Q: This past August, when our son was a mere 22 months of age, it took him two weeks to learn to use the potty successfully. He was dry even at night. We were thrilled! However, now that the weather has turned cold, he has started wetting the bed every night and even during afternoon naptime. We tell him its wrong but he doesnt seem to care. We even put his little potty in his crib but he doesnt use it. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Congratulations on potty training your son at 22 months! Disposable diaper manufacturers do not want parents to know that just as it is easier to housetrain a 4-month-old puppy as opposed to a 1-year-old dog, it will be far easier to toilet train an intelligent human at 22 months than at 36 months. As soon as this column appears, you should go into hiding.
However, I have to tell you that youre letting your sons success go to your heads. Its premature by at least six months to expect consistent night dryness from a child of your sons tender age. The fact that he was dry after periods of sleep for a couple of months is what Ill call a temporary side-effect of daytime training. It was bound not to last. The other factor operating here is that boys are twice as likely as girls to be bed-wetters. No one knows why.
Then theres the matter of the message youre sending your son. If I put this gently, you may not get the point: Youre making a huge mistake by telling him that bedwetting is wrong. Reacting punitively is not going to help matters and is very likely to make the problem much worse. Youre also headed toward an escalating parent-child power struggle. Being anxious and punitive about bedwetting sets a BAD disciplinary precedent.
Children who wet the bed have no conscious control over the problem. Without exception (that Ive ever heard of), they are very deep sleepers who dont hear their bladder telling them to get out of bed and use the toilet. So, they just release. When they wake up wet, they cant explain it. That applies as well to older kids who still wet.
I encourage you to back off and wait until spring not because of warm weather, but because hell be old enough by then to begin having success maybe. I recommend a waiting period of no less than six months between daytime training and attempts to help a child learn nighttime bladder control.
Let him sleep naked from the waist down. That increases the likelihood that when he wets, hell wake up. For some unknown reason, that usually (but not always) promotes a quicker resolution to the problem.
And be sure to follow Johnny Mercers advice and accentuate the positive.




