Photo by: Todd Morris

Emotionally Intelligent Potty Training

Photo by: Todd Morris

C’mon parents! Are you buying that Batman or Barbie underwear for your kids or for that aching need in your own heart to purge the Pamper? Admit it! You are over the diaper! But, “gasp”, what if your tinkling toddler isn’t?

The internet contains countless pleas from fraught parents wanting to potty train their toddlers. Timelines vary from a single day to a more leisurely schedule counting up to the first day of preschool. Aaarrgh! Can’t those preschools change a diaper? Why must kids be potty trained to enter? Don’t parents have enough pressure?!

I like to reach out to these parent predicaments with an emotional intelligence perspective that promotes peace and practical policy to the potty. Whoa, lots of p’s in that sentence. Now let’s get some “pee” out of your kid! Here is what I recently shared with a parent who asked on the internet for help.

But first my disclaimer! How any parent pursues potty training their child is their own choice. You have the right to accomplish it in a day (as some books promise) and to cover your child from head to toe with stickers. With respect for my readers, my purpose is not to tell you what to do, but to share ideas that you can pick and choose from. Most importantly, I am an advocate for emotional intelligence skills in children. Potty training is a huge milestone with an array of emotions, and I believe it can, and should, be accomplished with a child’s self esteem intact if not outwardly enhanced.

For reasons you’ll understand in #3, I’ll use “he” for the remainder of this blog! No offense to the girls!

1. Many parents view potty training solely as a physical task and innocently forget their child’s deep feelings or emotions on the subject. The first step for your child to be emotionally intelligent is for him to be aware of his feelings. Parents are the perfect people to promote this awareness, and also promote the self management of those feelings (which is the second step). Allow for expression of feelings and be cautious about forcing or bribing your child to use the potty before he is emotionally or physically ready (more on this later). According to experts (including pediatrician T. Berry Brazleton), there are other strategies to try first.

2. Buy him a potty seat of his own. Take him to the store with you and let him pick out one he likes. If you need to stay within a budget, give him a choice of two or three and let him choose from those. This will help to get his emotional buy in and build his own excitement. A child of any age is more likely to work toward a goal if it he is involved in all its aspects as opposed to being instructed what to do. And while you’re shopping, let him choose his big boy underwear too. Let him know his opinion matters. With these steps you are also exposing your child to basic decision making skills and promoting this aspect of his independence.

3. Invite him in to the bathroom whenever you or your spouse use it. Take his potty in with you and ask him if he would like to try too. Whenever possible, allow him to make the choice instead of making him follow your command. This gives him ownership of his decisions, and potentially a sense of pride. Let him observe you and take his time to process those observations. Be prepared for a question about “size” if he notices that dad is bigger than him. This is normal and parents can simply point out that all of daddy’s body parts are bigger!

4. Many children have the emotion of fear when flushing because of the loud sound, but mostly because they are afraid of losing a part of themselves, especially when they see a formed “poop” exit their body! Some kids are so scared that they hold poops for days and spur on constipation. Of course common sense tells us to soothe our child’s fears. Remember however that it’s not what you say but how you say it. Soothe him and comfort his emotional health by soliciting his questions and lovingly alleviating his fears or other negative emotions. Sometimes it helps to point out that animals (including your own pets) also “poop” and that this is normal for all living creatures. A great book to read together is called “Everyone Poops”.

5. Encourage your child when he TRIES as well as when he succeeds. If he is successful in using the potty, congratulate him but be careful not to overdo the praise. And please do not scold! If for some reason his body is not able to cooperate with his efforts, you don’t want him to feel bad about it, or make him feel that he is disappointing mom, dad, or himself. A child’s confidence and self esteem must be built at this age, not dented by disappointments or indirect demoralization because he cannot pee or poop on command. Your child wants to be a “big kid” and is trying hard. Do not mistake any inability as a child’s defiance or a challenge to your parental authority. A toddler cannot necessarily articulate his emotions of frustration with himself or with external situations / people, so he will need your help. Ask him about his feelings, help him with labeling his feelings with words, and give him the necessary support. This is a fundamental approach that parents can use to build emotional intelligence in their kids.

6. As far as using stickers or other incentives, I’m wary because of what I mentioned above. A child has to be ready to perform a big task like bladder/bowel control. This readiness has to be both on a physical level and an emotional level. Not being able to “earn” a sticker because this readiness hasn’t developed, or because he regressed, just doesn’t seem fair. Loving encouragement, heartfelt congratulations, nurturing hugs, and patience are the best gifts a parent can give a child who is working hard to gain physical control and emotional independence.

If you are planning to or are currently potty training consider giving yourselves plenty of time before preschool deadlines and be ready for accidents or even full regression. This can be triggered by a new baby, preschool trauma, major household changes, or by something as simple as a strenuous day, fatigue, or deep sleep. Solicit your child’s emotions, and assure and comfort him if this happens. Realize that some kids will accommodate teachers at school but not parents at home. Rest assured that your child will not be in diapers when they are 20 and that this moment in time shall pass. No pun intended!

Keyuri Joshi RN, MSN, is a Certified Parenting and Emotional Intelligence Coach. A “personal trainer” for parents, Keyuri assists moms or dads build and use a toolbox to achieve any goals they desire. She also teaches parents to build emotional and social intelligence skills in children. These are research proven “must have” skills which schools do not teach.

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45 Comments

I am currently using the Iphone App Potty Predictor. My son is 24 months and is doing great! We are on day #4 of potty training. The app not only gives you customized timers to use the potty, but it actually records and analyzes all potty habits, then predicts when he or she will have to use the potty. It has reward systems for successes and trying and gives motivation for accidents. Check it out!

What about a 5yr old who still poops in her pants (because her lazy mother told her it was ok) & pees in her bed!! I am soon to be the step parent & this is driving her father & I nuts! Her mother who has physical custody of her blames all of the daughters mistakes & faults on us! We have her every other weekend. She has her every day! The mom is too lazy to make her sit on the toilet till she goes...

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I loved the article and completely agree because each child is different and the emotional side of them plays just as big a role as the physical side of what they are doing. So in response to Katie's blog: while you've done well on potty training your own kids and done well at praising yourself for your ability, I feel sorry for you...

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the earlier the better, that way it's not "training", it's just something they are already so familiar with. there are a few books out there with various terms, but you can just make up the way that feels comfortable to you. we started at 3 months, by about 7 months when they can sit up, you can just sit them on a floor potty and when they go, make a sound. if they go,great, if not, you don't make it a big deal. it saves so much money, good for the environment, prevents diaper rash, etc..!

I am trying to potty train my daughter. She is 2 and a half years. She showed signs of readiness with the babysitter when I was working tax season. My hours are very long and by the time I get home and help my son with homework, I was exhausted. When tax season came to an end we started on it a whole month solid. She has tinkled but not a full pee or poop. I took her when she squatted to poop-nothing. I put her on the potty every 45 minutes sometimes sooner than that...

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CLOTH DIAPERS!! Potty training is REALLY fast if they are in cloth 24/7. My youngest trained HERSELF completely @ 18 months--day & night. We would have fights over panties, diapers or pull-ups (I didn't trust her to remember to ask go potty if we weren't at home--but she was SO over diapers!!) Yes, she had a few accidents, but no more than a handful.

Here is the part I don't get... "take kids to the store and allow them to pick out the potty, underpants too...' This statement implies the child is rather old, to have such an opinion.
We bought my son a potty at 12 months, and while I didn't expect him to use it right then, we placed it in the bathroom, so it was ready when he was-- no big, scary introduction of a new contraption later on...

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I am responding to a comment left by Katie on August 25........
I am very happy to hear that you are "super mom" and can have all three of your children potty trained before age 3. My son is 3 1/2 and still is not potty trained and that is not because I am lazy either. I set a timer and put him on the potty every 40 minutes or so. I read stories to him while he sits on the potty...

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My daughter is just now 2 1/2 and she has had a potty in our bathroom since she was 18 months. She has used it on and off over the course of a year. Just recently she has actually been telling me she needs to pee and we go on the potty. She has been dry for 3 days straight. It didn't feel natural to me to do it in a certain time frame. It just happened when she was ready. Every child is different, so I don't think you can have one approach...

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Ok interesting article...I am unfortunately at my wits end as I have read several articles and bought countless numbers of books on this subject...Nothing is working...I did the Potty Bootcamp every ten minutes...My daughter is almost 3 and she will have days where she wont do anything in her pull up&she'll tell me she has to go to the bathroom, but then there are days where she is arms length from the potty and she'll stand there&pee in my floor!Or sometimes she'll pee in the potty and as soon as I reward her and go to get her treat, she pees again on the floor!What am i to do still give her the treat for peeing in the potty or correct for peeing on the floor after first peeing in the potty...sooo confused!I need help seriously!Pull ups are more expensive and less quantity then diapers!I tried doing panties all day except for naps and nighttime but like i said she'll do good one day and then if she gets mad she'll pee on the floor so to me seems as if its done on purpose...im frazzled(sp ck) single mom of 2! Any advice???

This blog, unfortunately, limits itself to a rather vague application of "emotional intelligence" as applied to potty training, and succeeded in "losing" a few responders. Too bad; I'm frequently startled to see some people's knee-jerk reactions to terms that apparently seem too alternative, too soft, too something. So a few parents attack or dismiss without taking the time to find out what it means...

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My son, who is 2 yrs/3 months, is completely physically ready to potty train during the day. Often, before I take his diaper off before bath or bed, he'll say "Wait a minute, I have to go pee first." But he is COMPLETELY averse to sitting on the potty. He has sat 4 times with clothes on, and at least 2 of those, peed in his diaper and asked if its going in the potty...

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I thought this was a good post. I am contemplating potty training with my 2 yr. old and am trying to learn everything I can before we start! Thanks!
http://dramamamadaily.blogspot.com/

I have done EVERYTHING suggested since 18months. My 3yr old confessed to me today that he is JUST NOT READY to use the potty. He might use it on a good day if he is totally naked but the second any article of clothing goes on his body it is like his bowls release instantly. Now what do I do? FRUSTRATED WITH THE POTTY MAMMA.

I don't think I completely agree with the article since I started Elimination Communication with my son when he was 7 months old. The concept for me was really about making it part of his daily routine. No emotions around it.
EC for me is about awareness of his bodily functions. We bought a potty for him to sit on. I was aware of the signs and signals he would make when pooping or peeing. After a while, I got to know when he needed to go by faces he made and look he had when bearing down...

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