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agapoulo

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  1. Water pills (diuretics) by themselves can't cause bedwetting. Typically they are associated with various types of incontinence in people already incapacitated from some other cause, such as dementia, physical limitations (can't reach bathroom in time), and medications with a sedative effect. Don't play with diuretics, they can interact with many other medications and cause dangerous situations such as fainting, electrolyte imbalances that in turn can contribute to cardiac issues, and so on.
  2. I doubt it's betanechol, it`s seldom used anymore and would also cause very unpleasant side-effects if taken in a dose sufficient to cause urge incontinence. Same for neostigmine etc. More likely to be anti-hypertensives or muscle relaxants.
  3. The sleeping pill (depending on the type, dosage, and your own sensitivity to it) may help bedwetting. If it's the non-prescription antihistamine type, unlikely, as these products tend to cause urinary retention more than the reverse. You likely will wake up with a full bladder, a fuzzy mind, and a dry mouth. If it's the benzodiazepine or analog type (Z-drugs) some people have reported success, but don't take this for a recommendation. Taking any kind of non-prescribed drugs (including alcohol) to cause bedwetting with any semblance of safety requires lots of homework, and is generally not a good idea. The diuretic (unless regularly prescribed to you) is not useful here. Simply having a large glass of water before bedtime will be just as effective, and less risky. One less risky route might be, if you have legitimately prescribed benzodiazepine-family sleeping pills, to take one on an empty stomach with a large glass of water and go to bed. Then you lie down on your belly, and relax your sphincter just shy of peeing and hover like that (this takes a bit of practice). With some luck, when the medication hits, it will take you over the edge and you will pee. The medication often has an amnestic effect, so in the morning you won't remember having peed. Voila.. safe(r) simili-bedwetting. This works best with a fast-acting benzo such as diazepam or sublingual lorazepam.
  4. Here we go again.. Please check your facts before spreading misinformation. No Botox doesn`t kill anything, it temporarily blocks nerve impulses from reaching the muscles, and so can cause paralysis. That doesn't mean it's a good idea to have it injected for a sexual fetish though, as there can be complications, some of which quite severe. On top of the ex-member Bettypooh refers to, there was a guy on a French ABDL site who chronicled his quest for botox injections in his external sphincter in a very detailed fashion. He was able to find an urologist to do the job in a Tunisian private clinic, after getting a written statement from his psychiatrist that the fetish was a permanent condition. In summary, it didn't work very well, and needed several interventions to work at all.
  5. I have tried them, but absorption speed seems to be quite mediocre. Had leaks overnight. So far best results with Betterdry, Northshore Megamax, and Seni Quattro w booster (Northshore or a simple Huggies).
  6. Forgive me for asking, but after many years counseling people I feel you may be turbocharging through some things that might warrant skilled help. How much was the diapers/wetting a factor in the separation? Was the drinking the a cause of the crumbling relationship or a consequence of it? Please don't get defensive, I'm just concerned about you.
  7. Wow. At 8% ABV that's the same ethanol quantity as 10 shots of vodka, more than 1/3 of a USA 40oz bottle. For someone not used to alcohol that's enough to be actually dangerous, as in passing out, possibly choking on your vomit, and dying. So folks, don't take that as a recommendation! FWIW I've had "success" on much lower quantities of ethanol, especially when tired from a few double shifts and heavy gym workout. 2-3 * 330ml Belgian 9% beers will work wonders then. As I stated in another thread the key point is to prehydrate. Once you are copiously peeing clear, then drink the beers in close succession, pee again, then go to bed. I have found that being extra tired (such as after a 175km bike race, heavy crossfit session etc) can minimise the alcohol requirement. Also kava can help, but with great caution as low quality kava mixed with ethanol has the potential to cause liver injury. Only use the purest stuff from Hawaii, not cheap caplets from vitamin stores. And no, don't mix ethanol with sleeping pills... that's really asking for trouble. A wet diaper isn't worth the risk.
  8. The SSL certificate presented is their hosting provider's (Viviti) certificate, which causes an issue since the name on the certificate doesn't match rearz.ca. Many browsers will simply halt there to prevent spoofing attacks. The plain HTTP version does indeed say the website is suspended. What is interesting is their DNS record for rearz.ca was updated today, and hosting provider seems to have changed as well today. They are possibly migrating to a new provider. No DDoS as far as I can see.
  9. The meaning of linked picture (my first link) is quite obvious given this forum`s avowed subject and audience. Check the picture... Kitty O`Neill was a stuntswoman in 1979 for the Wonder Woman TV show starring Lynda Carter. This is clearly explained in the article (second link) that you obviously did not read.
  10. Can't help but wonder if my imagination is playing tricks on me... https://www.washingtonpost.com/resizer/4jnobfmi9UGqJ3Dp-Zf6ycD1MaY=/1484x0/arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/2DZAEGHAJUI6RORQU7PNATMPVQ.jpg This is from obituary of Kitty O'Neil, doing a scary jump in article here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/kitty-oneil-deaf-daredevil-who-became-worlds-fastest-woman-dies-at-72/2018/11/04/5d88dc9c-e044-11e8-8f5f-a55347f48762_story.html
  11. So much I gathered, thus my saying I wouldn't comment his posts further
  12. Flomax is actually a trade name for tamsulosin. Tamsulosin is OTC in several countries such as UK. In a normal healthy person you won't notice much if any "interesting" effects. I agree that a stent (after really doing your homework) is probably a better idea than pills.
  13. Many factors influence urine output, ranging from how salty you have been eating, exertion, several medications, temperature, and obviously fluid intake. In a healthy adult, if normally hydrated (pale straw coloured urine), increasing water intake over the last 2 hours before bedtime is unlikely to cause stomach aches, and should result in fairly copious urine output by bedtime. The idea is to go to bed with an empty bladder, and be quickly, deeply sleeping and relaxed thanks to the ethanol's sedative effect by the time the bladder is full. Actual optimal water intake needed will vary depending on body weight and composition, and can only be ascertained through personal experimentation. Please note this "optimisation" is strongly discouraged for people with hypertension, diabetes, renal insufficiency, or any other disease where homeostasis is already compromised. As with anything else involving "hacking" your body's intricate balance and systems, do your research and go gradual.
  14. Same experience here. I found that especially if really tired from a double shift at work, long bike ride (over 150km) or extra-intense workout, a few glasses of wine or beer will induce an accident. First time this happened I was fortunately diapered (Depends with a Huggies booster at the time). Waking up with a clearly wet, swollen diaper I couldn't believe it, and the mix of confusion, shame and delight at the same time was quite intense. The main thing is to not overdo it, I found that just getting a bit buzzed (far from really drunk) does it. And for obvious reasons, it's not for everyone, nor for every night. Prehydrating also helps. Drink enough water over 1-2 hours to get your pee clear, then have the beer/wine, and go to bed right away. Some other folks in this forum have reported success with sleeping pills, but I would steer clear of that. Especially if mixed with alcohol the results can be unpredictable and potentially way too dangerous for "recreational" use. Plus many sleeping pills are now increasingly linked with increases in mortality rates from cancer and other causes.
  15. BabyKeiff, I believe you are well intentioned but misinformed. I have treated folks with pneumothorax, and it's really not as you seem to understand. In the type of pneumothorax that will kill you fast (tension pneumothorax), air gets in the chest cavity via a wound and gets trapped between the inner chest wall and the lung itself, thus preventing full lung inflation. Each breath makes it worse, and you die unless treated quickly. If fluid got in the chest and prevented breathing that would normally be blood, known as haemothorax, not urine. If you die from internal bleeding it usually is from the hypovolemic shock, not suffocation. I won't comment the medical science (or lack of - actually) in your posts further beyond also stating that if you mix up ureters and urethra it's a bad start when trying to instruct people about bladder (dys)function. BTW people who chronically can't drain their bladders and keep high intravesical pressures (such as some paraplegics with neurogenic bladder) will end up with many issues, thus the importance of regular self-cathing, stents, or other procedure. It's not a good idea to mess with your body too much.
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