For anyone born before the 2000s, this story will feel very familiar — but younger people swear it’s impossible. One woman shared a memory about her mom rinsing dirty cloth diapers in the toilet, squeezing out the water, and tossing them into a diaper pail. Her friends told her she was imagining things… but here’s the reality.
This was absolutely normal — and it was the ONLY way many families managed diapers before disposables took over.
Back then, cloth diapers were thick cotton squares that had to be washed and reused. There were no diaper sprayers, no disposable liners, and no fancy sanitized gadgets. Parents would:
• Take the soiled cloth diaper
• Shake or rinse it in the toilet
• Wring out the excess water
• Drop it into a soaking pail with detergent or disinfectant
• Wash an entire load once the pail was full
It wasn’t considered gross — it was simply what every household did to save money, stretch supplies, and keep a baby clean. Most families only owned a small rotation of diapers, so reuse was essential.
Today, with disposable diapers everywhere, that routine sounds shocking. But to parents from the 60s, 70s, 80s, and even early 90s? It was just Tuesday.
And believe it or not, many modern parents using reusable cloth diapers still follow a similar process — though with better tools, sprayers, and washing machines.
What some people think is “made up” was actually the backbone of parenting for decades… and it worked.
