With finals over, Lillian was relieved and decided to cut loose. She had made it through her freshman year and her only regret up to this point was the effect stress and parties had on her body and wardrobe. Combining the stress with the frequent parties and drinking had resulted in a series of accidents that had forced her to start wearing “protective briefs.” Up until tonight, she’d managed to keep them hidden from everyone except her roommate who promised she’d never tell a soul.
That all changed tonight and she won’t know until morning. Lin her drinking state, she had wandered into a bathroom and removed her pants to use the bathroom. She had forgotten to remove her diaper and ended up soaking it. When she got up and pulled up her pants, she forgot to button them and wandered back to the party with her diaper in plain view. As the party wound down a couple hours later, she wandered away from the sorority that hosted the end of year party and back to her dorm.
In the morning, she will wake up to a hangover, a headache, a soaked diaper, and a phone continuously pinging with massages about her clearly used diaper. It only gets worse when her mom calls.
Lillian had hidden her wetting problem so carefully that her family had no idea, until she started being tagged in photos of the “campus diaper girl” by someone who recognized her from class. Lillian’s mom makes it clear that despite her 3.2 GPA with no classes below a C+ her entire freshman year, her behavior and her “problem” would have to be addressed appropriately over the summer.
By next semester, Lillian will be sharing a dorm with another girl who needs diapers, the RA will be a nursing student responsible for ensuring the diapers are worn according to the accommodation paperwork sent over from the accommodations office (for Lillian this means 24/7 dependence on diapers), and the entire campus will know her as the diapered party girl. Getting invited to parties won’t be a problem. Getting a boyfriend or girlfriend will be significantly harder.
Until her mom is happy with her behavior and Lillian proves that she no longer needs the diapers, her condition will be closely monitored with reports from the accommodations office on her academics, outside activities, and diaper usage rates every week. If any of those areas fail to show marked improvement by the end of Lillian’s sophomore year, she will be withdrawn from university and enrolled at the local community college and moved back into her childhood bedroom where her parents can keep a closer eye on her.























