BeckyScott
<font color=magenta>I am still upset that they don
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 1,127
mechurchlady, it's because the righties made all the rules.
This is just a guess, but the whole place setting thing has been around for ages, at least a century and probably more, and you know it used to be that lefties were forced into righties. So it was all designed for righties, much the same as pants zippers and spiral notebooks.
Kirsten, DS potty-trained at 4 (which for autism ain't bad) but he did it at preschool long before he'd do it at home.
However, the preschool had one para whose sole purpose was taking kids to the bathroom. They called her "the potty whisperer". So he was getting taken to the bathroom once an hour, no matter what. It's harder to do that at home. Then the preschool teacher told me it was okay to start sending him in real undies and not pull-ups, and I was like "whaaat?" because he certainly wasn't potty-trained at home. Because of that, I felt comfortable going cold-turkey with him, I knew that he could do it if he wanted. At night, it just happened that one night he had ran out of pull-ups and it was pretty late so we were looking at quite a drive to buy more. So I stuck a bunch of towels on the bed and kept my fingers crossed, he was dry that night so we just kept going. He had a couple accidents the first week or two, but we decided to keep trying. However (caveat), he was never a poop-smearer or anything like that, he was like many kids in that he'd just be too busy playing to take the time out. And he is under-sensitive so it wasn't a matter of the pants being wet, it was getting him to recognize the urge.
(the short answer to your question: someone else potty-trained him for me, LOL, that's what happened)
However, I do think that I contributed to the bad aim situation. I was so happy he was using the toilet at all, that I didn't pursue the aim problem. I figured it would work itself out. Four years later, no such luck. So when you do decide to try, work on the aim at the same time.


Kirsten, DS potty-trained at 4 (which for autism ain't bad) but he did it at preschool long before he'd do it at home.

(the short answer to your question: someone else potty-trained him for me, LOL, that's what happened)

However, I do think that I contributed to the bad aim situation. I was so happy he was using the toilet at all, that I didn't pursue the aim problem. I figured it would work itself out. Four years later, no such luck. So when you do decide to try, work on the aim at the same time.