5 Year Old Refuses to Poop on Potty

Updated on May 12, 2009
A.O. asks from Chicago, IL
16 answers

My 5 year old refuses to poop on the potty. she is otherwise potty trained, but she says that she is scared that it will hurt. She will either go in her underpants, a pull-up or even tries to hold it so she won't have to go. She has been known to not go for as much as 3 weeks before we had to give her an enema. We have tried everything - rewards, punishment, understanding, shame, etc.

What can I do next?

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So What Happened?

I appreciate everyone's input. We are currently seeing a psychologist as there are probably underlying issues. Some of your responses offered very harsh advice which i do not agree with. Tough love in this situation does not work and i believe, should not be used. It is not always a physical problem.

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B.B.

answers from Chicago on

Hi A.,

My sone went thru the same problem. It drove me nuts! His doctor recommended giving him a stool softner and that did the trick. You can buy it over the counter at any drug store. I just gave him about 1/2 a cap full every morning with his ovaltine. It may take awhile, but eventually she'll be fine.

B.

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T.K.

answers from Chicago on

We had a similar issue with our son. We wound up cutting a hole in the pull up and having him sit on the potty with his pullup on. He thought he was pooping in his pull up but he actually pooped in the potty. He was then able to see that it was no different and it didn't hurt. We used lots of rewards to encourage his progress - treats, stickers... It helped that he was always well hydrated -- pooping was regular and there was not a lot of pushing involved.

Best of luck.

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J.E.

answers from Chicago on

I know you must be getting nervous because it is almost time for school. I think you should just let her wear a pull up every night and if she poops in the pull up, have her clean herself up in the morning, with your help. I think you should make sure everyone in the house knows that this is the routine and your daughter shouldn't be made fun of or shamed. Say how proud you are of her every time she uses the potty correctly, so she wants to please you instead of being afraid when she fails. I think since your daughter is 5 years old, it is either medical, emotional or developmental-which means it is not anyone's fault and she can't help it.

I read a lot of advice on web sites that talk about potty training autistic children. Now those are parents who have some patience.

I have heard that doctors have some tricks for children who are constipated or withholding their stools like mineral oil or something, but I would talk to the doctor before using anything.

Hang in there. When she gets it, you will look back and feel so good about yourself.

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A.R.

answers from Chicago on

My son took a year longer to potty train for pooping than for peeing. This is not uncommon. I know first hand it can be frustrating and it would make me angry to clean it up. But shame and punishment don't work, will just make the whole process take longer and give the child a complex. I know first-hand. What worked? I started by telling him it was ok to poop in the pull ups but he had to be in the bathroom sitting on the toilet/potty to do it to get him into the habit of proper place/position. Then, after about 2 or 3 weeks of that, once he was regularly doing it in the right place, I got rid of pull ups except for naps and sleeping. Then no pull ups for naps because he stopped napping but would poop in his pants during naptime anyway. Someone suggested cutting a hole in the pull ups, I read that idea and was going to try it but didn't need to because other things worked, but I think it's a good one. My child wasn't one to poop on the floor if I left him bare-butted, but my other son would just let it fall. I think having the child clean it up or help clean it up if they make the mess is a good idea, as long as you do so in a neutral tone -- it's not punishment, no scolding, just oh, you made a mess, ok we're going to clean it up now together. (It will get old for them pretty quickly.) Another suggestion -- buy a bunch of cheap underwear so if the child poops in the underwear, you can just throw them away -- might be easier to deal with that than full clean up. And make sure she has lots of fiber and drinks a lot of water to keep the stools soft so they don't hurt. She might also need to put her feet on a step stool while she poops if she's doing it in the toilet -- again, you can work that out with her while she's wearing pull ups so she can get a feel for it. Finally, relax. It seems like they'll never get it, but they will. The best thing you can do is be patient and give her the space to do it one step at a time -- she'll get there. Good luck!!

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G.H.

answers from Chicago on

Take her in the bathroom with you and daddy when you "poop". Show her that it doesn't hurt if she lets it out. It only hurts when people hold it in. Let her see in the potty that you "went" with no problem.

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K.S.

answers from Chicago on

My son went through the same thing. He said he was scared and he wasn't comforable. So I took him to the store and he picked out a different potty chair (it had a cushion seat and it was bigger then the little potty seat we had but shorter then the toilet) He said he was much more comfortable and he started going right away! I was amazed that such a little thing like a different toilet made all the difference but it did and we were both much happier! Good Luck!

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N.A.

answers from Chicago on

Dear A.,

I went though the same thing with my son. I think he was about 4 and he would pee no problem on the big toilet but poop was another thing. I called my Dr and he said give him a little mineral oil and it would be easier for him to go until he is used to going on the big potty. It worked like a charm. Maybe get her special underwear and don't put the pull ups on her anymore. Eventually her fear will subside and she will be fine, going on the big potty. Good Luck!!

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D.R.

answers from Chicago on

My daughter went through the same thing. I ditched all the diapers and pull-ups b/c she refused to go poop in anything but them. I told her if she poops in her pants she has to clean it up. She did poop in her pants and she had to clean it up, after that she didn't want to do that anymore.

You may want to consider giving her a handful of dried prunes with breakfast each morning (or increase fiber another way). This will help keep her stools soft so they don't hurt and she won't be able to hold it even if she wants to.

Good luck!

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D.K.

answers from Chicago on

I had same issue. A nurse friend suggested adding small amounts of Benefiber to cereal, juice, etc. It's tasteless and odorless. This worked real well for us. After a few days of smooth, easy poops, I started backing off on the Benefiber and my daughter started pooping with no problems. Good luck!

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L.W.

answers from Chicago on

Try giving your child miralax. My son has been on it since he was 18 months on and off. It will make the stools softer and they will come everyday. Once your daughter learns going to the potty doesnt hurt you will have a better chance of her going on the toliet.

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S.A.

answers from Chicago on

Have you talked to your pediatrician about this?

Have you tried to explain to her that pooping in her pants is no different than pooping on the toilet. It doesn't feel any different to poop in the toilet than her pants and it doesn't hurt to pee on the toilet????

Honestly my brother would go in his pants from time to time at that age because he didn't want to go in the house to go....I mean stop playing to go to the bathroom. He hated pooping...it made him gag, so he would just go in his pants. My mom finally had to just get tough with him. Not only did he get a spanking if he pooped in his pants, but she would put a diaper on him for the afternoon.

He only pooped in his pants once after she told him what was going to happen...guess he didn't believe her.

I'm sure many will think that's mean and humiliating, but it worked and he's fine. He double majored in college in Computer Science and Math with a 3.8 GPA. He is married with three kids and he coaches baseball in his spare time. I think he's a pretty well adjusted guy with a great life. WOW!!! He wasn't traumatized.

Get tough with her and make her understand that is not acceptable. I had one that was three and wouldn't sit on the potty. She would make her mom give her a pull-up so she could go in another room and poop. I sat her on the potty and held her on it...I hugged her and kissed her face and told her it would be alright...nothing bad would happen... I made her sit until she went. All the kids cheared, I gave her a couple of chocolate chips and she went on the potty from then on out. She doesn't like to poop because it's gross to her so she will try to hold it.

Really, you will just have to get tough with her. After an enema I would think she would go...did you explain that you had to do the enema because she was holding it? That had to hurt????

Get a big diaper and show it to her...tell her that if she poops in her pants again, she will have to wear the diaper. Put it in plain view and remind her daily. Then if she poops in her pants, make her clean herself up...give her wipes, put her in the tub and make her clean up. Make her wash herself in the bath, then put the diaper on her. If she pitches a fit, then tell her that babies poop in their pants.

If she poops in the diaper, then make her clean that up too. Tell her that you love her and want her to be a big girl. Insist that she has to be a big girl or she will have to wear diapers...because pooping in her pants ruins her clothes, makes her stink, and creates all kinds of mess that has to be cleaned up.

Something has to sink in after all that.

If not, then I would take her to the doctor and see if there is not a medical condition that is causing her to go in her pants. There is such a thing though I don't know the name of it.

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N.P.

answers from Chicago on

Early Potty Training Key to Success
John K. Rosemond

What's it going to take for American parents to realize that just as it's far easier to house train a 4-month-old puppy than a one-year-old dog, it's far easier to toilet train a 20-month-old child than a 3-year-old?

Fifty-four years ago, according to a study conducted at the time by Harvard University, nearly 90 percent of America's children had been successfully trained before they reached their second birthdays. Today, courtesy of several decades of toilet-babble issuing primarily from pediatrician/author T. Berry Brazelton, parents wrongly think training a child under age two is psychologically harmful, if not impossible.

So, they wait. And they wait. And they wait. They're waiting, they tell me, for their children to show some of Brazelton's "readiness signs," which he snatched out of the thinnest of air to make it appear that his "child-centered" (a euphemism for upside-down) recommendations were based on solid science.

As a consequence of this waiting for the Godot of potties, children become ever more accustomed to and oblivious of letting go in their diapers. When their parents finally make the attempt to entice them to use the potty, all manner of resistance develops, including a problem that was rare fifty-plus years ago but is ubiquitous today: refusing to use the toilet for bowel movements.

Several weeks ago, a mother asked me for advice concerning her 4-year-old who was "absolutely refusing to poop in the potty." The child's resistance had been ongoing for some time and was associated with late training. Mom was obviously ready to pack it in and run away from home, so I went into my top-secret phone booth, changed into my Parentman costume, and gave Mom a set of instructions that have proved helpful to lots of other parents in the same fix:

Stop talking to your son about using the potty. Don't even ask "Do you want to try and poop in the potty today?" or other equally counterproductive questions.

Get rid of the diapers, pull-ups, and all associated things and resolve to never use them again.

Every day, right after your son eats a high fiber breakfast, gate him in the bathroom, naked from the waist down, and tell him his doctor said he has to stay there until he poops in the potty.

Don't stay in the bathroom with him. Don't offer incentives, or even encouragements. After putting him in the bathroom, make yourself scarce. Simply tell your son to call you when he poops or if he needs help.

Respond "coolly" to success, as if it's no big deal. Say no more than "That's good, you can come out now." Do not give a reward or even lots of praise.

Gate him in the bathroom every day until he's having regular bowel movements in the potty.

A week later, Mom wrote, "We have success." When she introduced the plan, the little guy cried and generally acted like he was being traumatized, but Mom stayed the course.

"You will poop in the potty," she told him, and he did; and he has been ever since.

Lesson: The mistake of late training is correctable, and my experience is that, as in this case, the correction usually takes less than a couple of weeks. But the wear and tear in the meantime!

Copyright 2009, John K. Rosemond

Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents' questions on his website at www.rosemond.com.

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L.D.

answers from Chicago on

There's a (I think) free class at Arlington Pediatric Therapy in Arlington Hts called Will my child ever be out of diapers? specifically for older children. Maybe this would help? It's taught by a nurse and in a small setting so she would be able to address your particular situation and give you some ideas. Their number is ###-###-####. Good Luck!

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B.S.

answers from Rockford on

i am retired nurse, mother of three and grandmother of six.... Such a long time not going to the bathroom can lead to serious medical crisis...consult with a pediatrician and or child psycologist as soon as possible..

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C.H.

answers from Chicago on

All 3 of my kids had issues with pooping. Not so much scared to go on the potty just hurt like heck so they would go maybe 1 a week. With my first, the dr told me to do mineral oil and it worked for her and the 2nd. Now the 3rd has had major issues with this and knock on wood, I think we may be at an end of it. With him he would take mineral oil but then would hold it in as long as possible, one night sitting for 2 1/2 hours before he went. He would always be happy once he went and said he felt better but then the next time would come and he would scream that it is gonna hurt. For about 2 weeks, I gave him Miralax again suggested by dr and I also backed off about it. I stopped pestering him and just told him to listen to his body and if his tummy was starting to hurt, then it was probably time to poop. He has gone by himself the last few times with no issues, no screams, nothing. I haven't given him Miralax for the last two weeks and he is now going maybe once every 3 days.

good luck
C.

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L.R.

answers from Chicago on

know her currency.....For us our son was almost 5...Thank God for Day out w/Thomas...he wanted to ride on Thomas....told him only "big boys" can ride on Thomas ans "big boys" go poopers on the potty. The NITE before he pooped on the poddy!!!! and at the event he had to poop and grabbed his butt and yelled DADDY POOPERS!!!!
It has to be something that she only gets or does if she poops on the poddy...never shame it makes it worse. and every teacher I have ever met has said the same....they have never seen a child start Kindergarten with a "diaper" on.

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