Hey there, thanks for all the great resources! Love your blog. Do you have any tips or recommendations for committing to 24/7 and avoiding reverting back to underwear after orgasm? Obviously, that'll be harder to do once the untraining kicks in, but every time I've tried to go 24/7, I can only manage for about a week before I get too horny, masturbate, and then change back into underwear. Rinse and repeat. I have almost no barriers to wearing 24/7 other than this. Maybe it's because I've been hesitant to actually get rid of my underwear?
Hey there, thanks for all the great resources! Love your blog.
Thanks! I kind of just write a lot because I’m bored.
Do you have any tips or recommendations for committing to 24/7 and avoiding reverting back to underwear after orgasm? Obviously, that'll be harder to do once the untraining kicks in, but every time I've tried to go 24/7, I can only manage for about a week before I get too horny, masturbate, and then change back into underwear. Rinse and repeat. I have almost no barriers to wearing 24/7 other than this. Maybe it's because I've been hesitant to actually get rid of my underwear?
It sounds like your diapers are currently very tightly bound up with your sexuality. This is completely normal and okay.
A lot of stuff which can’t really be articulated otherwise gets channelled through the sexuality, hence all the jokes about “girls with daddy issues” and how good we are in bed — science says “fucking terrible,” by the way (Yehuda et al., 2015; Wells et al., 2018).
Specifically, it sounds like your diapers are bound up with, and confined to, the active part of your sexuality — on some level, I’m guessing that they “feel,” to your mind, like part of, or a prerequisite for, sex. From what you said, I inferred that you don’t usually abstain from masturbation, but that you do while in diapers. It makes sense; if your diapers are part of sex, then when the refractory period causes loss of interest in sex, it will also cause loss of interest in diapers. If you also experience post-coital tristesse (PCT) — which you are disproportionately likely to do given that both AB/DL and PCT are trauma-linked (Fuss et al., 2019; Maczkowiack & Schweitzer, 2019) — that effect will be compounded. Like with many others, it sounds like this has put you into a frustrating “binge-purge” cycle (Grey, 2015).
Here are my recommendations.
Go x/7 first. The 12 Month Diaper Training Program is, in my opinion, the Holy Bible of untraining, to which I am merely a sort of off-brand Apostle Paul. However, the author suggests going directly from 24/7 underwear to 24/7 diapers. While “not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law,” (—Matt. 5:18 NIV) I think it’s pretty obvious this doesn’t work for everyone.
I suggest an alternative strategy: titration. In medicine, titration is the process of increasing the dosage of a drug stepwise until you find the sweet spot between “it doesn’t work” and “it hurts” (Roden, 2014). Titration is especially important for, e.g., dopaminergics, the class which includes Ritalin and Vyvanse (Bidwell et al., 2011). Taken properly, they make your brain work wonderfully well; taken too much at once from a standing start, they kick like a mule (Ghoshal, 2019).
I think there’s a lot to be said for a comparison between drugs that directly regulate the reward system (Berridge, 2006) and diapers, for reasons that should hopefully be obvious. Start by committing to wear diapers in a small amount at intervals, say x hours a day 7 days a week (x/7), and gradually increase the amount of time you commit. If the maximum observed x ends up being less than 24 — still great, because you still have what you want! But, realistically, courtesy of Tommy Siegel’s “black hole effect” (Grey, 2020) it likely won’t be.
I also find that in colonising new time for your diapers, it’s good to track allocated time, “I am [already] wearing diapers x hours a day 7 days a week,” but also good to avoid time-based criteria, “I must now wear diapers x + 1 hours a day 7 days a week.” Task-based criteria are more effective: “I must wear diapers whenever I do z,” and then steadily expand the set of values of z that require you to wear diapers.
Don’t just wear diapers instead of underwear; actively replace underwear with diapers. Determine how long you go between loads of laundry, or alternatively establish a laundry schedule; let’s put it on the long end, one week. Figure out how many pairs of underwear you usually wear in a week, and, if necessary, destroy and throw out as many pairs as necessary to reduce your total stock of underwear to only that number. Next, figure out for what percentage of each week the average pair of underwear gets worn; each time the percentage of the week that you spend in diapers increases by that amount, destroy and throw out a pair of underwear.
Don’t go volcel. The underlying psychological structure that makes someone like diapers is likely pretty deeply rooted. The libido is even more deeply-rooted; it’s a fundamental drive. If you place your sex drive and your diaper-wearing in opposition, the sex drive will win. You need to get them working together. I would advise masturbating as often as you ordinarily would, without regard for whether you’re in diapers or not, except insofar as is necessary to make sure you’re not doing it when you’re already about to leave diapers for the day.
Right now, for you, being in diapers after you come produces an unpleasant feeling, which leads to the conditioned behaviour of taking off your diapers to evade it. If you instead consciously resist the urge to leave diapers and confront that feeling, you’ll be doing a form of de facto exposure therapy on yourself — and because of the nature of the feeling and how exposure therapy works, the feeling will lessen to nothing (O’Kearney et al., 2006).
References
Berridge, K.C. (2006, October 27). The debate over dopamine’s role in reward: The case for incentive salience. Psychopharmacology, 191, 391-431. doi:10.1007/s00213-006-0578-x.
Bidwell, L.C., McClernon, F.J., & Kollins, S.H. (2011, August). Cognitive enhancers for the treatment of ADHD. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behaviour, 99(2), 262-274. doi:10.1016/j.pbb.2011.05.002.
Fuss, J., Jais, L., Grey, B.T., Guczka, S.R., Briken, P., & Biedermann, S.V. (2019, June 22). Self-reported childhood maltreatment and erotic target identity inversions among men with paraphilic infantilism. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 45(8), 781-795. doi:10.1080/0092623X.2019.1623355.
Ghoshal, M. (2019, November 21). Understanding drug tolerance (L. Slowiczek, Ed.). healthline.
Grey, B.T. (2015, July 23). The ABDL binge and purge cycle. Understanding Infantilism (.org).
Grey, B.T. (2020, July 19). ABDL glossary and search: “black hole effect.” Understanding Infantilism (.org).
Maczkowiack, J., & Schweitzer, R.D. (2019, February 7). Postcoital dysphoria: Prevalence and correlates among males. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 45(2), 128-140. doi:10.1080/0092623X.2018.1488326.
O’Kearney, R.T., Anstey, K., von Sanden, C., & Hunt, A. (2006, October 18). Behavioural and cognitive behavioural therapy for obsessive compulsive disorder in children and adolescents. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 4, CD004856. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD004856.pub2.
Roden, D.M. (2014). Chapter 5: Principles of clinical pharmacology. In D. Kasper, A. Fauci, S. Hauser, D. Longo, J.L. Jameson, & J. Loscalzo (Eds.), Principles of clinical pharmacology (19th ed.). McGraw-Hill.
Wells, S.Y., Glassman, L.H., Talkovsky, A.M., Sohn, M.J., Morland, L.A., & Mackintosh, M.A., et al. (2018, November 16). Examining changes in sexual functioning after cognitive processing therapy in a sample of women trauma survivors. Women’s Health Issues, 29(1), 72-79. doi:10.1016/j.whi.2018.10.003.
Yehuda, R., Lehrner, A., & Rosenbaum, T.Y. (2015, May 1). PTSD and sexual dysfunction in men and women. Journal of Sexual Medicine, 12(5), 1107-1119. doi:10.1111/jsm.12856.
I was wondering: How do you help your Untrainees to keep in line? E.g. if they try to cheat and use the potty instead of their diaper?
Good question! The answer is in depth, and a lot of it applies only to “inpatient” untrainees (i.e., untrainees who are actively spending most or all of their time around me), who are by far the smallest category of people in whose untraining I have any hand. “Outpatient” untrainees, who are a much larger category which by the broadest possible definition includes many of you folks, largely have to self-regulate and work on the honour system.
This is, nonetheless, a far longer answer than I thought it was going to be.
Exhaustive diapering and protection
This is a mechanically-mediated, convenience-based incentive, i.e., it’s based on how difficult and inconvenient it is to do something. As I’ve mentioned before, untraining tends to keep going under its own steam beyond a certain point because the more diapering you wear, the more difficult it is to easily remove.
It’s easy to go to the toilet when you only have to pull down your pants and underwear, and then do the reverse when you’re done. My job is to add a sufficient number of steps to that process that it becomes annoying and inconvenient, and wetting or messing your diaper and being changed is the simpler, more straightforward task.
For example, excluding physically secured clothing, I might dress my untrainees in two layers of diapering, waterproof pants, a onesie, a button-up shirt, overalls with a belt, and a woollen V-neck pullover. This might sound like a lot of clothing, but it’s actually not necessarily that much; a decent onesie is breathable, and “cold” in Brisbane is often wind chill, which woollens on their own don’t do much against.
If they want to use the toilet, here’s what they have to do:
Take off their pullover and find somewhere to hang it.
Undo their belt loops, which is useful if you want them to look like pants).
Undo the shoulder straps of their overalls.
Undo the side buttons of their overalls (up to three buttons per side, and in my experience kind of a bitch to undo).
Drop the overalls to the floor, potentially having to wriggle out of them.
Unbutton and take off their shirt and find somewhere to hang it.
Undo their onesie and hike it up to their chest or take it off.
Wiggle out of their waterproof pants.
Take off their outer layer of diapering.
Get out of their inner layer of diapering. If I okayed it for whatever reason, they can just undo their diapers as normal, but that can be an annoying, stressful strain. If they don’t want me to know, however, they have to wriggle out of their diapers. This is especially difficult if they’re dealing with a wet diaper, and even tougher if they’re already a bit messy.
Once they’re finished using the potty, not only do they have to do everything above in reverse, but (if they’re trying to be subtle) they also have to find a comfortable and secure fit for their diapers. I use fairly traditional plastic-backed four-tape diapers (such as ABU LittlePawz), meaning their tapes don’t deal well with being refastened, and it’s virtually impossible to unfasten them after extended wear without ripping the front wing apart.
Secure clothing
The simplest and most ubiquitous example of this is waterproof pants that lock with a waist chain. Like all properly fitted pairs of waterproof pants, a properly fitted pair of locking waterproof pants should top out at or around the small of the back. The chain, when correctly locked, prevents the waist of the pants from stretching by more than an insignificant amount. Since the body is wider directly below the waist (because of the butt, and in this case especially because of diapers), the pants can’t stretch enough to come off.
You do need a solid, metallic, relatively heavy-gauge chain, so it can vary depending on the make, and many models come with a diary lock (a tiny lock which is trivial to pick and which can often be forced open by hand), so you might like to replace it with your own lock. The absolute best plastic pants I’ve seen for this role are Fetware LPCXT.
Less directly related to diapers, there are, for example, chastity belts; these don’t reliably work with diapers alone (which can be untaped and migrated out of a leghole), but with pull-on plastic pants they work reasonably well, as under the best possible conditions you need to have an immense amount of flexibility to get plastic pants off while having a chastity belt on.
There are also clothes that are fastened in a normal, not particularly secure way, but in such a way that it’s incredibly difficult for the wearer to take them off. Onesies and sleepers tend to be particularly good for this; the Little Keeper Sleeper* in particular is designed to be virtually impossible for its wearer to get out of unaided, because of where the zip is located and how it’s protected when the sleeper is fully on.
(* Be nice to these folks — their primary market is disabled kids and I don’t want them to be flooded with badly-concealed AB/DL emails and wondering why.)
Make the system work for me
This is definitely founded in political bitterness, but it also works.
I will (genuinely!) allow my untrainees out of diapers for short stints on a very specific case-by-case basis. However, I think it’s counterproductive if they realise that all they have to do is say, “But I really have to!” But then again, I don’t want to demand more information from them about whether they really have to, make that call myself, and be wrong, either
causing something bad to happen (because they really did have to, but they ignored their better judgement and listened to me), or
compromising our relationship of trust and my moral authority (because they really did have to, so they were forced to ignore me)
As a result, I endeavour to leverage society’s general inaccessibility for incontinent people in order to ensure that the maximum possible amount of time that my untrainees are spending with me, it’s genuinely not up to me whether or not they use the toilet.
This varies massively from situation to situation, but one of the most prominent ways I do it is by using public transport. I do this because I have been a person who is severely incontinent and was commuting on public transport, and I know, for example,
that Queensland Rail SMU- and EMU-class trains don’t have toilets, as well as roughly which lines those trains are most likely to run on
that Transport for Brisbane buses also don’t have toilets
that the practical incidence of toilet facilities outside zones 1 and 2 on the QR City rail network (”practical” in the sense that they’re both materially present and aren’t, for example, permanently locked for some bizarre reason) is poor
that the practical incidence of toilet facilities beyond, and sometimes even at, major bus interchanges is even worse
I am also a dab hand at scheduling; I’m good at picking the journey option where you will definitely be able to catch all your connecting services and will not have to run through the walking portions of the journey to make it to the designated endpoint at the agreed time, but you also will not have 3 to 5 minutes spare to use the toilet if catching your connecting services and getting there on time is what you’re trying to do.
As a corollary to this, I will deliberately plan, and if necessary ad lib, stall, and waste time, so that we are consistently on the very latest possible journey home. “Sorry, darl, I know you really need to go #2, but we’ll miss the train and I don’t want to be stuck on the concourse until sunrise.” (It particularly entertains me to use this one because last time I checked there are basically no toilets within about 2km of Brisbane Central station that are easily accessible between midnight and sunrise.) “Just use your diapers, we’ll worry about it at home.” (Also particularly entertaining because I have a great, and completely accidental, tendency to live at least an hour out of town by public transport, so this one must really bite to hear.)
Integrate them into the system
While a small amount of this part works under pretty much any circumstances, much of it is explicitly premised on having friends present who I have privately discussed the situation with and who explicitly understand it and consent to be part of it. Taking into account that that may not be a factor in many people’s untraining regimens, I think it works remarkably well for the relatively small percentage of my time to which it applies.
In short, I will not go out of my way to expose an untrainee as being in diapers or highlight the fact that they are, but I also won’t do anything to hide it. I won’t deliberately speak loudly and humiliatingly; I won’t point. Conversely, I won’t speak to them more quietly about changing their diaper than I would speak in a non-diaper-related situation to someone who was going to the toilet, and I won’t use delicate circumlocutions (no “Do you need — ?,” just “Do you need your diaper changed?”).
If I am in a private space and have friends present whose consent has explicitly been secured, I will dial this up further, in ways that I’ll discuss in a separate post.
Make the system work for them
I set myself only such contract conditions as I can deliver (Marx, 1859/2009), and I deliver them.
Part of this is suspension of disbelief. An untraining contract obviously can’t be enforced under law, and in fact there are some jurisdictions in which it could be illegal (Pegg, 2019). It also can’t be enforced by social expectation; not on the macro-level, because we’re a bunch of fucking weirdos, nor on the micro- level, because even among our worldwide clique of fucking weirdos, untraining is considered rather extreme edge play — ADISC forbids discussing it (“Moo,” 2019). It exists, binds and has effect, solely because I and my untrainee believe it does.
Part of it is creation of a safe space. I’ve mentioned that untraining is an extremely psychologically dependent process; you can’t go ahead with it if you have reservations about it. More simply, “AlwaysDiapered” (2004) calls it “drill and practice,” and as someone who’s done a fair amount of that, I know practice doesn’t work if you only do it with part of your mind.
Part of it is ethics. I just believe contracts go two ways, and I don’t believe in vae victis, “woe to the vanquished” (Livius, 9 BCE/1905, pp. 34—49). I don’t get to fuck with the contract just because I’m in charge. I realise that’s how contracts work in the real world, but I’m not the real world; I’m me. There are therefore some things I make sure that I do.
I check and change them when I say I’m going to. I will check and, if necessary, change them at a set time of morning (even if they haven’t woken up yet). I will check them at as close as possible to an agreed interval while out of the house (using my phone alarms when possible).
I make sure to know where to change them, and be ready to change them. I keep two diaper bags (theirs and mine). I will always have enough diapers, spare pairs of waterproof pants, gloves, wipes, changing table covers, and a change of clothes. I have a pretty much encyclopaedic knowledge of viable adult diaper changing spots in my city and how to reach them.
I minimise the risk that they will be subjected to real pain or humiliation. The reality of pain is based on whether it is actually associated with injury — “unreal” pain is the feeling of a bisacodyl suppository after 30 minutes, “real” pain is diaper rash.
The reality of humiliation is based on whether it does actual reputational harm — “unreal” humiliation is having an accident in the City Botanic Gardens, where nobody you know will see it; “real” humiliation is having an accident in front of your boss while you’re on performance monitoring.
As a subset of this, I minimise the risk that they will accidentally damage my property, or anybody else’s. This is the secondary reason why there is so much protection on my car interiors and furniture (the primary reason being that I am in there all the time and need it myself). If they do leak or otherwise mess up my property, I don’t get mad; I put them there and I knew the risk. If they do it on someone else’s property, I take responsibility.
In short,
I get my untrainees to keep in line by:
arranging for it to be impossible not to;
making it as inconvenient as possible not to;
acting quickly to normalise the state of affairs where they do;
making that state of affairs as comfortable as possible;
being fair to them;
letting them choose to stop whenever, so that they don’t stop.
References
“AlwaysDiapered” (2004, June). The twelve month diaper training program [PDF]. Docdroid.
Livius, Titus (1905). Book V: War with Veii; destruction of Rome by the Gauls. In T. Livius, Books from the founding of the city (W.M. Roberts, Trans.; E. Rhys, Ed.). J.M. Dent and Sons. (Original work published 9 BCE).
Marx, K.H. (2009). A contribution to the critique of political economy (corrected 1977 Progress Publishers edition — S.W. Ryazanskaya, Trans.; T. Delaney, “Zodiac,” & M. Carmody, Eds.). Marxists’ Internet Archive. (Original work published 1859).
“Moo” (2019, May 4). Do NOT try to become incontinent [forum thread]. AB/DL/IC Support Community (ADISC).
Pegg, S. (2019, February 13). Body modification — when consent is not a defence. The Conversation UK.
How does look a perfect diaper training in your opinion ?
Although I think you might be asking for a detailed list of rules or a specific scenario, my answer will be a little bit different and more general.
The ultimate (long-term) goal of her diaper training is to convince her mind to consider wearing and using diapers constantly as normal as the toilet was before the training started. Side effects of that development are for instance:
she feels safer in a diaper than being without it,
she is not afraid anymore of other people seeing that she is wearing a diaper,
she is not ashamed of her (physiological and mental) need for them,
the thought of using a toilet feels strange for her,
she is either able to use her diapers regardless of the situation or might even have developed a dependency on them,
she doesn’t own any panties and also has no interest in wearing them anymore.
However, this is probably only the ideal case and can only be reached asymptotically over many years. Though, I think that an indicator for good diaper training is the fact that she makes constant progress towards this overall goal. The steps are generally quite easy to understand:
Start with a situation that is easy for her (e.g. wearing a diaper at home)
Bring her into a new situation that is not familiar to her and makes her uncomfortable (e.g. wearing a diaper while out and about).
Let her get used to that situation by repetition.
Never make a step back once she has mastered a new situation (e.g. as soon as she was out and about with a diaper, she always will be in a diaper when out and about from now on).
If you want to create some kind of training plan, you may keep the SMART rules in mind: specific, measurable, activating, reasonable and time-bound. But don’t forget that this means also work for you as a caregiver. Every once in a while, you have to analyse her training and check whether you are still making progress or if her training got stuck at some point.
One important point you should sort out right in the beginning (because it affects the whole diaper training) is the question about the fundamental limits. In many cases, specific aspects of the training are neglected or skipped because “others should not know about the diapers”. In the end, this leads to failure of the training and frustration. Wearing diapers 24/7 means that sooner or later other people (friends, family, coworkers) will find out - that’s the pay off, it’s as simple as that. Are you both willing to accept that? Because if you say ‘yes’, there is no need for further discussions about ‘wearing at work’ or ‘wearing at family gatherings’ - the diaper goes on and that’s it. If you have trouble answering that question or if you are convinced that is not possible, just ask yourself: How would you deal with it if she were actually incontinent? You see, it is definitely possible.
So, to sum it up: Clarify your limits and goals right in the beginning, create a plan and check frequently if you are making progress, introduce new things only in small steps, give her time to adjust to them, and never make a step back once she has mastered new challenges.
1. I’m glad you’re home from work sweetie, why don’t you tell me about your day while I put you in your diapers.
2. Come over here little one, I thought I smelled something stinky and I need to check if it was your diaper!
3. Is your diaper squishy baby? It looks like you’ve already had an accident.
4. Behave baby, there’s only 2 ways that diaper is coming off: when mommy/daddy needs to change you, and when they need to spank you.
5. Let me check your diaper honey, I need to make sure I put enough powder on you so you don’t get a rash today.
6. I think this store has a family restroom, let’s go inside and do a quick diaper check to see if you’re going to leak prince/princess.
7. You can’t sit on the couch baby, sit on daddy/mommy’s lap. Your diaper has more than enough padding to keep you comfy.
8. I hope your hungry baby, because you’re not getting out of that diaper until you make stinkies for me.
9. Bend over baby, I need to check the leg cuffs of your diaper, otherwise you’re going to leak with how much pee pee you make!
10. I think you’re just too little for pull-ups baby, let’s try again later. For now, let mommy/daddy put your diaper on and we can forget about the potty for a while.
11. Uh-oh, I think I smell poopies! Did you make a messy in your diapies baby?
12. Up on the changing table little one, you know the rules, it’s either a padded bum or a paddled bum in this house.
13. Now that’s a thick diaper you’ve got on baby! I guess you’re just going to have to crawl around the house now.
14. Do you want daddy/mommy to hold you while you make a pushie baby? It’s okay, mommy/daddy will help you get comfortable.
15. Of course you need to wear a diaper to the park baby, a little one like you isn’t going to want to stop playing to go to the bathroom!
16. Let’s practice counting by seeing how many diapers we have left before we buy you new ones baby, I think we’re running low!
17. Well, I could put a plug in your bottom if you aren’t going to go poopoo, it’s your choice baby.
18. You’re waddling again prince/princess, mommy/daddy knows that means your diaper is full. Come over and let me check.
19. I’m putting a booster in your diaper baby, and don’t fuss over it, you know you can’t control yourself on long car rides.
20. Sit next to me baby, that way I can check your diaper under the table during dinner.
21. I can’t believe I have to change you in the backseat! You must be just a little baby if you can’t make it through a car ride without a diaper change.
22. I love how these jammies have a flap in the back baby, perfect for checking for stinkies before bedtime!
23. I think I’m gonna put you in the crib for nap time baby, but not before I put a nighttime diaper on you, you’re such a heavy wetter when you sleep.
24. Hold still for your diaper change little one, mommy/daddy needs to put cream on your bottom so you don’t get a rash from your stinkies.
25. Don’t make me tie you down during nap time baby, you know not to try and use the bathroom. Mommy/daddy will change you when they come to wake you up.
26. If you’re such a big girl/boy, why did mommy have to change your diaper when you woke up wet today?
27. Baby, you haven’t made poppies in nearly 2 days, does mommy/daddy need to give you medicine to make it better? Let’s go to the changing table and put a suppository in your bottom little one.
28. I think it’s time to go honey, you always get fussy right before you have an accident in your diapers.
29. It doesn’t matter that you don’t want to wear diapers baby, I want you to wear them and what mommy/daddy says goes.
30. Don’t hide from me baby, I can smell that stinky bum all the way from here!
31. Did you just leak through your diaper into your pants? Okay, come over my lap baby, you’re getting a spanking for not telling me you were already wet.
32. Now that your home let’s lock up all your big boy/girl clothes, I think you need baby time for this whole weekend. Changing table, now.
33. Look at how cute this onesie is baby! It’s for crotch snaps so mommy/daddy can clean up your messy bottom, and it would go great with your pink diapers!
34. Don’t pretend like you don’t like your diapers baby, mommy/daddy sees how excited you get down there when they change you.
35. It’s been almost 2 hours since I changed you baby, are you sure you aren’t wet yet? I think we need to do a diaper check.
36. Cry all you want baby, maybe that’ll make you feel better for having an accident in your panties yesterday. It’s diaper time for you from here on out.
37. Hush baby, daddy/mommy will change you when you fully use your diaper. One wetting doesn’t cut it when they’re that thick.
38. I love it when you wet your diapers baby, it’s so fun to squeeze and squish your soggy bottom!
39. That’s your third cup of juice today baby, you must really like wetting your diapers since you’re definitely not using the potty today.
40. Don’t touch your diaper baby, if you need something come to mommy/daddy first, they know how it needs to fit best.
41. I’ll check on you during the night to make sure you don’t leak baby, so don’t be afraid to have an accident while you sleep.
42. It’s too bad you can’t touch yourself like mommy/daddy, you’ll just have to rub the front of your diaper if you want to cum.
43. I love the way these tights fit you baby, they really show off the diaper you’re wearing!
44. Don’t move a muscle baby, I can smell that poppy diaper from a mile away! Let’s get you changed in the nursery right now.
45. Don’t you love your diapers baby? They’re so soft and thick, perfect for mommy/daddy to pat your bottom over.
46. You’re not leaving that bouncer until you wet your diaper baby, end of story.
47. Oops, I think I put too much baby powder on you little one, I can’t wait to see it poof out the back of your diaper when you sit down!
48. Shhhhhh it’s okay prince/princess, daddy/mommy knows you can’t control yourself, that’s why you had your diaper on. Come on, let’s check and see the damage.
49. Rise and shine baby, let’s get you on the changing table right now, mommy/daddy knows that you can’t wake up dry.
50. Mommy/daddy loves you little one, diapered bottom and all!
What’s your favorite thing to hear while you’re wearing diapers?
Baby you look so cute in your short-alls! I can barley see your diaper.. no one will notice.. but you need to put the paci in your pocket when we leave. 🤦🏻♂️🍼such a cutie..
#Reposting @msadrianaevans with @instarepost_app – I can’t get over how comfy and form fitting these onesies are from @littleforbig. They’re very reasonably priced and are by far the most flattering/form fitting onesies on the Abdl market. I hear they’ve come out with a new pattern so be sure to get one for yourself or your little one!
Adriana is one of the well
#ddlg #abdl #fetish #altlifestyle #abdlgirls #diapers #adultbaby #diaperlover #diapergirl #abduniverse #abulavender #littleforbig #adultbabyonesie #nappies
I can’t agree more i have a pair myself and it is so soft form fitting and comfy to wear!!! I just love the way it makes me feel like a little baby 👶 🤪