Links to EC Websites |
| Born Potty Trained | |||
| Babies are BORN potty trained! Just like other animals, human infants instinctively avoid urinating and defecating on themselves. Why do you think babies go during diaper changes? It's not the rush of cold air like others will tell you -- our babies are simply (and smartly!) taking the opportunity to relieve themselves without having to sit in it! After just a few months of full time diapering, our babies are trained to ignore their natural instinct, and instead of preferring to be clean and dry, they are trained to pee and poop into their diapers. |
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| EC Simplified: Infant Potty Training Made Easy | |||
| EC Simplified is a visual, multimedia resource for beginning an Elimination Communication practice with your baby. The website contains a frequently updated blog; an overview of what EC is and the benefits of using EC; a thorough listing of places to find support, resources, and community sources for EC-friendly gear & clothing; several free how-to EC videos; a digital book & audiobook (endorsed by DiaperFreeBaby); and a helpful weekly EC Tips & Tricks Newsletter. |
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| Free to EC | |||
| Elimination Communication. Natural Infant Hygiene. Infant Potty Training. Elimination Timing. Trickle Treat. Diaper Free....these are merely the modern names that have been invented to describe something so natural, so primal that most women who practice it throughout the world have no name for it at all. |
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| Infant Potty Training | |||
| Have you ever thought about how babies were toilet trained in the days before diapers? Or how they are potty trained today in places without diapers? There is a growing community of mothers who are using infant potty training (IPT) with their babies, a method similar to the way mothers around the world have been handling the elimination issue for centuries. |
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| The Potty Whisperer | |||
| It often starts with a whisper, and it has many names: from the practical descriptions of “Infant Potty Training” and “Elimination Communication” to the nostalgic “Trickle Treat” from the early ’90s. It is part of a long-established child-rearing practice that lost favor to the hyper-convenient world of diapers and fast food. It is the gentle, loving, dual practice of being attentive and responsive to baby’s natural needs. I have now begun to think of it as “potty whispering” for this is how it begins in many places around the world. |
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Links to EC Websites --> general

