The podcaster shares her four daughters with husband Jason Kelce
Credit: Kylie Kelce/Instagram
NEED TO KNOW
- Kylie Kelce shares the one piece of potty training advice she decided wasn’t for her family
- She then went on to share her own biggest piece of advice for families who are beginning the process
- Kylie shares her four daughters with Jason Kelce
When it comes to potty training her daughters, there's one piece of advice that Kylie Kelce decided wasn't "in the cards" for her family.
Speaking with PEOPLE about her campaign with Pull-Ups Learning Layer diapers, the Not Gonna Lie podcast host, 34, shared that there was one method she and husband Jason Kelce decided wasn't for them.
"I actually had more than one person recommend the naked weekend," says the mom of four. "The sort of go nothing at all and wing it for a weekend, and you'll have a couple accidents, but after a while, we'll figure it out."
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"That was not in the cards for us. My germophobia kicks in the idea of them maybe, I don't know, springing a leak somewhere in the house and me not knowing about it," she continues.
"Too much to handle. That was not gonna cut it," says Kylie. "That was gonna be a no for me. And I know that has been very successful for other people, but also no."
Kylie shares her daughters Wyatt, 6, Elliotte, 5, Bennett, 3, and Finn, 13 months, with Jason.
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As for her own advice on potty training, Kylie says one thing that worked for her was setting a 45-minute timer to check in on her kids' diapers.
"I think the timers is the best [piece of advice] because I myself, much like my second child, get wrapped up in things and then completely forget about other things," explains Kylie.
"I would set it every 45 [minutes], which sounds excessive and it is," she continues. "We had long days of 45-minute timers. Sometimes you can push it to an hour, but you have to consider their liquid intake."
"It works because it's that constant check-in of just, 'Do you think maybe we should try?'" says Kylie. "And it was this nice little suggestion instead of 'you will.' It was the 'Let's try.' And that sort of took us to another level of, 'Okay, we can go give it a try, and if we are successful, great! And if we're not, we'll try again in 45 minutes when the timer goes off again.'"
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