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Potty Training in Cloth Vs. Disposables: An Intro

Cooper just turned one and it's gotten me thinking about (drum roll, please): Potty Training.  Many parents of twelve-month
child on potty
olds are not thinking about potty training any more than they're thinking about sending their baby off to college:  He's not ready!  She's too young.  We'll cross that bridge when we come to it. Though no studies have been done that I'm aware of, many moms say that babies in cloth train faster and that disposable pull-ups do nothing but prolong the process.  Cloth diapers, unlike their disposable-Sodium-Polacrylate-filled counterparts, feel wet to the touch when they are wet or soiled.  This means two things: babies and toddlers learn to dislike the wet feeling and have more of a motivation to stay dry AND they learn the cause and effect of their bodily functions: I pee, I feel wet. Toddlers who pee in a disposable diaper lose that cause and effect lessen: I pee, I still feel pretty dry.  Why stop playing to use the potty when you can pee right in your disposable and feel just as good? I think pull-up disposables were invented for two reasons:
  1. so they would "seem" more like underwear because they pull up and down like underwear and
  2. they are easier to put on a standing baby.  As a former nanny (over ten years, thank you very much) I stayed with each family I worked with for an average of three years---birth right through potty training, until the kids were off to preschool.  So between helping to potty-train three children I nannied for and so far two of my own, it's fair to say I have some experience.
I remember one toddler in particular, little Sarah who is now nine years old and a competitive ice-skater in Alaska.  When she turned two, or maybe a little after, her parents bought some disposable pull-ups. They were a novelty at first and Sarah liked pulling them up and down to sit on the potty like a big girl.  That soon wore off and Sarah would no longer ask to use the potty if she was distracted, tired or feeling less-than compliant (which as most parents can agree, happens a lot with two-year-olds).  She learned quickly that pull-ups were just diapers and "keeping the princesses on them dry" was not enough motivation to use the potty when she didn't feel like it.  We tried stickers and treats as rewards but nothing really worked and the process dragged on and on for months. In the next few months I'll write more on potty training with cloth diapers, potty training in general and the history of potty training and how it has changed since the invention of disposables.  I also plan to pick my sister's brain because as a cloth-diapering mom who had both of her son's trained by 18 months, I'm sure she has some tips we'd all like to hear.  And finally, I plan to chronicle my experiences as I potty train Cooper, my own cloth-diaper-wearing-baby . Please feel free to share your potty training anecdotes with me and each other--both success and failures and let's start a Potty-Training-in-Cloth-Diapers-Revolution!
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541 comments

  • There are so many factors involved in potty training (or any childhood milestone!), I think it’s hard to ascribe success/failure to any one particular aspect. Both my older kids potty trained at age 2 of their own accord, and they were both in disposables. Cloth diapering has many features in its favor, and if it does have a chance to ease potty training, even better. But I wouldn’t expect it to be a magic bullet — some kids will just take longer to tune in to their body’s cues, or to care enough about them to stop playing and use the bathroom!

    Maureen on
  • I loved cloth for potty training, it was the laundry hassle of less things to wash that was my issue. Not to start – but once she got a hang of it.

    Lauren on
  • I have my son exclusively cloth diapering now and his sister started late. She’s 3 years old now and still not potty trained. She’s using pull ups cloth diapers.

    Sheena Malate on
  • This is some great information. I’m not even ready to think about potty training yet but I’m bookmarking this :)

    Valerie Jaffee on
  • My son decided to potty train at 16 months (he hated feeling wet). We used cloth trainers and it worked great. Disposable pull ups were nice for car trips though because sometimes we couldn’t pull over fast enough and he would have an accident. In cloth trainers, his shorts would be wet by the time we pulled over but disposables kept him and the car seat dry.

    Sarah on

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