Showing posts with label Speech and Language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Speech and Language. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 07, 2014

Potty Training



I've heard people say, "When a child's ready to potty train, it'll be easy." We have been in the potty training mode for well over a year now. Probably close to two years to be honest. Gus was about to turn two when we started the process of becoming familiar with the potty.

I followed all the recommendations, getting a potty for them to sit on, taking them potty when you go, lots of praise if they sit on the potty. We were doing well with everything and Gus was occasionally going pee-pee on the little potty. He was in a diaper and would take the diaper off for a change and we'd stick him on the potty.

While he was at CtK for preschool, they'd have "potty parties" and all the kids would go together to the bathroom and they'd see how it's done. It sounded odd at first, but seeing his friends go potty on the big potty was a motivator for Gus. So about this time last year, we started buying Pull-Ups.

Now, don't let anyone tell you that a Pull-Up isn't a diaper. It is. It's just easier to pull up and down like undies. However, they can pee and poo in one, and it will absorb like a diaper does. A Pull-Up does NOT hold as much urine as a regular diaper does, but it still contains it, unlike undies that don't hold it at all.

We've been in Pull-Ups for a while and Gus has progressively gotten better and better with going pee-pee on the potty. We got him a Potty Time watch, started doing rewards for each pee, but at some point, there has to be individual accountability.

That's the key with potty training. Sure, he can depend on a watch to tell him to go, but he really needs to be listening to his body and when he feels the need to go, that's when he should be recognizing the need to find a potty. Until your child can associate the feeling of needing to go, hold it, and verbalize that they have to go, it's going to be all on mom and dad to get the train rolling.

And you can't really say your child is potty trained if YOU are the one doing all the work, now can you?

Gus has been pee-trained for about eight months. Right when he started school he started getting the hang of it, and would tell us that he had to go pee-pee. Sometimes the Pull-Up would be wet already, but the more time went on, the drier and drier it got.

We were done with daytime diapers (actual size 6 diapers) back in December. We've had some back and forth regression with potty training, but as he's gotten older, once we turned from diapers in the day, he's been only wearing Pull-Ups and refuses to wear a diaper in the day.

However... it's the pooping that's been a problem. For whatever reason, pooping on the potty was not going to happen. He'd poop in his Pull-Up or if he was without pants, he'd ask for a Pull Up, then he'd poop.



This was an on-going frustration for MONTHS. I bought a potty chart to keep track of his pees and poos and it was a great motivator. He loved it. We got one of the new Thomas friends and taped it to the bathroom door and he knew that once he pooped on the potty, he'd get his train. 

He wanted that train desperately. However, he wasn't willing to poop on the potty to get it. He'd poop in his Pull Up and say, "No train today!" 

During Spring Break, he was running around the house naked for the most part. The recognizing the need to pee was definitely there and he'd announce that he needed to go potty. However, pooping wasn't happening.

I went to a retreat at church on April 13th and while I was gone, Steve was watching the boys. Gus was without pants and undies and had told Steve that he needed a diaper. Steve (so smart) said, "If you need to poop, go get on the potty." Gus said, "Oh, okay, Daddy."

However, he didn't go on the potty. He continued to play and then after a few more minutes, he said, "Daddy I need a diaper." Steve told him that if he needed to poop, he had to go get on the potty and poop there. Gus said, "Oh, okay, Daddy."

Then Gus rushed into the bathroom and a few minutes later, he was super excited and said, "Daddy, look! There's poop in the potty!!" Steve went in and looked, and sure enough, there was poop in the potty! He finally did it!!

Right after my retreat, I went to Kroger and while shopping, I got this picture from Steve via text:
 
I bought some of Gus's favorite two-bite strawberry cupcakes and came home and we all celebrated. We weren't sure if it was a one time thing, but he's now going poop on a daily basis on the potty. 


What's even more impressive is that this weekend, he was playing and we were doing our own thing and he came out of our bedroom and excitedly announced to come see the poop in the potty. When we went, his shorts were on the floor in front of the toilet and there was poop in the potty. He had just gone all by himself without any prompting from us. It was glorious.


Gus is now wearing undies each day. He wears a special night-time pull up to bed, but the last few nights it's been dry, so we may be moving to undies at night too. He wears undies to school (we were wearing undies then a Pull Up on top of the undies) and now it's just straight undies.


I can't even explain how proud of him that I am. I had hoped and prayed that he'd be daytime potty trained by the time he was four. Most boys aren't potty trained until sometime in their third year. With Gus, it's been hard because of his speech and language delays, that he couldn't verbalize his need to go. He's now a rock star and we're gearing up for nighttime training.



Just as we're getting one finished, it's almost time to start working with Hugh on potty training. He watches Gus go and claps when Gus pees on the potty. I'm hoping that with having an older brother to watch, Hugh will be easier to train. 

The one thing that I do know is that when your child IS actually ready, it's easy. Until they're totally ready, it's going to be difficult and painful at times. 


Here are the 10 signs of potty training readiness:
1) Stays dry for hours at a time
2) Awareness of when he or she is going (sometimes kids hide when they're going to the bathroom in a diaper)
3) Knows words for going
4) Knows the difference between wet and dry
5) Shows interest in others' bathroom habits
6) Wants diaper changed when it is wet or dirty
7) Can pull pants up and down
8) Can sit on toilet or potty chair for long enough to go (2-5 minutes)
9) Wants to try potty training (adamantly opposed to training will be incredibly hard)
10) You, the parent, are ready (it's a lot of work and you have to be willing to spend the time and energy)

I'm so proud of Gus and so happy that I can say he was potty trained before he turned four.  :D

Monday, August 26, 2013

Off to School!



On August 8th, we had a chance to go to LWES and see Gus's classroom and introduce him to his teacher, Ms. Amanda. He was very excited to see his room and he enjoyed checking out all the different toys.

 His room

 With Ms. Amanda

 His tiny class (the top four are the AM session kids and the bottom two are the PM session kids)

 Checking out the bus


 With Ms. Susan (Speech teacher)

 Gus's color this year is yellow and his animal is the duck.


 His playground




On Monday, August 12th, Steve stayed home so we could both be here to see Gus off on his first day of school. Gus was very excited because we had been talking about school and the bus and Ms. Amanda all weekend. He was good until the bus came, and then he was excited to get on, but wanted us to get on with him. 








 On the bus and ready for us to join him...

 He was NOT happy that we weren't coming, and he started to cry. The bus driver had to drag him to his seat and fight him to strap him into the car seat.

 You can just barely see him looking at me through the window

 We live on a cul-du-sac, so the bus had to go down and turn around


As soon as the bus went by, Steve and I started crying. It was so hard to see Gus cry and not be able to help him. We just hoped that he'd have a good day and would stop crying by the time he got to school.

We went outside at 10:55 to wait for Gus (his day is from 7:40-10:40 and he has to be at the end of our driveway at 7:05 for pick up). We had no idea what time he'd be coming home, so we figured fifteen minutes would be the soonest.





I got a call at 11:10 saying that the bus still had not picked Gus up from school, and that as soon as the bus got there, Ms. Amanda would call to let me know that he was on his way. So we went back inside.

At 11:45 Gus's bus finally arrived!
 The best thing I saw all day!


 He was SO excited to get off the bus and see us!

 Waving bye to his bus driver

 Waiting for the bus to turn around and pass back by our house!

Every day, his teacher sends home a daily note about behavior and what his day was like. Gus's first day was a wonderful day for him! 


This morning was the beginning of week three for Gus. I have been taking pictures every day and here are pictures from the first two weeks of school:
 8/13/13


 Every day, he goes to the top of the driveway to wait for the bus to turn around and then waves goodbye to the bus!


 8/14/13




 8/15/13


 Cold and rainy Friday- 8/16/13



 Starting week two! 8/19/13

 8/20/13

 We waited and waited and waited... it started to rain so we went to wait inside the garage. Gus's bus didn't come until 7:35!!!







 8/21/13


 8/22/13


 TGIF!!!  8/23/13
 "The moon!"
 "Hi bus!!"

 Here he comes!!





 Starting week three!! 8/26/13

 Back to potty training! Wearing his potty watch to school!

 Looking at the moon-- he kept saying, "I love you mama, to the moon and back!"





 Here comes the bus!


I'm so proud of Gus. He has been doing so well with school and going FIVE DAYS A WEEK! His language has started to really take off (still isn't caught up, but he's making HUGE progress) and I was thinking that it's only been two full weeks, but... that's ten days of school. When he was going to CtK, ten days of school was the same as FIVE WEEKS!!!

He's wearing pull-ups to school and hopefully, his teacher can help us with him going #2 on the potty. That's his biggest area of concern, and he's great with peeing, but until he can recognize the need to poop, and tell me he has to poop... I don't know how successful potty training again will go. We'll see. Hopefully it'll all come together and will go well for him!!

We have his curriculum night on Wednesday (he'll be staying home and my friend Kathryn is going to babysit him and Hugh for us). It should be interesting to see what he'll be learning for the year and for us to get a better idea of things we can do to help him here at home.

Today, when he comes home, we'll be starting the Letter School program (it's a homeschooling program). We are starting with letter A and we'll be doing a letter a week. I've got different activities each day for him to do. Should be fun!!