, it is out of their control (literally). I am being patient. I can't honestly say that I will wait until she is 10 years old before trying another remedy or med, as I know it is her greatest desire to be normal, but for now I wait....Good Luck, you will find many, many, many more people out there are facing the same problem.