![]() |
| Home Treatment Programs Proven Principles of Bedwetting Principle 3: Bladder Capacity is Smaller than Normal Why It Happens: Since bedwetters rarely hold their urine all night, the inside of the bladder is not elasticizing or stretching as it should. This causes the capacity of the bladder to remain small. The bladder itself is normal and growing with the body, but, like a balloon that never gets blown up, the potential to expand is there but it just has not been realized. Limiting fluids, at any time, is counter productive to normal bladder capacity growth and elasticity. Bedwetters wet the bed because their brain cannot wake up, not because there is too much fluid in the body. Our bodies need fluids. Restricting is unhealthy. How Do We Increase Capacity? Home Treatment Programs shows you how to measure current capacity of the bladder. Based upon these results, it teaches you the method that will slowly and gradually increase bladder capacity until it is normal for the bedwetters age and body size. Increasing capacity is accomplished with a simple, daily bladder routine that takes only a few minutes, once each day. |
Parenting Topic of the Month |
|
|
||
| Earn commissions! Add our parenting store to your web site! Join our Affiliate Program | ||
|
If you have a parenting product that you'd like us to review for placement in our store, contact us at the address below, marked "Attn: Submissions Department" |
||
| PPP Enterprises 2027 Pheasant Creek Dr. Martinez, GA 30907 706-855-7059 706-855-1348 fax E-mail us at pppent@webehave.com Find out more about us! |
Copyright © 1999 PPP Enterprises, Inc.
Site designed by Fabricant Internet, Inc.