Bedwetter was published in April of this year, and by May it was a New York Times best-seller. It begins: "Like most children, I learned to swear from a parent. But most children learn to swear by mimicking moments when a parent loses self-control. That is typically followed by the parent stressing that such words are bad and shouldn't be repeated outside the home. When I was three years old, I learned to swear from my father, but he taught me with every intention to do so. It was like he was teaching a 'cursing as a second language' course for one. ... My guess is that when something is so easy, so greatly rewarded, and bears so few negative consequences, it's a recipe for addiction."
As for those who may have this scenario as a fantasy, trust me its not something you would ever truly want to have happen. Being a child in the late 60's and early 70's being put in a diaper as punishment was horrible. I have been there, not to the degree that this film portrays but its humiliating, degrading and leaves emotional scares that one bares for life. My mother was kind about my bedwetting and diapers became part of my nightly routine. My father on the other hand was not so nice about it and I would get regular beatings from him (when mom wasn't around). My grandmother...on my fathers side (the apple must not fall far from the tree)...was really abusive and I had to endure many humiliating diaperings at her hands and I was also introduced to baby treatment from her. Which included drinking from bottle, having to sit in a highchair, naps in a crib, always having a pacifier in my mouth and all of the things you do with regular babies were all approved of by my father. I would shiver every time I was told I had to go to grandmas house for the weekend. Which would usually start out with a paddling no sooner did my parents pull out of the driveway and diapers so thick you could barely walk, pacifier stuffed in my mouth because I was crying (like a baby) after my spanking and usually paraded around the house for everyone to see. I too was forced to play outside in just a diaper and a tshirt in the back yard which was not shielded by any fence and visible to anyone wondering by. My only savior through all of this was the girl next door who was about 3 years older then me who befriended me in my time of need. I was 9 years old at the time but have been a bedwetter my whole life. This treatment continued at grandmas until I will in my mid teens. I was never allowed to tell my mother or..you guessed it...I would get a beating from my father.
Redemption Bedwetting And Consequences
Download: https://tinourl.com/2vEYia
Diaper discipline as a parental practice can be controversial. At the website Child Abuse Effects, one user described a situation in which a seventeen-year-old boy had been kept in diapers since age twelve, asking whether this was legal and would be considered abuse.[7] Violence and abuse prevention educator Darlene Barriere responded by saying that forcibly diapering an adolescent as punishment was not illegal as far as she knew. However, she claimed that treating a teenager like a small child would fall under a form of abuse known as "rejecting", describing it as a "humiliating, and cruel and unusual punishment". She speculated that it may also be considered neglect, physical or sexual abuse depending on where, when and how the boy in question is being made to use diapers.[7] Upon being contacted by another reader, who detailed his own experiences with diaper discipline, Barriere once again addressed the issue. She explained that people who administer diaper discipline are experimenting with a controversial psychology known as regression therapy that can be emotionally devastating even when administered professionally, and that parents would not consider the practice were they aware of its consequences. The reader in question, Robert P., offered his own opinions regarding the appearance of diaper discipline versus it's actual effects. He claimed that children being disciplined may appear calm and well-behaved, when in reality this obedience is a result of their self-esteem having been destroyed and their social development severely hindered. Robert concluded that diaper discipline is "the killing of a human soul".[2] In contrast, Diaper Discipline Site described keeping children in diapers as "relatively safe" when compared to other common methods of discipline such as spanking, screaming, and medication such as ritalin.[1] 2ff7e9595c
Comments