2024 the best toilet in the world review
Price: $16.99 - $9.69
(as of Nov 20, 2024 15:09:10 UTC - Details)
In this newly modernized edition of the classic, bestselling book on toilet training, you’ll discover the scientifically proven Azrin-Foxx method that’s been used by millions of parents worldwide.
This clear and accessible guide remains the go-to book on toilet training for a reason. With a newly modernized take on the same proven, easy-to-follow steps, you’ll learn how to let go of stress and have your child confidently using the toilet—without assistance or a reminder—in only a couple of hours.
Inside you will find a wealth of helpful information, including:
- Step-by-step instructions taking you and your child from pre-training all the way through to the Potty Training Diploma
- A method that unlocks your child’s sense of pride, independence, and accomplishment
- Supply lists, reminder sheets, and frequently asked questions
With more than two million copies sold, Toilet Training in Less Than a Day is the only guide you'll ever need to make potty training a rewarding and successful experience for both you and your toddler.
Publisher : Gallery Books; Reprint edition (August 6, 2019)
Language : English
Paperback : 192 pages
ISBN-10 : 1982120754
ISBN-13 : 978-1982120757
Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
Dimensions : 5.31 x 0.5 x 8.25 inches
Reviewer: S. Thompson
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Very intense, but super effective!
Review: Below was my original review from training my first child in 2018; today I'm adding another review after potty training my second child in 2021.I tried potty-training my 2018 when he was 18 months and 30 months. He was not cooperating and mainly I felt like he wasn't socioemotionally or linguistically ready. To use this book's method, you have to get the child to pay attention and communicate using words or gesture. My little one (like his big brother) is pretty wild and just wouldn't calm down enough to really listen, so I aborted both attempts. The book says to minimize unsuccessful toilet training attempts as that tends to build up resistance. Finally, after he turned 36 months I felt like he was ready (he was possibly ready a few months earlier, but I was so overwhelmed with the pandemic and work that I put it off). Like his big brother, he was initially resistant to taking off his pants or diaper, or then putting on the underwear, but I persisted and then we got ready with the potty training.Day 1: he peed in the potty successfully four times, had 3 pee accidents, and 1 BM accidents. Toward the end of the day, he looked sad/contrite when he had an accident. I felt that he understood he needed to keep it all in the potty but he just somehow couldn't tell he needed to go until it was too late. He also needed to sit on the potty a long time to pee in there. He did stay dry through a short nap. We kept him inside the house almost the whole day. I didn't feel he was potty-trained sufficiently to trust him to stay dry at night, so we put him in a diaper (even though the book says you should never let them see a diaper again if they're older than 2.5).Day 2: I left with the older child and let his dad take over potty training. The first two times were accidents; then I came home and supervised, and he was succeeded every single time, although sometimes he still needed to sit 20-30 minutes. He stayed dry through his nap, and in fact through the rest of the day. We kept him indoors almost the whole day. No BM in the evening. We put him to sleep at night with just underwear and crossed our fingers -- he wet his bed at night. Considering our older one wet his bed 3 nights in a row before miraculously being night-trained, we steeled ourselves for a similar possibility.Day 3: It was Monday and I had to work, so I left a sheet of instructions with our nanny. First pee was an accident, but then he stayed dry the rest of the day and stayed dry for his nap. He got to play in the yard, and ran back inside once or twice to pee on his own. Still no BM in the evening. But he managed to stay dry all night and had a big pee in the morning in the pee, and was very proud of himself. We are cautiously optimistic that maybe he's going to be night trained faster than his big brother, who wet his bed 3 nights!Day 4: No accidents so far (it's almost noon as I'm typing this). He's very fast at peeing in the potty now. I asked the nanny to take him to the park with his potty -- it's his first time venturing that far from home. I'm hopeful he will pee/poop in the park today, so that tomorrow the nanny can restart picking up the older one from school and shuttling him to after-school activities, with the younger one in tow. Still no BM since Saturday night. We've gotten him prune juice and miralax, hoping it will ease his first BM in the potty.Summary:Well, potty training is not quite complete (still working on BM and going potty outside the house), but I would say overall it has gone really well. He's made so much progress and I don't see us going back to diapers or training underwear -- I had thick training underwear for the older child but avoided them this time. The older one would pee a few drops in these training underwear before making it to the toilet; it hasn't happened with the younger one. Either we're lucky this time or maybe the training underwear actually makes it harder to tell that it's wet. Unlike with the older child, I omitted the "positive practice trials" for both the doll and my child when they had an accident. I was upset by how upset it made my older child; I think it probably did slow down the training a little this time, but a lot less crying. It basically took two full days (just a normal weekend) to get the younger one to be able to spontaneously go potty by himself. I feel like taking two days instead of a few hours, in order to avoid the crying/trauma part, was worth it for me. I also tried to stick to healthier snacks & drinks, which probably also lengthened the training a bit too, but I just couldn't quite stomach giving him very salty snacks, or really sugary drinks; I stuck to veggie chips and real fruit juice (or milk). It means he was less thirsty and probably got fewer opportunities to practice pottying per hour than he would have otherwise, but I felt ok with that. A three-day weekend would've been nice to consolidate everything, but we found a normal 2-day weekend was just enough to get through most of it and make sure he's on a good path. It seemed that every time I let him be introduced to a new situation (being supervised by dad, or by the nanny), he had an accident. It made me nervous, but then each time he was able to adapt and improve. Given that I'm a full-time working mom and we couldn't wait until a long weekend to potty train (the preschool we want to send him wouldn't let him register until he's already potty trained), I thought it worked out efficiently enough. Overall, I am very pleased with the method in this book.Read the book carefully, follow all the instructions (or skip minor ones like I did, but then be ready to deal with slightly longer training period). It should all work more or less like the book says it will. Don't forget, stay positive! There were many moments when I felt discouraged, and then remembered the book said to stay positive, and that kept me from giving up or feeling miserable.(Original Review)I almost never write reviews, but the procedure in this book was so effective that I had to write one up.It was a lot of work reading/internalizing this book and getting everything prepared, and then a super intense long weekend (exacerbated by my 3-year-old son's intense personality and deep sense of resistance to pottying) devoted to potty training, but the method *really works*! Before the weekend, we had basically gotten nowhere with potty training, because we didn't know how to start, and he always said no if we asked him if he wanted to sit on the potty or the toilet. When he turned 3, and now that we have a newborn, I decided it was time to train him for real.Our procedure: I basically followed the procedure in the book faithfully the first morning (3 hours), except I had to let him train the doll naked waist-down, because he absolutely refused to wear underwear. Luckily he held his pee the whole time. After the whole doll procedure, and much coaxing/persuading, I finally persuaded him to put on underwear more than an hour after starting. Then it took another good 30 minutes to persuade him to take it off and sit on the potty. Note that this is a wild child who never does anything I say, but the book has some good tips for how to get such kids (any child, really) to follow instructions, and I practiced it a little bit beforehand, and used it over and over on the day. The second day, I went through the whole procedure (including the doll) again in a sped up fashion, just to make sure he really got it. I also let him wear training pants the whole long weekend as well as the first day at school, but by the second day at school he was happy to go in underwear. I bought 9 pairs of training pants, and he used them all during the training process, plus we had to do laundry every day as well! At the beginning he would have just a couple of drops of pee in his training pants before he made it to the potty, but he got over that after a few days.After the first morning: he knew the whole sequence of pulling down pants, sitting down, peeing, pulling up pants, dump the potty content in the toilet, flush the toilet putting the potty seat back; but he didn't always consistently go when he needed to pee, and he didn't always completely empty his bladder when he did pee in the pottyBy the first evening: he spontaneously had his first poop in the potty (I was surprsied BM did not need separate training, despite assurances from the book)By the second day: he stayed dry through his napBy the third day: he could spontaneously go to the potty by himself when he needed to go (we had stopped giving any food/drinks as rewards), and he added an extra hand-washing step by himselfBy the fourth day: he stayed dry all night for the first time (this really surprised me, because I really expected him not to be able to hold it all night); he went back to preschool ready to pee/poop on their mini toilets, slept dry through the nap, and only had one poop accident on the playgroundBy the end of week 1: no more accidents, and he can easily pee/poop on adult-sized toilets in restaurants, parks, other people's homes, etc. Basically, he was now a fully toilet trained child, and only needed some help to wipe himself after BM, or get onto an adult-sized toilet when we're not home. We do occasionally ask him if he needs to go (sometimes he says yes, sometimes he says no). But he goes spontaneously when he needs to, and has not had any accident since.He still occasionally blows out at night (once in the last week), but it's getting rarer and rarer. He also finally accepted after about 3 weeks that if he wants any milk or other fluid in the evening, he must have it at dinner or shortly after, and not before bedtime.Finally, I'm a psychologist myself, and I find this a scientifically grounded approach. It does not involve "brainwashing" or "shaming" the child. To the contrary, it made my child feel really proud of himself, and really helped with my parenting, because the book taught me how to get my child to be more cooperative in all kinds of situations. I am still using these techniques daily to deal with my very independent and stubborn 3-year-old. On a side note, it was also interesting to see that my very boyish boy (super excited about trains, fire trucks, and planes) to really get into role-playing with a girl doll (which I named Molly).I recommend this book to anyone and everyone! I will definitely use this method to train my second child when he's old enough (the book says many kids are ready by 18 months). I wish I had trained my older son a year ago, he was definitely ready!
Reviewer: Jane Smith
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: 22mo old daughter trained in one morning-dont buy a potty doll
Review: This method is awesome for the kid who is easy going and is eager to please. Instead of a 50 dollar peeing doll we used her favorite teddy bear and a squirt bottle. She saw how I made bear pee but it didnt matter and was really effective. we psyched her up for the big day for a week before we started. Wrapped the potty like a present so it was really exciting. Talked about how fun it would be..read potty books about big girls. Worked like a charm. Early in the training she was burned out on sugar treats so we used a sticker chart, party hats and a candle she could blow out as a reward ("Susie is a big girl today"- to happy birthday tune). She also was told she could open a present for each poo on the potty (extra incentive to try). We went through all the steps of training and after 2 hrs she hadnt managed to pee yet despite 3 juice boxes. I went into the kitchen to make an early lunch and she came to get me 5 minutes later fully dressed saying she had peed in the potty and wanted a treat. "yeah right" I thought, but sure enough she had pulled her pants down, peed in the pot and pulled her pants up all by herself. After showing me she took the pot, marched to the bathroom, dumped it in the toilet and flushed! We started training at 9am and this was at 11! The rest of the day she had only 2 accidents. With the accidents you are supposed to do 10 practice potty drills. The trick for us was to make them fun. Some parents think it works better if they dont like it and cry but it worked great for us as fun practice (they're called positive practice drills after all). Talk in an upbeat voice with a smile about it but remind her that you have to practice so she doesnt go pee pee in her pants again. "if you were in here playing with your dolly and suddenly you had to go pee pee what do you do? do you go in your pants? No, run to the potty! Quick! Go go go! Thats right! Now pull down your pants! OK, 9 more times! Lets pretend you were here coloring and suddenly you have to poop! What do you do?...right! to the potty! Go go go! Faster faster! YEah! Good job! OK 8 more times!" It is exausting but it works. Instead of getting frustrated by each accident be happy that there is an opportunity for practice. Never show frustration or anger and remember that this is a new concept and requires practice! This is where she figured out a lot of the steps like how to pull up and down her undies..and later her pants and undies. And even though she had fun with the drills I think she realized she didnt want to do drills all the time. The second day she had no accidents except during her sleep at nap time. She also pooed in the potty twice on day two after holding it all day the first day. Cried after the first one because she thought she did something wrong (we had to throw another potty party and get out a present). We called cookie monster and dora explorer on the phone. You have to watch the face for #2 and then rush her/him to the potty. Reading books and drinking juice boxes on the potty was key to relaxing her enough so she could go #1 or #2. Potty books worked best because she was thinking about it. At some point in the training I was burnt out on talking about potties so we watched a video of a mom using this method with her two year old and also some potty songs we found on youtube. She was riveted watching the little girl go through the same training steps she just did with me and her teddy bear..I think this method might be tricky if your child has an especially defiant personality but the steps might actually help them be less defiant. Keep it fun and if they get upset give hugs and keep talking upbeat and how proud you are of them for learning how to be a big kid. If they melt down durinng practice promise a treat after 10 runs. They say dont treat for practice but if it keeps them going and enjoying learning and keeps them practicing do it. Also use it to teach numbers (7 more times and your finished and get a treat! -show your fingers..6 more times etc..).Try it, it really works!Update: 3 weeks later and averaging less than one accident per week (usually my fault), self initiating (except before bed and outings) and is dry every morning -never put diapers back on at night because she wouldnt let me (shes a 12 hr sleeper so I put her on the potty at 11pm to pee so she can make it through the night-she never even really wakes up but it works). The book glosses over issues with # 2 but it does work the same way as training for #1 you just have to extend training for that part since you have so fewer opportunities. We had no accidents with #2 ever but it took a couple of weeks of continued encouragement, prune juice and promised rewards/treats for it to become relaxed and routine again (ie she would just hold it) but now there is no issue, even at daycare. Wish I had started earlier, the process was so easy.
Reviewer: markis jay greif
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Has good pointers
Review: My wife used this book to potty train our two year old witch I think is impressive it took a couple days and a few accidents here and there but it did work donât get your hopes up if it doesnât work in a day you also have to invest the time
Reviewer: Srta Palo
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Potty training my first child was a nightmare, it took me almost 1 years. This book really helped me with the second one, after a couple of days she was able to do it all by herself. I totally recommend it.
Reviewer: mumof2
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This method works, potty trained 2 kids using it and both times success (it took 2 days with my second one but hey! ) no accidents at all after 2-3 days and both never wet the bed either ( so nappy free for bedtime too ) be ready to be stuck at home only potty training for a day or 2 ! No visitors, phone calls or checking your emails haha ok maybe not that extreme. Book is very dated so is the language but if you look past that it delivers what it promises which is rare.
Reviewer: Risé
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I got this book about 16 years ago (which means my kids are all teens now) ... I followed the book precisely and my kidlet was trained by supper time. Stress-free for me and for him. I applied the techniques in this book for my next two children and again, trained by supper time the same day. When I tell people that I trained them all in one day, I get the dubious look. But I have a husband who can testify to it working!! I am buying a few copies of this book to give away as baby shower gifts because the techniques in the book work and work very well. My children were ready at different ages. My oldest was a week after turning 2 years old, my daughter 2 years and 4 months, and my youngest was almost 4 - he took a long time to meet those 'milestones' as he was quite speech delayed and he had severe comprehension delays - once they were overcome though - potty trained in ONE DAY!! Thank you Drs. Nathan Azrin and Richard Foxx - you guys rock!!!! Thank you for this amazing stress-free technique!!
Reviewer: Adriano demofonti
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: un manuale indispensabile per chi ha bambini con disabilità e vuole affrontare le autonomie. è in inglese ma è comprensibile. forse poche immagini esplicative
Reviewer: yumyum
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
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Customers say
Customers find the advice in the book worth trying. They say it works well for some children and the principles are sound. However, some customers feel the content is outdated and the language is easy to follow. Opinions are mixed on the value for money and intensity.
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