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Potty training is one of our first traumas in life. For some, perhaps most, it is easy, but for others, it can be a deeply traumatic experience with lasting consequences. As we grow to our teenage years and adulthood, potty training is expected and assumed and yet for many, it still remains difficult and for some, seemingly unnecessary. And yet, society both demands and expects it. A brilliant arguer for breaking social norms, Gwendoline Summers attacks the question of whether or not potty training should be required for preteens, teens and adults and the issues with rejecting it. An openly pro-nappy/diaper book, Gwendoline targets her book not to just adult babies and diaper lovers, but to anyone seeking a reason and rationale for avoiding the toilet and making alternative choices.
Gwendoline Summers has a special style of writing to women about some of the unique options available to them. She knows what it is like to baby her husband. Her first book is a guide to other women seeking to take their partner in hand and make them the baby they both need him to be. This is not an enforced babying guide, but rather one to help women who already KNOW that their partners need the security of nappies, a dummy and a babyish lifestyle, to achieve that goal. The second book covers the subject in a more extensive way about making your partner into a Sissy Baby - a baby girl And the third book brings up an interesting question: is potty training a thing of the past and is it time to reject it both for your partner and yourself? This book is not just for women with AB partners but for ALL women whether their partners are AB or not! She takes it step by step in how to slowly get your partner into nappies and other baby items. If your partner is AB then you are already partway there, but if they are non-AB, this book is still for you. It is a guidebook along a journey of letting our men express the infancy inside that is so often just beneath the surface.
Forrest Grant's epic first book - The Joy of Bedwetting - introduced us to Forrest's unusual world of personal bedwetting and his refreshing viewpoint on it. In this long-awaited book, Forrest has now taken on her feminine persona and goes by the name of Florence. She tells us about growing up as a bedwetter from preschool to preteen, to teenager and then adult, and how her heavy wetting was of no concern to her, unlike those around her. It tells of being a teenager still with nightly soaked sheets while most around him - but not all - did not. Nappies and dummies abound as she tells her life story of getting married and having children while still wetting the bed and wearing nappies. She is open about something most of us hide. Florence is a confirmed Sissy Adult Baby, but at night while the rest of us don our nappies, Florence often sleeps unprotected, finding comfort in her own wet bed. Or is it a baby's cot? Florence gets real joy out of wetting her bed and her refreshing attitude to it is something you will enjoy.
“It’s My Poop ... “ is a quick simple read that provides parents and others a look into the mind of the potty-training toddler or preschooler and their thoughts about being hurried to reach a milestone in which they may be unprepared. Dr. Brightwell witnessed in anguish over a thirty-year period as hundreds of little ones were pushed into potty-training when they were clearly not ready which resulted in this project . The purpose of the book is not to create an argument about the best time to potty train, but rather to encourage parents to allow their children to train at their own pace instead of the time table of someone else’s. The potty-training process should be an exciting period of growth for all involved, not that which is frustrating and time consuming. The hope is that parents will create a fun and creative approach to potty training their little angels.
In this pioneering, practical book, parenting expert Kathleen Patel offer a revolutionary approach to child parenting with key strategies that foster healthy brain development, leading to calmer, happier children successful with potty learning. I explain�and make accessible�the new science of how a child�s brain is wired and how it matures enough to handle potty activity efficiently and independently. The �upstairs brain, � which makes decisions and balances emotions, and in young children, the right brain and its emotions tend to rule over the logic of the left brain, which is why effective potty training strategy is required for effective potty learning. By applying these ultimate strategies and discoveries to everyday parenting, you can turn any outburst, argument, or fear into a chance to integrate your child�s brain and foster vital growth.
"It's My Poop ... " is a quick simple read that provides parents and others a look into the mind of the potty-training toddler or preschooler and their thoughts about being hurried to reach a milestone in which they may be unprepared. Dr. Brightwell witnessed in anguish over a thirty-year period as hundreds of little ones were pushed into potty-training when they were clearly not ready which resulted in this project . The purpose of the book is not to create an argument about the best time to potty train, but rather to encourage parents to allow their children to train at their own pace instead of the time table of someone else's. The potty-training process should be an exciting period of growth for all involved, not that which is frustrating and time consuming. The hope is that parents will create a fun and creative approach to potty training their little angels.
Your great-grandmother would be amazed to learn that toilet training has become one of Mom's greatest sources of anxiety and frustration during her child's early years. To Great-Grandma, it was no worse than teaching her child to use a spoon. Rosemond does not write from the perspective of a psychologist, but with the common sense and authority derived from 30 years of counseling parents, and from his two children and seven grandchildren, some of whom he helped toilet train. He advises an old-fashioned approach to toilet training that would have earned Grandma's stamp of approval. This book is helpful, revealing, and funny. Best of all, the method works! Thousands of parents have used it to discover how easy toilet training can be. With his trademark parents-take-control style, Rosemond covers everything from the basic how-to and troubleshooting issues to successful testimonies and proper encouragement. His straightforward and no-nonsense advice utilizes simple steps with proven results. No arguing, bribing, or cajoling necessary. It helps parents avoid common toilet-training mistakes, and leads the way to a diaper-free household.
With the signature hilarity that has made the Sucks series a hit, Kimes and Laccinole tackle number one, number two, and all the accidents in between on the way to full-time underpants. Are you suffering through your kid's potty training because... -Your toddler has peed on your in-laws' carpet again? -Your best friend's kid is already trained (even though he's two months younger than yours)? -You're not allowed back at the community pool until your wee one is old enough to drive? If you have children, you're going to have to potty train them. At least there's a glimmer of hope. Amidst all the headaches (and heartaches), Potty Training Sucks is the only book that feels your pain. Veteran potty trainers Joanne Kimes and Kathleen Laccinole cover: potty training doo-doos and don'ts; handling accidents; the respective troubles of training boys and girls; and how to maintain your sanity through it all.
Conventional wisdom tells parents that they should delay potty training to toddler age, and only after seeing signs of readiness. But is that really the best way? In Diaper-Free Before 3, Dr. Jill Lekovic presents the new case that early training--beginning as early as nine months olds--is most natural, healthy, and beneficial for your child, based on medical evidence. By incoporating the potty into your child's routine early on, toilet training becomes far less stressful for both parent and child. Dr. Lekovic's method, which she has used successfully with her own kids and recommends to patients, helps children become better aware of their body's signals, boosts confidence, and decreases the risk of urinary health problems. The guide includes informative chapters on bedwetting, accidents, and adapting the method for day care, special-needs children, and older toddlers. Offering a technique that really works and turns toilet training into a positive experience, Diaper-Free Before 3 is sure to become a new parenting classic.