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Hi all.  I'm in a quandry to help an 11 yr. old child client with bedwetting.  Any suggestions would be appreciated.  Thanks, Lainie

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Roger Moor suggested this: Cut out all dairy, cow, goat or any other including milk, cheese, yogurt, cottage cheese, for two weeks. If the problem does not go away go to www.LakesideHypnosis.net. There is a plan of attack for this. Good luck, Kent.
Hello Lainie,

Thanks for sharing Roger's advice Kent - Roger's advice is right on for many bedwetters-- If that doesn't help and it usually does, I have noticed that many of my young bed wetting clients reported having the "dream".

Which is why I started adding the suggestion that when ever my client's brain and bladder decides that they can't wait until the morning to relieve themselves - they will automatically have the "dream" and the dream will wake them up so they can relieve themselves and go right back to sleep -

Works like a charm...
I've had a lot of success with bedwetting help for kids.
I ask them to take a trip into their brain, find the controls for how they send the signals to their body. Find the place that controls going pee.
Find out how to tells that special place in your body how to stay tightly closed, and how it opens it up when you go pee.
Now, take a trip down through your brain (inside of your body- describe the trip down the spine) and find out how your brain sends the signal to that special place in your body.
And now see that it is closed tight.
Now go back up to your brain and find out how that part of your brain keeps it closed tight so no pee gets out.
Is there a button, or a lever, or a switch? Describe how it stays closed tight.

Now, tonight before you go to sleep you are going to set that part of your brain to a brand new setting. It is the extra strong, closed tight all night setting. Tell me how your brain will do that.

Take another trip down through the body, check out the closed tight all night in that special place.
Remind the child that they don't have to try to make it work, it will just do it all by itself, staying closed tight all night.

I also take them into the future when they are dry every night and have them doing some things they love as a result.
Also I ask the parents to NOT say Don't wet the bed, or you Won't wet the bed... only stay dry all night, and closed tight all night.
Make sense?

If the child still wets the bed after the next night, let them know it is OK, totally fine, no problem, we just need to fine tune that control panel in their brain on the next visit.
One of my clients had a super powerful worm stand guard on the switch all night. And that did it for him.
Also, helping the child to understand that if his brain can keep it closed tight during the day, it can do it at night as well.

Wendi
Thanks Wendi, Makes sense. I convince him! Lainie

wendi friesen said:
I've had a lot of success with bedwetting help for kids.
I ask them to take a trip into their brain, find the controls for how they send the signals to their body. Find the place that controls going pee.
Find out how to tells that special place in your body how to stay tightly closed, and how it opens it up when you go pee.
Now, take a trip down through your brain (inside of your body- describe the trip down the spine) and find out how your brain sends the signal to that special place in your body.
And now see that it is closed tight.
Now go back up to your brain and find out how that part of your brain keeps it closed tight so no pee gets out.
Is there a button, or a lever, or a switch? Describe how it stays closed tight.

Now, tonight before you go to sleep you are going to set that part of your brain to a brand new setting. It is the extra strong, closed tight all night setting. Tell me how your brain will do that.

Take another trip down through the body, check out the closed tight all night in that special place.
Remind the child that they don't have to try to make it work, it will just do it all by itself, staying closed tight all night.

I also take them into the future when they are dry every night and have them doing some things they love as a result.
Also I ask the parents to NOT say Don't wet the bed, or you Won't wet the bed... only stay dry all night, and closed tight all night.
Make sense?

If the child still wets the bed after the next night, let them know it is OK, totally fine, no problem, we just need to fine tune that control panel in their brain on the next visit.
One of my clients had a super powerful worm stand guard on the switch all night. And that did it for him.
Also, helping the child to understand that if his brain can keep it closed tight during the day, it can do it at night as well.

Wendi
I have not had experience with bedwetting with clients, but I have a grandson that used to wet the bed. I asked him why he thought he wet the bed and he said it was because he was bad. I told him that was not the reason and explained to him the medical reason. He never wet the bed again.
Why the quandry?

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