It had become such a universally
accepted concept that I could recite it long before I had any children of my
own: Girls are easier to potty train. There was a myriad of reasons offered for
this phenomenon. They mature faster. They were less fascinated by the process.
They maintained the same seated posture for all forms of egress.
Like most people, I accepted this
without question. So, after struggling to get our son potty-trained I looked
forward to what I expected to be smooth transition for our daughter. In my
mind, it would go something like this:
Sweetie, for reasons both hygienic and financial, it is time that you cease to wet and soil yourself and use the toilet.
Okay father, I had arrived at the same conclusion and now seems to be a developmentally-appropriate time.
Love you honey! Let me know if I need to replenish the bathroom tissue.
For a brief moment, it almost
seemed like that was where we were headed. Around the age of 2, she would ask
to sit on the toilet and proceed to pantomime all of the motions of emptying
one’s bladder. She would even request a modest square of toilet paper and flush
it. Although she was not actually peeing during any of this, it already felt
like a victory.
My wife and I told ourselves that
the hard part was done and that the actual emptying of the bladder was just
around the corner. This went on for months. Sit on toilet. Pretend to pee.
Wipe. Pull pants up. Flush. Wash Hands. Hose down Pampers.
We had a contingency plan for this:
big girl underwear. We would simply remove the convenience of a diaper or
pull-up and she would be forced to use the restroom. This was not nearly as
successful as we had hoped.
She would still pee in her pants
and was heartbreakingly conscientious about it (“I make pee-pee in kitchen”).
She has gotten much better and actually does a pretty good job now.
Her reward for urinating in the toilet is 2 store-brand miniature marshmallows.
I am certain that upcoming scientific studies will find our reward system to be
deeply-flawed (reward with sugar, sudden onset of type 2 diabetes, glucose
build-up leads to excessive thirst which results in increased urination and
more sugar rewards, etc.) but it seemed to be the most reasonable motivation
that we could find.
We have had a modest amount of
success with this technique and her batting average is pretty respectable. The
real challenge is when it is time for her “yucky poo-poo snake” to make an
appearance.
The books and experts all tell you
the same thing: catch a “big job” in progress and immediately place them on the
toilet for the second half. Eventually, they will associate sitting on the
toilet with pooping and will voluntarily got to the restroom to release the
colon kraken.
The implementation of this strategy
with my son had required very little effort as he had no bowel-movement poker
face. He would cease his current activity, descend into a half-squat and assume
the conflicted facial expression of someone being offered an extended warranty
on a new couch. Even his denials were grunted in the unmistakable cadence of
someone putting in work.
My daughter, on the other hand, is
a defecation ninja. She can silently make a deposit in a pull-up with no
discernible shift in posture. On at least one occasion, I am 99% sure she was
looking me dead in the eye while singing “Let It Go” and doing just that. She
will even deploy decoy flatulence to throw us off. I cannot tell you how many
times we have smelled something and run her to the bathroom only to be
presented with nary a skid mark.
Even the seasoned professionals at
her daycare are miffed. They have confessed that they cannot get a read on her.
Most kids will slip away to a corner in shame or openly grimace. Not my baby
girl; she will soil herself with the breezy efficiency of Jamie Lee Curtis at
the tail-end of an Activia challenge. My father has suggested we sweeten the pot with a higher reward. I am close to offering her half of our pull-up budget in cash because I would still come out ahead.
I never quite mastered the status of Potty Trainer Pro. I felt your pain but, I can assure you, they will be relatively trained by 9 & 11. #thestruggle
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