Hi J.,
I really understand what you are going through. I am in the process of adopting my two sons, both who came to me through the foster care system and have dealt with exactly what you are going through. My oldest son is going to be four next month and he has only finished training in the last two months. He still has accidents at night, two or three times a week. My advice is heartfelt and I hope you find it useful. He had been trained at 2 also before he entered the state system, or at least that is what we were told. He has been with me a year and from the beginning wore only diapers. He regressed and lost any prior training that he had ever had. We started back training from square one. First of all, I would like to say that the training, I have learned, has got to start with Mommy! I was trying so hard at the beginning and burning my candle at both ends. Finally, I had to access the situation, after months of trying everything, and ask myself a few questions.
Question 1: In the big scheme of things, what is my three year old learning to do besides potty train?
I discovered that my child was really adjusting well to his new home.(he had lost his big sister(6) that he adored and was his caretaker and his baby sister(1)too; been moved to 3 different homes in the last year and a half; now had only his 2 year old brother as the only person he knew at all; got a stranger for a Mommy with a huge stranger extended family; had moved to a strange country town from the city; got a new house and all new belongings; a new daycare; and now had routine in his life that he had never had before.){I am sure your little one has a similar background.} So... he was learning a lot and was doing great with everything else! If we had to deal with all of that as adults we would likely be on medication, seeing a therapist, be lethargic and depressed, and we likely wouldn't care if we were wetting ours pants either.
Question 2: Why am I so stressed about him training before a specific date on a calendar?
It is very easy to get caught up in society's perfect views of how to be a wonderful parent. As foster/adoptive/step parents we are under even more scutiny since we are different than the norm. It is easy to feel like we are expected to be great because we made a calculated decision to take on all that we have! Yet we are handed a child that at age two has a very traumatic history, is a total stranger to us, and needs more love and praise than the average two year old. Average children, in ideal homes, with ideal routines, and ideal bonds with family have trouble training. Society can make you feel like you are a loser if your child is not potty trained by three. Your child, like mine, like all children, is an individual. They are not robots and all learn at different times. We are not superheroes, we are MOMS, humans, and sometimes we have to remind ourselves that we cannot control everything, all the time. If your child's school or daycare is not making an issue over the pull-ups or changing wet panties (and if they are you need to have a conference with them and discuss your child's individual/special needs and how to work together) then stop stressing so. I had to do that. When you stop stressing, you are more patient and positive. Just promise yourself not to care if she wets her panties or her bed today! I pray that each morning. You will find that you will spend more time bragging on her when she does go to the potty like she is supposed to, and less time fussing over every mistake that she makes. That was the turning point for me and my son. His favorite sentence from me is "I'm soooo proud of you!" He became addicted to it and after several months just started going to the bathroom like a pro! He still likes for me to say it and if I forget he will come out of the bathroom asking, "Mommy, you so proud of me?" I quit potty training and started teaching him to be confident, trusting, loving, and happy! There are NO written guidelines for when your child has to be potty trained!!!! There's relief in that thought, isn't there? Relax, just keep up with the laundry so there are always clean shorts and panties in her reach and teach her to change herself. She is going to get it and if she doesn't, who will know by looking at her at age five that she is wearing a pull-up! Don't let what everyone else wants fill up your life and mind. This is YOUR family!
Question 3:
Is my child happy and healthy? Is her Momma happy and healthy too?
First, make sure there is not a medical reason that training is taking her a while. If so start there. Next, ask is your child happy? Are you spending more time loving, playing with her and praising her, or are you spending most of your time fussing at her, making her sit on the potty, disciplining her for other typical behaviors, keeping a spotless house, and in general working yourself to death trying to raise her like supermom! I was spending too much time focused on the later for the first six months. It was not intentional, it just happened when my life changed so drastically. I wanted to be perfect and have perfect children. I now realize my children are perfect- to me, and I am the only one that really counts! (Your children will tell you that!) Also, there is no perfect mommy, just a happy one.
You have my blessings. And my understanding!! ( I am just now thinking about starting to train my two and a half year old, but if he is not trained by four, I really don't care!!! He is wonderful to me, tee-tee smell and all!!!)
Good luck!