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| My daughter is potty trained at age 1 and now she is 3 and she starts doing the same thing she never had a potty accident but now from last 3 weeks she had 4 potty accidents. about pee accidents whenever i forgot to remind my daughter about pee time by turning off tv or taking off the toy she is playing with she had a accident. in the case of pee i think that its my fault because i know with liquid intake she goes pp after every 30 minutes and with out liquid she goes after 1 hour. once i was very upset about her pp accidents when she was 2 y old and i talked with a friend about this and she said something i can never forget " you know its not only her potty training you also have to trained your self with her timetable you have to take her to washroom or motivate her after 30 minutes or so" when she said that I was 100% convinced. About your son he is toilet trained and plz never put him in diapers again bcz they get used of it very quikly and its very hard to potty trained 3 or 4 y old kids . I think so what i observed with my 2 kids he is just so busy with his play he don't wana go to washroom and believe me my daughter is 3 and from last 3 months each day she tells me about pp 3 in 8 times .rest of the time i have to use my instinct
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| Toddlers can be irregular in their development. Sometimes toddlers seem to regress in their toileting skills when there is a change in the family or school - a new baby, a new teacher, a new nanny and so on can all result in more accidents. In addition, toddlers are so busy learning new skills every day that they often neglect the "old" ones. So if your child learned how to use the potty but is now learning how to do puzzles or manipulate his new digger toy, then he may not pay attention to the potty issue. Also, toddlers can become very engrossed in their activities and not want to interrupt what they're doing in order to go get undressed, use the potty, clean up etc. It's not that they forget how to do it - they just don't want to do it! The cure for all of the above is patience and perseverance on your part. Stay on top of his schedule and if time has gone by, then just take him to the potty. You don't have to ask him. Just tell him that it's potty time and lead him there in a pleasant but I-mean-business type of way. If you keep doing that, he'll have fewer and fewer accidents as time goes on and in just 10 years or so, you'll forget that these accidents ever happened! Sarah Chana
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