A new child-raising trend has
been in the news lately. It seems some experts are saying you don’t
have to wait years before you potty train your young child. But
is this good for the baby or is it just another fad?
It seems that for the Young family it’s working. “Psss.
You need to go bud? Do you need to go?” Diana asks her seven-month-old
son, Dorian, while he’s sitting on his infant potty seat.
When he has to go, Diana taught him to make a sign. “See,” she
points, “now he’s doing the potty sign. Do you see
his right hand there like that?”
But is he really potty trained?
“Children, when they’re toilet trained as young infants
are not truly toilet trained,” explains pediatrician Dr.
Karen Dewling, “Their parents become trained, their caregivers
become trained to recognize the infants cues that they need to
void or defecate.”
She explains that the biggest problem is young babies can’t
do very much. “Toilet training is a very complex skill that
requires the child to recognize the need to go, to control the
need to go, to be able to get to the bathroom, remove their clothing,
do what they need to do, flush, wash their hands, very complicated
language and motor skills are required for the true process.”
So, should you try to potty train a child before the age or two
or three? She says it may not work, but there’s no harm in
trying. “I think that a caregiver who’s able to recognize
a baby’s cues is very in tune with that baby, and that’s
probably a very good thing.”
“My friend’s say, ‘I have never seen a happier
baby,’ and I think it’s because he knows that I’ll
meet his needs,” says Diana, “He doesn’t need
to cry to get my attention, cause he has my attention all the time.”
All that attention may seem like a lot of work, but Diana says it’s
worth it. “The biggest benefit has been the connection between
us. I just feel like I’m a good mother. I feel like I’m
doing something for him that he appreciates, and that he needs, and
it’s the right thing.” |