I have a 14-year-old son and a 7-year-old son. My older son did really well with Pull-ups disposable training pants, and rarely wet his bed. But my youngest son is just now having continuous dry nights. It sounds like your daughter is doing wonderfully with potty training. My husband and I believe that kids come to achieve these milestones at different times and in different ways. Our youngest has had intermittent severe growing pains since he was about 18 months old, and my husband thinks the fast rate of growth plays a part in him wetting the bed on occasion. I think he's onto something, because the bed-wetting always happens just after the growing pains cease. We cope by having two sets of sheets and mattress pads, so while one is in the wash, the other one can be used. We taped sheet of plastic over the mattress (or you can buy a special "no-leak" mattress pad), on top of that we put a thick absorbent blanket (or towel), then the sheets. We focused on telling Koryn it was okay and normal that he wet the bed, and that as he got older he would change and do it less and less. We also taught him to tell us as soon as he knows he wet the bed, even if it's in the middle of the night; to go potty at that time, which helped transition him to getting up and going potty before wetting the bed; we changed the bedding, cleaned the plastic with disinfectant spray, wiped him from torso to knees with a warm, damp wash cloth, put on clean pj's, and put him back to bed. We discovered that the security of knowing mom and dad wouldn't be irritated and didn't make a big deal out of the be-wetting was the best prevention. A nice bonus is that this was early training for being able to tell us anything and feel safe doing so. We're hoping that will continue into his teen years, when being able to tell us anything is more important than ever. One more thing - we encourage our son to drink a good amount of water during the day (he starts the morning with water), then limit liquid one hour before bedtime to a sip or two. When he was wetting the bed a lot, we tried to get in an extra trip to the bathroom, even if it meant helping him because he was so groggy. Don't worry, as you move through this with your daughter, she will become more aware and gain more control over her body, waking up to go instead of wetting the bed. Blessings to you and your family.