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DARE TO ASK: Potty training: A black and white issue?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why do white people potty train their kids so late, while black people train them earlier?

Lynn, Memphis, Tenn.

Replies

Probably because more white women have the time to wipe their babies’ bottoms than many black women have the privilege to, between three jobs, rising out of poverty and generations of slavery.

Daryl, 30, Asian, Texas

It’s also very common in Europe and the former Soviet Union to potty train early (12 months or so). This could be because diapers are expensive.

Kate, 34, white, Columbia, Md.

Pacifiers, bottles, breast-feeding and diapers are areas we black mothers tend to want to rid our children of as early as possible because they weigh the child down. Having a 3-year-old hooked on a pacifier is like having a 3-year-old hooked on crack. I guess we also think it’s hard enough for black kids to progress in America, so why keep them attached to unnecessary “baby things”? We tend to want our children far less dependent on us as soon as possible because sometimes life has a way of happening, and we don’t want to leave behind dependent children.

Raquel, 33, black, Houston

I never recognized any correlation between race and potty-training. I do think, however, that stingy people or those with lower incomes are more likely to potty train early because day care for potty-trained infants is easier to find and significantly cheaper.

Kristina, 23, black, Washington

Experts say

When controversy like this rears its possibly dirty head (we aren’t checking – you do it), there’s only one option: seek out the “Potty Pro.”

Teri Crane, known by that moniker for having helped thousands of parents in her “potty training boot camps,” is author of Potty Train Your Child in Just One Day (Simon & Schuster).

“I can tell you, emphatically, this is not a black or white thing. Black people don’t do it [potty train their kids] before white people. It’s based on the needs of the individual child.”

Cheli English-Figaro, national president of the Mocha Moms support group for mothers of color, agreed.

“I’ve never heard anything like that – us taking shorter time to train our kids,” she said. “Now, my mom did train me by age 1, but that was the cultural norm for everyone back in the mid-’60s. Before Pampers and diaper services, you had to wash your own cloth diapers, and people didn’t want to deal with that for too long.”

While some cultures do train their children early – tribes in East Africa have had success using a “soothing, calm approach” to train their offspring by as young as 5 months – today in America it’s generally not recommended to start training until at least age 2, Crane said. Meanwhile, the American Academy of Family Physicians and the American Academy of Pediatrics give no “set” date, but both say many children don’t show “readiness” until 18 to 24 months.

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