Bed Wetting Is Embarrassing

Bed wetting can be very embarrassing for an older child. Find out what you can do to help your child cope and learn to better understand what your child is going through.

By the time children reach school age, they can find wetting the bed very embarrassing.

This makes it difficult to accept invitations for overnight activities, and children will withdraw from social activities such as sleepovers. Children may also begin to develop low self esteem problems as they have less confidence in themselves. Parents may also feel frustrated about the fact that their child still wets the bed, as if they have somehow failed.

There are many positives ways to cope with bedwetting, which can help make this condition easier for the family to deal with and help the child grow out of it easily and perhaps faster.

Coping

A few simple products that can be purchased at parenting stores or online at parenting websites can help you and your toddler or school aged child deal with enuresis, such as absorbent underpants, both disposable and reusable, moisture alarms, which wake the child when his or her bed gets wet and which help train the child to wake up before they urinate. There are also sleeping bag liners that you can buy which can help your child feel more comfortable about sleepovers. You may want to let your child first try out the sleeping bag liner at home or at a relative’s house.

We Recommend

Stop Bedwetting Forever   
101 Tips to help your child stop wetting the bed at night. Danielle has put together an ebook that's packed full of easy to use and hand-on advice you can start implementing right away. If you have a child that wets the bed, this is a must-read.