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LL Medico Diapers and More Bambino Diapers - ABDL Diaper Store

billydydy

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  1. I don't know if you are trying to write like guy with some cognitive problems, you have cognitive problems or possibly English is not your first language. You can either spell or use a spelling checker. As far as grammar checkers go, I last used Grammatik 30 years ago. The most it did for me was tell me I was writing in the passive mode which I dang well knew I was doing and it was appropriate for the type of writing I was doing. I do hope grammar checkers have improved since then.
  2. Your congress critter might possibly be useful in settling eligibility problems. Unfortunately now, some seem to be too busy fund raising to service their district. Some still respond to constituents. Many years ago Jack Brooks helped constituents deal with the VA. He got my mom $200/mo more in her SS back in the 70's.
  3. I'm like beallucanb - hairy. I don't think our problem so much is that we are hairy, we just can't reach our backs to take care of it. And that sorta sets our style. I use an epilator and Wahl clippers. I use epilator on diaper area, the Wahl with a #2 rake to keep my body hair mowed to a believable height - where I can reach. The #1 rake is for beard and head - not lacking much of a Yul Brynner haircut.
  4. OshKosh would still be making adult clothing, but as an extension of their toddler line. Overalls and short-alls without flies. with snaps in the legs and crotch and a generous diaper allowance. Maybe even some rompers too. Anavini would extend their toddler clothing into adult sizes and made exactly as toddler clothing. Their line is what southern well-to-do grannies would dress their grandsons and great grandsons in. Nice stuff for sis too.
  5. I've had 1 gmail account hi-jacked. I was told by a good friend "in the business" that google was more relaxed about security than others having internet email service. Having stuff that is important to you "out there" is not the best approach. I have several ways to create documents and store them on line and it just doesn't appeal to me. It seems you can get into a gmail account simply by sending an email from an OBVIOUSLY fake address and give yourself permission to send mail from the account. It has been a very long time since I earned my BA (hand cranked Monroe calculators were very hi-tech then). On second go round in the 80's I wondered how we got along without computers in the past. When I was dealing with both flood and windstorm insurance adjusters because of IKE, I dumped everything to CD's. I had all my belongs on a spreadsheet - and it was a pain to do, even though I had jpgs of everything. A word of advice. Stand in the middle of all the rooms, attic, garage and storeroom (ought to include rented storage too) and take pictures and dump them to a CD or DVD. Then take the CD or DVD and store them someplace safe - better yet have copies stashed elsewhere just in case. When natural disasters occur, you have evidence of what you owned.
  6. I was in my 30's when I realized there were others out in the world like me from letters and articles in Nugget and Letters magazines, This was in the 70's. I first saw ads for DPF in The Advocate about 1981. I was unable to join DPF because of privacy and then money issues until the very late 80's or very early 90's. I kept up my membership until the late 90's. Also met a guy who founded GLADS when he moved to TX and also other people through him. We tried networking with other people in the DPF roster, but very few seemed interested in meeting others. (With time that situation has changed for the better.) Tommy gets a lot of flak today, but he was the first to organize the AB/DL community and bring people together and DPF had a host of baby supplies under one roof that one would have trouble finding on their own. Tommy seemed to have trouble entering the internet age and did not play well with others. I used AOL and the early diapers chatroom was limited to 23 people in the beginning. There were very few people there at first and then it was almost impossible to get in later. I also became aware of ABC and ordered some baby supplies from Walter. He later had health issues and was slow to never in delivery. The internet age is great. Kids do not have to wonder if they are the only kid in the world who still wets the bed as HS senior or they want to wear diapers and be a toddler or infant again.
  7. Sort of an aside. In WW2, Dutch women moved stuff through German inspections in a baby buggy. The child was taught to scream at the sight of a uniform and being messy was probably a plus. What red-blooded young guy wants a screaming and maybe messy kid around. Mom was quickly passed through.
  8. I do have a few tighty whiteys, mostly without flies - as near to training pants as I can get, I did find one pair that has "HUNG" on the waist band - just couldn't resist. Even have a few childish print ones from AussieBum and usually only wear these when trainers or pull ups won't do. I mostly wear trainers or pull ups from Babykins. The old ABC had very nice trainers make of a decent knit material. I wish I cold find someone to make copies of them.
  9. A squalling, possibly poopy baby in a baby buggy was very effective in Holland in WW2. The kids were trained to really cry at the sight of a uniformed soldier - probably poop too. In any event the last thing a red blooded German soldier in his late teens or early twenties wanted around was a squalling kid, possibly stinky too. Mother and child were quickly passed through the inspection lines and heaven only knew what was under the mattress. I suspect this would have worked with American soldiers as well.
  10. What I thought was different was a guy who liked wearing diapers, but never ever even peed in them. Given the opportunity I'd more than just hump my diapers. OTOH we certainly are not vanilla and thinking anyone else is strange is a no no for me.
  11. I've heard many stories of people giving up diapers for a long time, disposing of all of their baby paraphernalia, returning to diapers and and then regretting disposing of their stuff. I finally decided diapers were a subset of one's sexuality before I knew about paraphilias. Giving up diapers is like changing ones sexuality. I'm being facetious in suggesting supporting a friends leaving the scene and helping him (or possibly her) dispose of their baby paraphernalia - rolling it in with your own - supposing he is about your size. In any event having AB/DL feelings is troubling to many people and learning to accept it is probably their best course of action. Many of us have had to suppress our desires or lessen them in some ways due to living conditions. I've had to put up with living for a very short times in small towns and getting mail in a company mailbox, working offshore in a very un-private environment and just not having any privacy. I'm quite sympathetic to the young still living at home with no or little privacy. I've been retired about 11 years now and while I haven't lived as high off the hog as I might like to, I have enjoyed every second of my privacy. I enjoy wearing diapers and while I don't flaunt them I don't hide them or slightly childish clothing either. I'll never quit wearing diapers at night, but wearing in the daytimes also depends on diaper rash to higher degree than it did when I first retired; my hiney seemed indestructible then.
  12. The comco (comcomfg.com) trainers come in three thicknesses and have no elastics in the legs - sorta saggy on me even dry. The fabric is a very basic knit. I could live with these if they had elastics in the legs. I still have a pair of trainers from DPF and another pair of what were very nice trainers from the old ABC - a surprise find . (Yeah I know I'm giving away my age. If you bought anything from ABC - you are at least middle aged.) I'd love to have someone make a few trainers for me using the ABC's as a pattern. Better yet to find some online similar to these.
  13. I use an epilator on diaper area and "shave" what I can reach and keep skin taut down there. That said I have some arthritis and I'm not as flexible or agile as I once was. I never got used to itch from a regular razor either. I'm pretty hairy and have hair on my back I just can't reach. I bought a small Wahl Peanut clipper to keep my beard trimmed with many years ago and was told by a lady barber it was actually a commercial grade clipper sized to fit the small hands of many lady barbers. I was gonna use epilator on legs, arms and entire torso, but decided it didn't look right with a hairy back. Now I just "mow" the arms, legs and torso using a #2 rake - keeps things a lot neater..
  14. A professor (a Mac person) who taught several computer related courses said that Mac and PC (windows 3.0 was several years in the offing) people were just different. Don't know if this holds water any more. Also a guy who was with a computer training company said Macs were "fiendishly simple" and they made a lot of money training oil company people to use Macs and charged considerably less than Apple too. I did an internship and we used Macs. I had to learn what not to do on a Mac because we were designing software for school kids using the old Apples. I have nothing for or against Macs. In any event Macs are out of my price class I use a self made computer made with parts from Fry's. This decision was dictated by the state of my wallet. I've been using Linux since RedHat 6.1 or 6.2 To each his own.
  15. Pre-Stonewall and also pre-internet gay people had to find each other. Many gay people have had to accept the fact that they were gay and there is a lot of confusion. Some men are grandfathers when they accept the fact and others have said they knew they were gay at 7 yo. I'd say that gay people are more introspective of their sexuality and more used to reaching out to other gay people. I suspect there are a lot more straight AB/DL's out in the world who don't accept they are or are afraid to reach out.
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