toilet seat – About Twins https://about-twins.com Fri, 21 Dec 2018 12:49:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 Toilet training seat or potty? https://about-twins.com/toddlers/toilet-training-seat-potty/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=toilet-training-seat-potty https://about-twins.com/toddlers/toilet-training-seat-potty/#comments Mon, 25 Apr 2016 11:21:54 +0000 https://about-twins.com/?p=921 Are you wondering whether to buy a toilet training seat or a potty? Both may be able to do the trick for your children, but there are a few things to think about before you choose.

Observe your children

Are your toddlers afraid of loud noises? Do they seem sensitive and cautious regarding new adventures? Be aware that these type of children may feel more comfortable sitting on the potty close to the floor than on a large toilet. Read more about how to potty train successfully. This also goes for very young children. Some parents choose to buy a potty for very young children and then switch to a toilet training seat when they are older.

Toilet training at nursery

If your children are in nursery or daycare, consider using whatever they’re using. Your children may be more inclined using a toilet training seat or a potty, depending on what the other children in the nursery or daycare center use.

Ask your children

If your children are around the age of two or above, include them in the decision. Take them out shopping or show them pictures of a toilet training seat and a potty. Explain that they’ll soon be able to go to the toilet themselves, and ask them if they’d prefer a toilet training seat or a potty.

Did a toilet training seat or a potty work for your children? Leave a reply below this article and let us know what you chose.

 

 

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Potty Training Twins: How to Potty Train Twin Boys and Girls https://about-twins.com/toddlers/potty-training-twins-successfully/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=potty-training-twins-successfully Mon, 25 Apr 2016 09:29:56 +0000 https://about-twins.com/?p=910 Before you start potty training twins, there are a few things you need to think through. You can’t plan how your twin toddlers will react to the toilet or potty, but you can do a lot of things to make sure that they’re motivated. It’s important that they’re feeling positively towards using the toilet or potty. Your reactions to their training efforts also need to be positive.

Take a look at these 7 tips on potty training, before you start potty training twins.

1. Timing is crucial

Don’t start potty training twins, when something radically different is about to happen. This could be them starting in nursery or kindergarten, a move or getting a new sibling. Wait until things have settled down a bit, before you introduce them to the toilet or potty. This will make your potty training efforts more likely to succeed.

2. Starting up slow

Start by simply talking about it. Let them join you, when you go to the restroom (they’ll probably follow you anyway) and tell them what you’re doing, when you’re on the toilet (yes, that’s right!). For instance tell them “I’m peeing now,” “I’m wiping now,” (let them give you the paper), “I’m going to flush now” (let them flush) and “I’m washing my hands now” (let them wash their hands too). Tell them that they’ll soon be able to sit on the toilet themselves, and let them try it, if they want to (hold them tight, their tooshies are too small for ordinary toilet seats). If they’re very young warn them about the sound of the flush (it’s scary to some children).

3. Include and motivate

Take them out to buy potties or toilet training seats and let them decide the colour on their own. Buy them one each, so they feel individual ownership. The best way to potty train largely relies on the personality of your child, but one thing is key to all children – they need to be motivated. You can motivate them in many different ways, such as making up a funny song, when they pee (you may feel stupid, but they’ll love it). You can also let their favorite teddy try the potty or buy a few children’s books for them to read when on the potty. Think very closely before you hang up charts praising – and inadvertently comparing – them for their accomplishments. Make sure that potty training doesn’t become a competition between the twins, and one twin is left behind feeling inadequate.

4. Use a role model

If your twins have a playmate, who are further ahead with potty training, he or she could be a big motivational factor for them. Children copy other children and if they have a bond and play well together, your twins will try to mirror their friend. You should only use this method if they usually go to the bathroom together and are comfortable with it. You could also use an older sibling as role model.

5. Be aware of differences

Your twin toddlers may be ready to potty train at different times. You need to consider whether they should start potty training together or apart. If they are as much as six months or a year apart in readiness and they start out together, you may inadvertently make one twin feel very inadequate and the other could feel guilty. On the other hand starting them up together could be motivating for both of them. No matter what you choose to do, it’s crucial that you never compare them. Make sure that they know that faster isn’t necessarily better.

6. Dress them appropriately

When potty training twins you need to dress them in clothes they can pull off quickly. Onesies is a no go. Underwear is better. Let them wear dresses, skirts or joggers, they easily can pull down. Depending on the weather, it could be an idea to let them run around bottomless sometimes – this will save you some laundry (but you’ll be cleaning floors instead).

7. Don’t push them

Children will get out of their diapers eventually and use the toilet or potty. Don’t push them. It might backfire and prolong the process. Make sure that your standards for when children should be potty trained isn’t being forced upon them. Read more about age and potty training.

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