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Sissy Room


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    • Several have asked for more insight on the mindset of each of the main characters. These next few chapters start to provide that. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHAPTER SEVEN While the washing machine hummed softly in the background, Rachel stood in the laundry room folding the damp dinosaur pajamas with deliberate care. The wet fabric still carried the faint scent of the accident, and each fold sent a quiet thrill through her. She paused, pressing the material to her cheek for a moment, eyes half-closed. This was what she had always wanted. Not the frantic, high-powered career she had chased in her early twenties. Not the polished image of the quiet, reliable accountant everyone saw at the office. Something deeper. Something primal. Rachel had known since she was a little girl that she was meant to be a mother. While other children played house with dolls they eventually outgrew, she had cradled hers with fierce, protective tenderness long after her friends moved on to boy bands and makeup. She loved the softness of small bodies, the absolute trust in wide, innocent eyes, the way a child could surrender completely to someone who knew how to care for them. As she grew older, those maternal instincts only strengthened—layered with something else that made her pulse quicken: the deep, satisfying pleasure of being in control. She had tried the conventional path. Dated “normal” men. Smiled through conversations about careers and travel and “someday.” But none of them truly understood. They wanted partners, equals, someone to split decisions and responsibilities with fifty-fifty. Rachel wanted to *provide*. To *guide*. To hold someone so completely that their world revolved around her voice, her rules, her love. Then came Matt. At first, she had fallen hard for his easy charm, his quick laugh, the way he made her feel seen. She had waited patiently for several years, dropping gentle hints about the future. Marriage. A house with a yard. Children—God, how she ached for children. She imagined a nursery painted in soft pastels, the weight of a baby in her arms, tiny hands gripping her finger. She pictured herself as the calm, confident center of their little family, guiding everyone with the firm but loving hand she knew she possessed. But every time she steered the conversation there, Matt would flash that salesman smile and deflect. “We’ve got plenty of time, babe.”   “Let’s just enjoy being us for a while.”   “I don’t know if I’m ready to be someone’s dad yet.” The frustration had built slowly, like water pressing against a dam. She loved him—truly, deeply loved him—but she could feel the future she craved slipping away. Matt wanted the girlfriend experience forever: dinners, vacations, sex, laughter. He wanted the fun parts of adulthood without the commitment, without the beautiful vulnerability of becoming small and dependent in her arms. One sleepless night, after another conversation where he had changed the subject with a joke, Rachel made her decision. If he wouldn’t step into the future she needed, she would bring the future to him. She would make him her baby—soft, trusting, completely reliant on her. She would satisfy both her overwhelming maternal hunger and the dominant streak that had always simmered beneath her quiet exterior. Researching subliminal audio, hypnotic triggers, and age regression techniques had consumed her for months. She had tested recordings on herself first, carefully calibrating the layers of suggestion. Relaxation. Trust. Obedience. The need to please her. The innocent joy of letting go. The tablet, the card, the colorful “children’s” programming—all of it had been designed with surgical precision and endless love. She wasn’t doing this to punish him. She was saving them both. Rachel finished folding the pajamas and set them aside. She glanced toward the bedroom where Matt was still showering, no doubt wrestling with waves of shame and confusion. Her heart swelled with affection. "My sweet boy," she thought. "You fought so hard to stay big. But you were never meant to carry all that weight. Mommy’s here now." The dominant part of her—the part that had secretly thrilled at how quickly the triggers took hold—felt a rush of power. She loved the way his eyes went soft and glassy when she gave instructions. She loved how his adult defenses crumbled under her calm, maternal authority. This wasn’t cruelty. This was *right*. He would be happier this way. Safe. Cherished. Free from the pressure of pretending to want the big, scary future he had been avoiding. She picked up the fresh stack of laundry and carried it back toward the bedroom, her steps light. The silky negligee still clung to her body, a reminder that she was still very much a woman with desires—but those desires had shifted. She wanted his head on her chest not just for passion, but for comfort. She wanted to bathe him, dress him, feed him, correct him when needed, and reward him with praise that made him glow. As she passed the hallway mirror, Rachel caught her own reflection. Her eyes were bright, her posture confident in a way it had rarely been before. This was her true self emerging. Matt stepped out of the bathroom wrapped in a towel, hair damp, looking adorably lost. His eyes met hers—still carrying that mix of embarrassment and hazy submission. Rachel smiled, warm and certain, and opened her arms. “Come here, baby,” she said softly, her voice carrying that perfect blend of maternal sweetness and gentle command. He hesitated only a second before walking into her embrace, and Rachel held him close, one hand stroking his back while the other rested possessively at the nape of his neck. This was only the beginning. She had years of love, discipline, and nurturing stored up inside her. And now, finally, she had the perfect little boy to give it all to. CHAPTER EIGHT Matt stood under the hot spray of the shower, eyes closed, letting the water pound against his shoulders. The steam filled the small bathroom, but it did nothing to clear the thick fog still swirling in his head. Every time he tried to piece together what was happening—what had happened last night—his thoughts slipped away like wet soap. Fragments of memory drifted up instead. Not from yesterday. Older ones. Deeper. His mother. Even now, at twenty-seven, the mere thought of her brought a confusing knot of emotions twisting in his chest. On the surface, Matt had always projected the image of the confident, outgoing salesman—quick with a joke, firm handshake, the kind of man who closed deals and never backed down. But behind that carefully built exterior lived a boy who had never been fully allowed to grow up. From the moment he could remember, his mother had kept him small. She called him her “precious little man” long after other boys his age were embarrassed by such nicknames. While his friends were given chores and responsibilities, she hovered. She packed his lunches with little notes and cartoon napkins well into middle school. She picked out his clothes. She kissed his scraped knees and rocked him in her lap even when he was tall enough that his legs dangled awkwardly off the chair.  Part of him had *hated* it. The other kids teased him when they found out. “Mommy’s boy.” He resented the way she infantilized him, the way she made him feel weak and dependent when all he wanted was to prove he was strong. He pushed back as a teenager, arguing, slamming doors, wearing the most “manly” clothes he could find. He joined sports, lifted weights, dated aggressively, anything to shake off the cloying sweetness of being babied. But another part of him, the part he buried deepest, had loved it. Loved the safety. The warmth. The complete absence of pressure. When the world felt too big and scary, there was always Mommy’s lap, her soft voice, her unquestioning love. That secret comfort had burrowed into him like a seed. And then there were the nights. Matt’s face burned under the shower spray as the memories surfaced. He had been a chronic bedwetter—well into his early teens. Doctors said it was stress-related. His mother refused to “push” him. No harsh alarms, no strict training charts, no shame. Instead, every night after his bath, she would lay him down on a changing mat and tape him snugly into thick nighttime diapers. “You’re my little boy,” she would coo as she fastened the tapes, powdering him generously. “Big boys can wait. My sweet baby needs his protection so he can sleep safe and dry.” He had fought it at first—tears, protests, burning humiliation. The plastic crinkle, the bulky padding between his legs, the way it forced him to waddle slightly even in his pajamas. But night after night, the ritual continued. And slowly, something shifted. The shame never fully went away. He hated how it made him feel helpless and small. He hated sneaking the used diapers into the trash in the morning, praying no one would notice the smell or the bulk in the garbage. He hated lying to friends about sleepovers. Yet in the quiet darkness, once the tapes were secure and his mother had tucked him in with kisses and a bedtime story, a strange, guilty peace would settle over him. The diaper was warm and soft. It held him. It took away the fear of waking up in a cold, wet bed and facing disappointment. For those hours, he didn’t have to try so hard to be big. He could just *be*. His mother never rushed him. Even when he finally started staying dry more consistently around fourteen, she kept diapering him for several more years—“just in case, baby.” Part of him suspected she enjoyed it too. The closeness. The control. The role of eternal caretaker. When he finally moved out for college, he had thrown himself into hyper-masculine adulthood with almost frantic energy. No more diapers. No more babying. He dated women who were independent and career-focused. He avoided anything that smelled of vulnerability. He told himself he was free. But the truth was more complicated. Deep down, the pull remained. A confusing ache for that same unconditional surrender. The safety of being small. The comfort of letting someone else take charge completely. That was why Rachel’s gentle dominance over the past two years had felt so dangerously good, even as he deflected her talks about marriage and children. He wanted her. He loved her. But the idea of becoming a father, of being the strong, responsible adult, had quietly terrified him. What if he failed? What if he secretly *wanted* to fail and be taken care of instead? Now, standing in the shower with the ghost of last night’s accident still lingering on his skin, Matt felt the old programming and new triggers colliding inside him. The thick fog in his mind made resistance feel distant and exhausting. Part of him wanted to fight, to reclaim the confident man he had built. But another part, the little boy who had been secretly diapered and coddled for years, felt a treacherous sense of relief at the idea of letting go again. He turned off the water with shaking hands and stepped out, wrapping a towel around his waist. When he opened the bathroom door, Rachel was waiting in the hallway. Her smile was radiant, full of love and gentle authority. “Come here, sweetie,” she said softly, reaching for his hand. “Time to get ready for the day.” Matt’s heart hammered. Old shame and old comfort swirled together as he let her lead him toward the bedroom. For the first time in years, the conflicting parts of him didn’t feel quite so contradictory.  
    • Very well said. And you've sumarized much of what I've been saying for over 20 years now. -stop delaying from your goals out of fear or what if's. You'll never get there if you make excuses or delay starting for a "better time".  -a thin diaper that has leaked is WAY more noticable than a thick one that has done its job. -wear the diaper you can trust wont leak and then adjust your clothes to make your diaper more stealthy. Blacknoants, 1 size larger than needed, is your friend here. As are long length shirts, and PUL diaper covers. -other people and strangers in public really do not notice. Even when your diaper is painfully obvious to you, they really just won't realize it. But for the very rare one person that does take notice, that's all on them.  -anyone physically or emotionally close to you IS going to find out. Be it they stumble across your stash/trash, or you break down and tell them yourself. So don't think you can delay or hide it forever. Control the narative and tell them on your own terms. Sooner rather than later, or at least before you get married. -being a Diaper Lover is NOT the same thing as a Sexual Diaper enthusiast (ie, Kink, Fetish, Sexually based). There's nothing wrong with SD, but realizing there IS a difference to DL will help you understand your own feelings sooner and better. -incontinence BIID (body identity integration disorder) is a real thing. I doubt more than a handful have it, but recognizing if you have these feelings will help you realize they won't go away. On the flip side, trying to embrace incontinence (or diaper dependency) via some fast means (surgery, stents, catheters, etc) isn't going to get you there any faster or easier. Slow and steady reverse potty training wins the race. I'd also add cost. Diapers are NOT cheap. But please stop look at it as a cost per diaper. Look at it as a cost per day. Premium grade diapers can easily cost less than store or medical grade diapers. Plus you'll have to change much less often, will have fewer leaks, and will actually feel dryer too.  
    • 2.84 9  at  BJ’s club  40  gallon 99 dollar  limit   but went over   both by a  bit   sorry was 40 gallon limit ops
    • No.  I change into my night nappy around dinner time.  Generally I'll got to bed a bit wet already but in a nappy with enough capacity to last me through until morning.  Falling asleep in a somewhat-wet nappy isn't a problem for me at all and if I'm lucky, I won't get woken up to pee through the night.  It will just happen in my sleep.
    • Great chapter! Not gonna lie It felt amazing hearing Amber say she wanted to defend Paul, to me that’s such growth, I think Amber wanting to help Paul is incredible, I will say it’s so interesting you said control, that could throw another person in Paul’s life wanting to help and control him, haha could we be seeing a cat fight between Amber and Harley. But also interesting Amber talking about being jealous of wanting that softness of her mom. Regression really might be come for her to help her
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