Little Johnny’s mother is exasperated. She has tried everything to get
her four year old to use the potty: rewarding, bribing, pleading, cajoling,
drawing little targets on the bottom of the bowl, but the boy has made no
progress. The first time Johnny’s parents sat him on the potty, he was 18
months old. When that failed, a well-meaning friend offered the advice, “Wait
until he’s ready! You’ll mess him up, and he’ll never learn.” Now almost three
years later, Johnny’s mom is wondering if she did this to him by not waiting
long enough before that first attempt. Riddled with guilt, she turns to her
peers for advice on how to train him before he embarrasses himself in
kindergarten. “Don’t worry about it,” her friends all chime in once again.
“He’ll do it when he’s ready.” Some even say “Stop trying so hard, they’ll all do
it on their own eventually.” And someone
offers this encouraging anecdotal evidence: “Well, my little Petey just did it
all own his own one day.”
It sounds like reasonable advice.
Everyone says it, including, in one form or another, potty training books. It
absolves the parent of any guilt or need to take action. And it’s probably true
that he’ll learn soon enough. But it’s not especially empowering advice for the
mom who wants to help her child. And there’s something about it that just doesn’t
sound right to me. I knew there was something erroneous about this way of
thinking about development so I set out to explore the origins of this line,
where it came from and the motives for perpetuating it. What I found was
shocking.
People have different reasons for
giving the ol’ “when they’re ready” line, and most of them have honest
intentions. The problem is that without further clarification, the line
suggests that potty training is innate; that it happens naturally without
coaching, just like getting teeth or reaching puberty. Perhaps a child, while
sleeping, grows the little piece of brain matter responsible for toileting. Any
attempt at potty training before this milestone is sure to end in failure! To
sit that child on a toilet is like making a tadpole climb a ladder. So give up, parents, or your child will be
destined toward self loathing the rest of his life...won’t he?
After pondering it for some time,
it hit me. This is not a new idea. It is a very old one called maturational theory. Let me take you
back to the year 1929. A developmental
psychologist named Arnold Gessell is fervently demonstrating to a baby girl how
to climb up a set of stairs. The girl’s identical twin sister isn’t lucky
enough get stair climbing lessons; she is the control group. And wouldn’t you know it; both children learn
to climb the stairs! Gessell eventually concludes that much of what humans do
is innate, and it is futile to teach a child how to reach common milestones. The age at which the children learn to climb,
walk, or any number of tasks, he asserts, is a matter of genetic determinism. They
will do it when their genes dictate they are ready. While there are some
elements of truth to this, should this theory be applied to potty training?
Swimming lessons are a waste of money for this Axolotl. |
Genie |
Potty training, we now know, is
one of those skills that requires both nature and nurture. While neuromuscular
control of the bladder will happen on its own, society has adopted cultural expectations
with regards to things like clothing and indoor plumbing that aren’t part of
our evolutionary repertoire. There is no reason to believe the human brain will
naturally direct a person toward a porcelain bowl like a cat to a pile of
sand. Proof positive: the city of
Amsterdam issues over three thousand fines each year for public urination (Look!).
Humans, it turns out, must be taught.
Allow me deviate from my stance
for a moment to acknowledge that the “nature” portion of potty training,
according to some experts, is still worth consideration. Most sources will tell
you that there is a degree of physical maturity that must be reached before
potty training can begin. In general the experts are unclear and diverse on
what exactly they mean by physical maturity.
Some maintain that children must be able to do everything from
unbuttoning their pants to turning on the faucet. Advocates of Elimination Communication
espouse the belief that children need only the skill of anticipating an
imminent need to relieve oneself and expressing that need. The most commonly
held middle ground is that children mainly need to be able to control their
sphincter and bladder. In her charmingly titled book, “Pee, Poop, and Potty
Training,” Alison MacKonochie says, “During the early months of life, your
baby’s bladder only holds a very small amount of urine. As soon as the bladder
is full, it automatically contracts and empties, forcing urine down the
urethra. [...] As your baby grows, the capacity of the bladder will increase.
By the time he has reached toddlerhood, voluntary control of the sphincter
muscles will start to develop, and you will notice your child passes urine less
frequently. This is just one of the signs that your child is ready to begin
potty training.”
So here we see that there is limited merit
behind maturational theory, as it relates to elimination. A child whose bladder
is emptying automatically is not going to have much success. But it’s rather ambiguous
to say this happens by “toddlerhood.” When I attempted to find a more specific
timeline for this bladder and bowel maturity, the numbers I found suggested
anywhere from 3 to 24 months. Some suggested 15 months on average. While it
certainly varies for individual children, on the whole, Western children are
trained at an average age which is much higher than the average age of bladder
and bowel maturation*. The age at which a North American child is potty trained
today is almost double what it was at the beginning of the century, and also
much higher than the rest of the world, excepting a few other industrialized
countries**. To suggest all these late trainers simply hadn’t reached an age of
physical ability would be to suggest there is an epidemic of elimination muscle
delay among developed countries. (Sources: *Sears, Robert R., Eleanor Maccoby, and Harry Levin (1957). Patterns of Child Rearing. **http://disposablediaper.net)
How do you know if your specific
child has physical mastery of their bladder and bowels? A child who refuses to
urinate until the diaper is put back on is a child who has physical readiness.
A child who squats behind the couch every time she has a bowel movement is a
child with bowel mastery. A young baby who pees selectively on his Daddy every
time he is the one to remove his diaper might even have bladder control. In
fact, there is no evidence even to suggest that bladder and bowel muscle
control can’t be somewhat influenced by environmental factors in the same way
other muscles can. Consider a tiny baby who flails her arms randomly, then
learns to control her fingers when motivated by a toy. Elimination muscles are
no different and can also be honed with motivation. Advocates of non-western toilet training methods, including Elimination
Communication, have proven that infants are capable of being conditioned to
control their bladders and bowels as early as two or three months. Any number
of factors could provide this conditioning. This accounts for the diverse range
of ages at which a child may reach this physical milestone.
Psychological readiness, on the
other hand, is a whole other question. And that, parents, is something you can
have a hand in. But first, let’s go back to the prodigy, little Petey. Petey’s
mom asserts that eventually he just went on his own without anyone training
him. If potty training isn’t innate, how did that happen? The answer is that
Petey is being conditioned every day. Presumably he’s living in a house with at
least one toilet. He sees other people going into the bathroom. He hears them
urinating, he may even see or smell them. He watches television: toilet paper
commercials, potty training commercials; he reads books with pictures of personified
animals inexplicably perched on human toilets. Maybe he goes to daycare or sees
his peers use the toilet. He gets negative feedback when he defecates in his
diaper and his mother wrinkles her nose, and when he eventually tries the toilet
he receives some kind of praise or approval. Petey was still “trained” with a
system, and that system was an eventual environmental conformity. It worked
with his learning style, and the rate at which he adapted was acceptable for
his parents.
But this won’t work for everyone. It’s
a slow process for most children. There are many reasons why a parent
would seek out ways to hasten their child’s psychological readiness. Problems
can occur if the process is taking too long. A child can become complacent with
their diapering habits. Writes Behaviour Consultant Brenda Batts, “Very often,
potty training is the last skill we think of implementing, and by the time we
are confronted with potty training our children they have learned potty
training behaviours that, because of the passage of time, have become ingrained
in their repertoire of behaviours, making potty training a very difficult
process” (Ready, Set, Potty, 2010).
If this is the case, advising such
a parent to wait it out may cause even more problems down the road. Secondly,
an older child who is not yet potty trained may experience problems in daycare
or school. While he may be able to quickly adapt to the toilet once he is in among peers who are using it, it is also possible that a child may be
embarrassed or ostracised when he is the only one still in diapers. You
cannot assume that peer pressure– or peer shaming– will result in increased
motivation. Some programs will not even allow
a child to enroll until they are toilet trained. While this is an unfortunate
policy that I don’t wholly support, it’s a fact.
Lastly, an extended period of
diapering can be financially stressful on parents. Not everyone is able to use
cloth diapers, and the cost of disposables is considerable. An extra year
without disposables could pay for a semester of college. The slow-paced
approach might not be advisable for parents with limited means.
There is no shortage of
psychological obstacles which could prevent a child from responding to a potty
training plan. Some children’s needs or learning styles are more complex than
the scope of parents’ understanding. It’s possible that the system parents are
using has not been individualized to their child’s specific needs. According to
Butts, parents must “take into consideration a child’s unique learning modes,
dislikes, and sensory issues, in order to develop and implement a program that
is relevant and appealing to the child.” (Ready, Set, Potty). While the author
is specifically referring to developmentally delayed children here, it is no
less true of average children with issues causing delayed potty training. While
I won’t go into all the ways of adapting a potty training program here, suffice
to say that the child-directed pace will not be universally successful with all
children.
So this raises an important
question. Why is “wait until they’re ready,” such a prevalent piece of advice?
Even in potty training books, this statement is usually followed by, well, a
whole entire book of ways to get help get your child psychologically ready,
rather than sitting idly by and waiting. But the idea that there is nothing you
can do to speed the process, and if you try you will damage your child,
persists.
I read at least dozen modern books
on the topic and none of them actually suggest you should do nothing and your
child will just come around. At most they suggests that breaks are advisable
from time to time if your plan isn’t working, but abandoning the plan all
together just to end the struggle and “wait and see,” is not something most
experts recommend.
Part of it can be traced back to
Sigmund Freud, who had a lot of opinions about potty training and the potential
trauma surrounding it. Freud was one of the original advocates for a child
directed pace. But nowadays we understand that Freud’s theories are mainly
directed against the horrific and often abusive toileting practices of the forties
and fifties, and used out of context they become far reaching hyperbole. Most authors acknowledge Freud’s contribution
to developmental science but understand that applying his principles too
rigorously amounts to alarmism. We now know that a common sense approach to
toilet training is not going to cause personality defects or Oedipal
relationships. So have we not tired of beating this dead horse, or is someone resurrecting it
intentionally?
Jennifer Margulis, journalist and author
of “The Business of Baby,” makes a startling claim that it may be diaper
companies themselves that are propagating this idea. She writes that disposable diapers themselves
are well known to cause delays in training, and that hospitals are enabling
long term diaper habits by distributing free samples. But more alarmingly,
Margulis alleges that “...Mommy bloggers were being paid by Kimberly-Clark to
promote delayed potty training.” While it is difficult to find proof of this,
it is worth bearing in mind that media sponsored by diaper companies may be
subject to content that is supportive of long-haul potty training strategies.
And since most parenting themed public sources are at least in part sponsored
by Huggies or Pampers, their potential for control on the subject is
significant. However, to be fair, the official advice put out by the Diaper
Giants’ websites does contain a mixture of pro-training and pro-waiting advice.
Pampers presents a wonderfully empathetic view on what potty training must be
like for children, but they also subtly suggest that children must possess all
the necessary skills from managing their own clothing to washing their own
hands; skills many children still struggle with by elementary school. Must we
teach such perfectionism? Letting children do what they can and offering
assistance for everything else is a reasonable compromise.
Huggies’ website offers the crucial
recommendation that parents follow an individualized plan. But it offers few
details on how to accomplish this. And they also have this to say: “If your child starts out fine, but then gets
hopelessly stuck, no worries! It’s not unusual for the potty chair to go back
into the closet for weeks, or even months. If your child loses interest, hold
off for a few weeks and then try again. Toilet training is a developmental
process. Children’s bodies and brains are developing all the time, and each new
phase sets the foundation for those to come. No amount of teaching can make
those developments happen before their time. You’ll have an easier, happy time
of it if you wait until you’re sure your child is ready.”
To me, this reeks of maturational theory. And in addition to
resurrecting Gessell’s “no amount of teaching” adage, diaper companies are now
attempting to convince the public that keeping your child in the right kind of
diapers will somehow get him out of diapers sooner. All research suggests that
ditching the diapers completely will give you a better result, and as that
verdict became public knowledge, Diaper giants responded by creating something
special for when your child is meant to get out of diapers: the Pull-up, which
is another– and more expensive– diaper. When
educated parents first became aware that Pull-ups were statistically delaying
the age of potty training, the diaper giants responded by encouraging the belief that it
was because the diapers worked so well and were so absorbent and comfortable
that their child had no idea they had urinated.
This may be true. If the diaper giants weren’t concerned with their
bottom line, this should have resulted in a less absorbent or less comfortable
diaper, which might have worked but no parent would buy it. Instead they came
up with things like disappearing designs, which give your child an unnatural
deterrent far removed from the feeling of wetness.
Then some genius came up with Cool Alert, which is a little better, in
theory, because being cool is at least something akin to being wet. But what
exactly is Cool Alert? This information was not easy to come by- it has been
removed from Huggies website. But at one point it read as follows, “When
the child wets the pant, sorbitol crystals dissolve, which cools the urine in
the patch. When the cool urine in the patch contacts the skin, the child feels
the coolness. This cool feeling is similar to the change you feel when touching
cool tap water. The pants remain cool for a few minutes. Sorbitol is a
sugar-like material that occurs naturally in fruits such as apples, plums,
cherries and pears. It is commonly used as a sweetener in gum and in low
calorie foods. In cosmetics, sorbitol is frequently used as an emollient (skin
softener).”
That sounds like a great product,
with lots of positive associations! Who doesn’t like apples, plums, cherries, and
gum? And it’s low calorie! And perhaps it would solve a problem if your child
had rough genitals that needed softening.
The fact is, sorbitol is a sugar, and sugar should go nowhere near these
orifices. The product reviews for Cool Alert are loaded with one-star warnings
of rashes and infections. The package itself warns to discontinue use when a
rash occurs, and where does that leave a child who is in the middle of a
training plan based around Cool Alerts? Diaper companies do not have your
child’s best interest in mind when reaching for your bottom dollar, and the
ideas they circulate should be taken with caution.
Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that all the information put out
by diaper companies is meant to mislead you. Some of it is great, albeit
incomplete, and some is just what certain people want to hear. What I’m
suggesting is that the scales are weighted toward the long haul approach, in
terms of readily available information. When given a choice between the findings of
empirical scientific research, and opinions of those who adapt and redistribute those
findings in order to better capitalize on keeping your children in diapers for
as long as possible, it is the parents’ duty to find out about the many
different approaches to potty training and select the one that best suits their
child.
So let’s get back to Johnny’s Mom. If “wait until he’s ready,” is not a
helpful piece of advice on its own, what is?
If you’re Petey’s mom, you might say, “Don’t stress needlessly. Many
children in a nurturing environment eventually respond to societal expectations
without too much coaxing. If this slow and subtle approach works best for you, it
is a respectable choice.”
But if the slow potty training is becoming an issue of concern for the
parent and they are actually seeking advice on how to speed up the process, you
might suggest, “Don’t take him out of diapers until he shows signs of
readiness, but in the meantime you can look for ways to ready him that are
conducive to his learning style and interests.”
But nobody talks like this. So perhaps the best advice might be “wait
until you are ready.” Do you have a
plan? If your child is so young that you are not able to guess what approaches
might be successful, you might need to wait until you are able to come up with
an appropriate plan. But remember, if the plan fails, you won’t damage your
child as long as you use a gentle approach. If your child resists, it’s still
okay to wait until your child forgets about the failed strategy, and then come
up with a new plan. You are not, as people might suggest, being an overly
forceful parent if you introduce the potty and your child doesn’t take to it
right away. In the next posts I discuss ways of individualizing plans and how
to actually apply developmental psychology theories which hold more water than
maturational theory.
Further Reading:
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