How to SUCCESSFULLY Potty Train your child in five hours or less - even if your child is resistant, and you've tried other methods before! Get it now!
I think babies have different speed of development. There are babies who are able to start sitting and walking as early as 6 months and there are those who start too late and are others unfortunate not to. So I guess you should start from there.
I myself started potty training my kids as early as 1 so they are able to go by their own when they reach I also taught them how to wash and clean themselves so they’re doing good now. So I think that’s it, you have to know your child whether s/he can learn it already. Training him or her little by little and making him/her understand what s/he’s doing can also help him/her to be a good and industrious person.
S/he will be able to apply to him/herself the right way to do things when s/he has grown up. As to when should parent should start getting worried, I think when he's 3-4 years old already and he's still not able to go to the toilet by him/herself. But you should not wait until 3.As long as the child is healthy then you should start as late as 2.
To get professional advice, you can check this website written by professionals. They tell you all about potty training and when you should start worrying. Excellent information.
Keep Kids Healthy keepkidshealthy.com/parenting_tips/potty... Have fun!
Consider potty training your child between 2 years old and 3 1/2 years old. Depending on the child, they may take to it earlier, or later. I think that if a child reaches school age and is not nearly completely potty trained (the occasional accident) then the parent should be worried.
Much like any other learning activity that a child has to endure, potty training can be stressful and even traumatic in some children. It does not seem to be a terrible event for the baby to pee in the potty chair, it is just water to them, and does not seem too bad, however when they do (#2) it can be disturbing and a little scary. In any case, if your child does not show understanding of the process it is too early to teach them.
When the child begins taking off their diaper because it is wet, or bringing you one to change them, they know they've gone to the bathroom.
I had three children and also an in home daycare for 6 years. I have potty-trained many children both boys and girls at various ages and emotional development. I truly believe that children are far more ready to be potty trained at an earlier age than most diaper companies would like you to believe.
I found that between the ages of 18 months to two years old was the best age for most children. They are well aware of when the need to go “potty� And not quite so independent that it becomes a war.
I also believe that with the advance technology of disposable diapers a child rarely feels wet or uncomfortable, therefore why bother. If you would like to see your child out of diapers before the age of two, I would suggest getting them a potty chair or two and leaving them in convenient locations. Somewhere were they can quickly sit down.
I would also leave them bottomless so that they are fully aware of the need to go to the bathroom and won’t get hung up trying to take off the diaper. Yes, you may have to clean up a puddle or two, but believe me, a fully potty-trained child is well worth the effort.
I had three children and also an in home daycare for 6 years. I have potty-trained many children both boys and girls at various ages and emotional development. I truly believe that children are far more ready to be potty trained at an earlier age than most diaper companies would like you to believe.
I found that between the ages of 18 months to two years old was the best age for most children. They are well aware of when the need to go “potty” and not quite so independent that it becomes a war. I also believe that with the advance technology of disposable diapers a child rarely feels wet or uncomfortable, therefore why bother.
If you would like to see your child out of diapers before the age of two, I would suggest getting them a potty chair or two and leaving them in convenient locations. Somewhere were they can quickly sit down. I would also leave them bottomless so that they are fully aware of the need to go to the bathroom and won’t get hung up trying to take off the diaper.
Yes, you may have to clean up a puddle or two, but believe me, a fully potty-trained child is well worth the effort. I had three children and also an in home daycare for 6 years. I have potty-trained many children both boys and girls at various ages and emotional development.
I truly believe that children are far more ready to be potty trained at an earlier age than most diaper companies would like you to believe. I found that between the ages of 18 months to two years old was the best age for most children. They are well aware of when the need to go “potty” and not quite so independent that it becomes a war.
I also believe that with the advance technology of disposable diapers a child rarely feels wet or uncomfortable, therefore why bother. If you would like to see your child out of diapers before the age of two, I would suggest getting them a potty chair or two and leaving them in convenient locations. Somewhere were they can quickly sit down.
I would also leave them bottomless so that they are fully aware of the need to go to the bathroom and won’t get hung up trying to take off the diaper. Yes, you may have to clean up a puddle or two, but believe me, a fully potty-trained child is well worth the effort.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.