Go on, laugh! What a weirdo! It is such a contentious statement.
But, maybe it is not so controversial.
I am not medically qualified, but can only relate my experience &
conclusions. I am an adult who wears and unashamedly uses diapers for their purpose. I made a considered choice on practical & scientific grounds. I am not diagnostically incontinent. There is no fetish or sexual motive involved, nor is this anything to do with children. If you have an alternative agenda, please look elsewhere! The issue is medical incontinence pads diapers/nappies) for adults and all products are easily bought from chemists or online.
For years I have suffered painfully severe IBS, with all the usual suspects (sporadic incontinence, trapped wind, mucus discharge, constipation) and desperately took to wearing diapers 24/7 during 2
months of acute suffering. ...Suddenly the complaint was cured. Why?
It is purely biological. . . . . I handed my body back to nature.
When animals (and we are animals) need to urinate or defecate they do it on impulse; they exercise no control. Nature has ordained that, for the sake of health, bowel & bladder muscles EXPEL URINE AND FAECES BY DEFAULT. Clearly Nature has decided that retention of waste is harmful to the body and nothing remains to poison the system. A conscious effort is needed to hold it.
So, what are we doing when we toilet-train children or even pets?
We are reversing Nature's plan.
Suddenly the bladder and sphincter muscles are re-conditioned to
RETAIN THE WASTE BY DEFAULT, with a conscious effort required to expel it.
This breaks Nature's rules and cannot be good for our health.
In regular peristalsis, your gut digests all the beneficial properties (e.g. vitamins, minerals) from your food and expels the rest via the colon. But, if you "hold" faeces you create a tailback, digestive processes go into overdrive, producing more gas and acid, the food stays in the gut longer and the system digests other elements (e.g. sugars, fats) more harmful to your health. It is no surprise then that, of all illnesses suffered by humans, the most common are bowel-related, while, in comparison, animals rarely suffer bowel disorders. At the same time, humans are more prone to obesity than untrained animals, a by-product surely of the ingestion of excessive sugars and fats caused by the tailback.
Apart from spastic colon, the interruption of the peristalsis with spasms, the causes of IBS have always been regarded as unchartered territory. Surely it is the human race's insistence on rewriting natural law which fills this void on the medical map.
The answer for the millions worldwide who suffer the agonies of IBS therefore is to return to nature's way as demonstrated in the animal kingdom.
Clearly we cannot urinate or defecate in the street. Nor has the
faecal catheter been invented yet. So the only sensible option is
for widespread wearing of diapers to become sociably acceptable until an alternative appears. That is the foundation of this campaign and dozens of others have now signed up.
I found that wearing diapers, I would hold nothing, therefore my system instinctively urinated and defecated more frequently. The pressure from the bladder reduced, stools previously hard became supple and everything ran on a smooth conveyor belt. Problem solved!
Wearing diapers regularly, I find they are more comfortable than
conventional underwear, even in bed. That is purely a personal
opinion.
Moreover, they are much more convenient. I never to look for a toilet or, having found one, further risk my health in uncleaned, unhygienic facilities, e.g. on commuter trains. I do not have to break concentration at work to visit the toilet. I never need to miss that crucial part of a game, film or concert to visit the loo.
Where the average person visits the toilet about 8 times daily to
urinate (at 3 mins per visit) and once to defecate (5-10 mins),
totalling over half-an-hour, I find using 2 diapers a day that it
takes 6 minutes for a full change and clean. As one change will be at shower/bath-time, that uses just the 6 minutes daily, a saving of about 25 minutes a day. That is 150 hours a year!
There are few drawbacks to wearing diapers. Faecal odour can be
totally masked by PVC pants so nobody notices. Nappy rash may appear in the early stages, but resolves quickly as your body becomes used to diapers. Any embarrassment factor is only the by-product of social indoctrination. This may be a psychological barrier to younger people, but if diapers can become adult-friendly on a public scale, such hang-ups should fade away. In a Cartesian, democratic society, who has the right to complain if nobody else is adversely affected by your free choice of underwear? Why be embarrassed about if there is no sexual or psychological undertone? Ideally people will eventually
"un-toilet-train" themselves, and their gastric system will resume as nature intended. The only unanswered contention is what to do with all those used diapers, which needs to be addressed.
While I am suggesting everyone should consider diapers as a route to natural good health, I am not proposing that it is forced on anyone, rather that the choice should be as acceptable as the choice between boxers and briefs.
Try it for yourself. You could find that your symptoms disappear after a few weeks and that you will never wish to return to the old order.
We are running a campaign for healthy living through diapers. Help to support us. There is no payment involved whatsoever, just a little effort.
This is not diaper-fetish, because fetish by definition has to be
abnormal behaviour. We are campaigning to have diapers designated
normal everyday wear, which (as a beneficial side-effect) would kill off infantilism for good.
I repeat, go elsewhere if you are after something kinky. Diapers are no more than the most practical and health-conscious form of
underwear.
If you want to join the campaign
call 07903 019696 or
e-mail seann.odoms@ntlworld.com
Even if you don't, do try return to nature as the remedy for your IBS or other bowel disorder.