Will offering a reward help stop your child’s bedwetting?

 
Offering rewards might not help your child stop bedwetting

I’m often asked if it’s a good idea to introduce a reward as an additional incentive to changing children’s bedwetting habits. On the face of it, it does sound like a good idea – human beings are naturally goal-seeking individuals and surely if you’re going to have to push yourself in order to achieve something, then rewarding yourself with an additional carrot may well make all the difference.

Parents are already encouraged to create star charts, give pocket money and dangle more expensive treats such as the promise of a new pair of trainers, to motivate their children on a daily basis.

Extrinsic rewards are not effective motivation

However, psychological studies show that our interest in completing a task – our intrinsic motivation – begins to rapidly decline if we introduce an extrinsic reward. This is because as soon as you take your attention, your awareness and focus away from your goal, you begin to make it much harder for yourself to succeed. Every ounce of brainpower should be channeled into focusing on the task in hand and the prospect of success.

Of course, there has to be something positive to be gained out of any kind of task, otherwise there would be no point in doing it. But keeping your end goal in sight as your ‘reward’ is going to increase your chances of getting there.

The end result is the ultimate reward!

So, in the case of a child who is following a programme, such as Stop Bedwetting in 7 Days, to stop their bedwetting habit for good, their ultimate reward will the be prospect having dry beds and the confidence to go on school trips and sleepovers with friends. The more that the child can sit and think and dream about how good life will be once they’ve ditched this miserable habit, the more likely they are to get there.

And think too, about what is likely to happen if that bedwetting child takes a little longer to get dry at night. Not only will they have the disappointment of waking up in a wet bed, but also the double disappointment of losing out on their treat or reward.

Success is more likely without the distraction of a reward

Many psychological experiments have been carried out monitoring people’s progress in achieving tasks when rewards are offered. In each case, the results have been replicated, with the conclusion that more pleasure and success can be derived from a task if there’s no distracting element such as a reward.

Which explains why Olympic athletes are more likely to be successful if they focus on winning the race, rather than getting a gold medal.

Alicia Eaton is a Children’s Behavioural Specialist based in London’s Harley Street since 2004.  She is the author of the best-selling “Stop Bedwetting in 7 days” book and online video training programme.  You can read more about changing children’s habits and behaviours in “Words that Work: How to Get Kids to Do Almost Anything”.

For more details see www.aliciaeaton.co.uk.

 
Rosanna

With 9 years as a Squarespace Circle Member, website designer and content creator, Rosanna shares tips and resources about design, content marketing and running a website design business on her blog. She’s also a Flodesk University Instructor (with 10+ years expertise in email marketing), and runs Cornwall’s most popular travel & lifestyle blog too.

http://www.byrosanna.co.uk
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Staying Positive for your child to beat Bedwetting