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Potty Training: Signs of Readiness and a Simple Method

By Marcus Hale · Senior gear writer & testing lead

Fact-checked by Dr. Elena Vasquez, MD, FAAP (Board-certified pediatrician & medical reviewer)

Updated June 3, 2026

· 2 min read
Medically reviewed by Dr. Elena Vasquez, MD, FAAP, Board-certified pediatrician & medical reviewer· Last updated June 3, 2026
Potty Training: Signs of Readiness and a Simple Method

How to know your toddler is ready and a low-stress way to start.

Potty Training: Signs of Readiness and a Simple Method can feel impossible the first time, then second nature the tenth time. This guide collects the techniques pediatric nurses and seasoned parents use to make daily care safer, calmer, and a lot less stressful — without expensive gear.

The basics, the right way

Most newborn care comes down to a few well-practiced moves: a safe hold, a clean change, a calm soothing routine, and watching for the signs that need a provider's call. The "right way" usually means slow, supported, and warm. Babies are surprisingly tough, but they also lose body heat fast and don't yet control their heads — both the reasons you keep things gentle and well-padded.

Most "rules" you hear (bath every day, feed on a schedule, sleep through the night by 8 weeks) are not actually rules — they're family preferences. The non-negotiables are short: safe sleep, supported head, clean feeds, and noticing changes in behavior.

How to make it routine

Babies thrive on rhythm rather than rigid schedules. Pair activities so each one cues the next: feed → burp → diaper → cuddle → sleep is a classic loop. Once your baby learns the pattern, transitions get easier and you stop reinventing the day every two hours.

Build in "redundancy": a second diaper-changing station upstairs if you have stairs, an extra outfit in the car, snacks in your bag. Friction during 3 a.m. is the enemy.

Common worries

Spit-up, hiccups, occasional fussiness, and irregular sleep are normal — even when they don't feel like it. Real red flags are different: refusing to feed, lethargy that's hard to wake from, a fever in a baby under three months, breathing that looks labored, or a cry that sounds different than usual. When in doubt, your pediatrician's nurse line beats Google every time.

Gear that actually helps

Most "must-haves" aren't. The genuine helpers tend to be: a safe car seat, a sturdy stroller, a reliable monitor, a swaddle that fits, and a comfortable carrier you'll actually wear. Skip gadgets that solve problems you don't have yet.

The bottom line

You'll mess up. You'll also be a good parent. Both are true. Bookmark what works, ignore what doesn't, and ask for help early — from a pediatrician, a lactation consultant, a family member, or a parent friend who's a few months ahead.

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Written by

Marcus Hale

Senior gear writer & testing lead

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