I understand your dilemma! Our son went through a similar phase in potty training because he thought it was easier. It's a learning process but you have to push a little to get them there. In our son's case it became a battle of wills for a bit because he insisted on using the diaper and we said "no more diapers" so he went in pull ups for awhile. Then we took pullups away and he deliberately stood in front of his father one day and pooped...he stopped pooping his pants that day because dad made him clean it up..helped him but made him do the work and the whole time made a big deal about how naughty it was to make so much work for other people when he was big enough to go himself. (Yes he did get some guilt for it..he was doing it because he got the individual attention from dad or mom when he got changed..takes longer to change a poopy diaper than a wet one). SO, Dad basically told him that no more..from now on he was going to deal with it himself and no more babying and changing diapers. When he understood his dad or I was not going to help him out with the diaper thing anymore..he quit pooping his pants. We had a couple of "incidents" after but simply led him to the bathroom and silently went about helping HIM clean it up. Sometimes that involved a bath or shower, and sometimes it took longer but we made no attempt to praise him for it, or punish him for it. He simply had to "deal " with it as a responsibility because he chose to do that. Time to hold HIM accountable it seems and make pooping in the potty part of his responsibilities as a young boy and not a baby anymore that needs diapering. Yes, you do still involve yourself in cleaning up the mess..sometimes it creates a little more work in fact but if you can do it and not have to deal with it for long...(work is hard and it is harder to get cleaned up from pooping a diaper than in the potty). If he knows this and has to do more than just "lie there" while you change him then he might get bored and start using the potty just to make it "easier" for him LOL. I don't know it worked for us..of course it did help that my son did something so drastic as to use it as "punishment" (lol) to us for something he didn't like and he did it in front of his dad...(even bigger lol..you shoulda seen the look on HIS face". That boy is lucky he isn't still scrubbing. (and he's 10 now..doing fine..) You can start more subtly perhaps and just start making a big deal about how nice it would be if he would poop in the potty because this is so much work (sigh, whine moan) and he's getting so big its hard to deal with, (sigh whine moan) and make it all in all a less pleasent experience for him getting changed. Do it as quickly as possible..or maybe not. If he wears disposables..make him get dressed himself..he is old enough to know how to stick his legs into the pants holes (if he wears pullups he should be putting those on himself too). Make him stand up and pull it all up and straighten it out for him. Then act (even if you are fit as a fiddle) as though the whole process is tiring for you and you must rest for a bit before doing something else with him. The first time he poops in the potty..when he's finished and dressed and all that find something to do with him that you often tell him "I don't have time" right now. That would be a great reward for him. Show him that the time you spend with him can be different time it doesn't have to be "no time" just because he's not in diapers..he can still have that time ...doing something more fun than a diaper change! Once my son learned that clean up was easier if done in the potty, and it took less time from the things he wanted to do..he was all for it really.