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Description

Child readiness for toilet learning

Toilet Learning Philosophy & Readiness

Adult readiness more critical than child readiness

    •    Adults must have bandwidth to support child through incompetence-to-competence phase

    •    Adult anxiety transfers to child, reducing learning capacity

    •    Key question: Can adult maintain calm during transitional space?

Child readiness indicators

    •    Natural curiosity about potty (wanting to sit, try, emulate adults)

    •    Curiosity wanes when effort feels challenging

    •    Can child tolerate discomfort when effort > reward?

Three learning stages

    1    Effort much greater than reward (hardest phase)

    2    Effort equals reward

    3    Effort becomes easier, reward greater (integrated/automatic)

Direct vs Indirect Learning Strategy

Maximize indirect learning before potty expectations

    •    Healthy adult modeling and body talk outside bathroom

    •    Play props and toys around potty concepts (not in bathroom)

    •    Books, songs, visuals about body processes

    •    Reduces performance anxiety in actual bathroom moments

Formal learning begins with underwear transition

    •    Children learn by doing, not just observing (swimming pool analogy)

    •    Must wear underwear before mastering skills (expect accidents initially)

    •    Keeping diapers while expecting consistent potty requests is unrealistic

    •    Children understand: diapers = pee/poop, underwear = different expectation

Body Boss Language Framework

Replace “big kid” language with “body boss”

    •    Avoids developmental struggle of wanting to be big vs baby

    •    Emphasizes empowerment and body ownership

    •    “You have an important job” vs “you’re a big kid”

    •    Normalize “listening to your body” and “taking care of your body” across all activities

Key phrases to use

    •    “Missing the signal” instead of asking “did you poop?”

    •    “Your body’s figuring out how to feel comfortable” vs “you should be able to…”

    •    “It’s not happening yet” vs “it’s not happening”

    •    Tag words: yet, soon, just a matter of time

Handling Poop Resistance

Treat peeing and pooping as separate skills

    •    Different body parts, consistency, pressure

    •    Give permission to ask for pull-up when feeling poop urge

    •    Celebrate progress: “toilet bowl is half full”

Prevent withholding behaviors

    •    Getting poop out of body trumps potty success

    •    Withholding causes constipation, behavioral issues, reduced bandwidth

    •    Offer dignified alternatives (pull-up, permission to soil underwear)

Response approach

    •    Reduce adult energy/focus around the struggle area

    •    Slow things down, reduce urgency

    •    Continue indirect learning without performance pressure

Practical Implementation

Potty equipment choices

    •    Offer both little potty and toilet seat attachment

    •    Let child choose which feels safer

    •    Feet firmly planted important for bowel movements

Nighttime readiness

    •    5 consecutive nights of dry pull-ups

    •    Check earlier than usual wake time to distinguish holding vs morning release

Launching process

    •    Start at home, not school

    •    Long weekend good for formal launch

    •    Don’t go back and forth between diapers/underwear (confusing)

    •    Reset to diapers okay if stress becomes excessive

Resources & Support

Diaper Doggy book

    •    Creates ritual for transition (like Tooth Fairy)

    •    Uses body boss language throughout

    •    Available at Barnes & Noble (not Amazon)

Joan’s consultation services

    •    Virtual coaching: $25/30min, $50/hour through medical practice

    •    Personalized social stories available

    •    Works with families nationwide
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