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What is the price of starting life over again? For college student, Toby, starting over will cost him everything. At just nineteen, Toby’s new life is about to begin. After a near-fatal overdose, he found himself kicked out of school and facing either jail or drug rehabilitation. Now, more than ever, he needs a do-over. A special drug rehabilitation center called Forever Free just might be able to help. This special program promises to make its clients “forever free” from their addiction to drugs and alcohol. However, this treatment comes at quite a price as Toby learns, when he is given his new start on life - quite literally! He finds himself transformed into a young child, a toddler living at a daycare center, with no memory of how they did it, or how to return to his adult life. As he struggles to keep his mind from sliding into early childhood along with his body, Toby discovers something surprising. Life in diapers isn’t all that bad. He makes new friends, and discovers he is surrounded by people who actually care about him - something denied him during his first pass through life. Toby must make a choice. Either try to get back to his old life with all its failures, or remain a child surrounded by people who love him. Which would you choose? For those who feel their infantilism touches something deep and alive inside, this story is for you. Beyond the diapers, early childhood is about a world filled with new relationships and vivid experiences. What matters most in Toby’s world, turns out to not be the material stuff after all. You are invited to walk through the regression chamber at Forever Free, step into the world of Buttons and Blocks Daycare, and experience for yourself - through the eyes of Toby - the transforming power of really starting over.
What is the price of starting life over again? For college student, Toby, starting over will cost him everything. At just nineteen, Toby’s new life is about to begin. After a near-fatal overdose, he found himself kicked out of school and facing either jail or drug rehabilitation. Now, more than ever, he needs a do-over. A special drug rehabilitation center called Forever Free just might be able to help. This special program promises to make its clients “forever free” from their addiction to drugs and alcohol. However, this treatment comes at quite a price as Toby learns, when he is given his new start on life - quite literally! He finds himself transformed into a young child, a toddler living at a daycare center, with no memory of how they did it, or how to return to his adult life. As he struggles to keep his mind from sliding into early childhood along with his body, Toby discovers something surprising. Life in nappies isn’t all that bad. He makes new friends, and discovers he is surrounded by people who actually care about him - something denied him during his first pass through life. Toby must make a choice. Either try to get back to his old life with all its failures, or remain a child surrounded by people who love him. Which would you choose? For those who feel their infantilism touches something deep and alive inside, this story is for you. Beyond the diapers, early childhood is about a world filled with new relationships and vivid experiences. What matters most in Toby’s world, turns out to not be the material stuff after all. You are invited to walk through the regression chamber at Forever Free, step into the world of Buttons and Blocks Daycare, and experience for yourself - through the eyes of Toby - the transforming power of really starting over.
For college student, Toby, starting over will cost him everything. At just nineteen, Toby's new life is about to begin. After a near fatal overdose, he found himself kicked out of school, and facing either jail or drug rehabilitation. Now, more than ever, he needs a do-over. A special drug rehabilitation center called Forever Free just might be able to help. This special program promises to make its clients "forever free" from their addiction to drugs and alcohol. However, this treatment comes at quite a price as Toby learns, when he is given his new start on life - quite literally!He finds himself transformed into a young child, a toddler living at a daycare center, with no memory of how they did it, or how to return to his adult life. As he struggles to keep his mind from sliding into early childhood along with his body, Toby discovers something surprising. Life in diapers isn't all that bad. He makes new friends, and discovers he is surrounded by people who actually care about him - something denied him during his first pass through life. Toby must make a choice. Either try to get back to his old life with all its failures, or remain a child surrounded by people who love him.Which would you choose?For those who feel their infantilism touches something deep and alive inside, this story is for you. Beyond the diapers, early childhood is about a world filled with new relationships and vivid experiences. What matters most in Toby's world, turns out to not be the material stuff after all.You are invited to walk through the regression chamber at Forever Free, step into the world of Buttons and Blocks Daycare, and experience for yourself - through the eyes of Toby - the transforming power of really starting over.
For college student, Toby, starting over will cost him everything. At just nineteen, Toby's new life is about to begin. After a near fatal overdose, he found himself kicked out of school, and facing either jail or drug rehabilitation. Now, more than ever, he needs a do-over. A special drug rehabilitation center called Forever Free just might be able to help. This special program promises to make its clients "forever free" from their addiction to drugs and alcohol. However, this treatment comes at quite a price as Toby learns, when he is given his new start on life - quite literally!He finds himself transformed into a young child, a toddler living at a daycare center, with no memory of how they did it, or how to return to his adult life. As he struggles to keep his mind from sliding into early childhood along with his body, Toby discovers something surprising. Life in nappies isn't all that bad. He makes new friends, and discovers he is surrounded by people who actually care about him - something denied him during his first pass through life. Toby must make a choice. Either try to get back to his old life with all its failures, or remain a child surrounded by people who love him.Which would you choose?For those who feel their infantilism touches something deep and alive inside, this story is for you. Beyond the diapers, early childhood is about a world filled with new relationships and vivid experiences. What matters most in Toby's world, turns out to not be the material stuff after all.You are invited to walk through the regression chamber at Forever Free, step into the world of Buttons and Blocks Daycare, and experience for yourself - through the eyes of Toby - the transforming power of really starting over.
Barry Oliver's three-part 'Regression Trilogy' is a fabulous story of a very special DayCare centre - Buttons and Blocks - where most (but not all) of the clients are adults who have been regressed to infants and toddlers. Danger, intrigue and adventure find each of our protagonists as we learn more about the mysterious technology that can give what adult babies have always wanted - physical regression to infancy. But is it all that we would hope for? The three books are: The Rehab Regression The Daycare Regression The Reporter Regression 184,000 words
This is the second edition of an inspired manual for psychotherapists, practitioners, healers, and students of emotional, mental, and spiritual healing. It has been updated with an index and additional spiritual insights into the dynamics of sanskara, impressions upon the soul created out of trauma that create our themes and issues in this life. The author describes how the issues we experience in this life are the effect of unfinished and unhealed trauma and wounds of our past lives and this one. He describes how the emotionally charged magnetic fields and signature beliefs created out of these events create our misperceptions of the world, ourselves, and others in relationships. Until now Regression and Past Life Therapy has been a significant tool in bringing emotional and mental healing to individuals. The New Regression Therapy raises that whole modality to a literally Higher Level of healing work, one that is a significant augmentation to the great work of all the pioneers in this field. The New Regression Therapy incorporates additional elements that enhance and broaden the scope and depth of what has been the state of the art in Regression and Past Life Therapy. Most significant among them is the application of Divine Presence from resources found in the Interlife or through Angelic Higher Resources that are brought to the events and fields of attraction where the wounds and signature beliefs have resided.In the second edition further insights into the dynamics of spirit attachment and augmented protocols for the clearing of such attached entities are included.Greg McHugh is a Registered Psychotherapist and Clinical Hypnotherapist with a practice in Denver, CO. He can been reached through his website at www.gregmchugh.com
Barry Oliver is a fabulous author of scifi books with an ABDL twist. In these three books, technology plays a part in literally reverting a person back to infancy. If you like your ABDL stories a bit different and with a scifi/technology bent, then this book is for you. Contains: The Virtual Reality Regression The Sissy Regression Baby Cruise
A powerful workshop-in-a-book for healing from loss One day everything is fine. The next, you find yourself without everything you took for granted. Love has turned sour. The people you depended on have let you down. You feel you’ll never love again. But there is a way out. In The Abandonment Recovery Workbook, the only book of its kind, psychotherapist and abandonment expert Susan Anderson explores the seemingly endless pain of heartbreak and shows readers how to break free—whether the heartbreak comes from a divorce, a breakup, a death, or the loss of friendship, health, a job, or a dream. From the first shock of despair through the waves of hopelessness to the tentative efforts to make new connections, The Abandonment Recovery Workbook provides an itinerary for recovery. A manual for individuals or support groups, it includes exercises that the author has tested and developed through her decades of expertise in abandonment recovery. Anderson provides concrete recovery tools and exercises to discover and heal underlying issues, identify self-defeating behaviors of mistrust and insecurity, and build self-esteem. Guiding you through the five stages of your journey—shattering, withdrawal, internalizing, rage, and lifting—this book (a new edition of Anderson’s Journey from Heartbreak to Connection) serves as a source of strength. You will come away with a new sense of self—a self with an increased capacity to love. Praise for Susan Anderson’s The Journey from Abandonment to Healing: “If there can be a pill to cure the heartbreak of rejection, this book may be it.” — Rabbi Harold Kushner, bestselling author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People
For a period of some fifteen years following completion of my internship training in clinical psychology (1950-1951) at the Washington University School of Medicine and my concurrent successful navigation through that school's neuroanatomy course, clinical work in neuropsychology for me and the psychologists of my generation consisted almost exclusively of our trying to help our physician colleagues differentiate patients with neurologic disorders from those with psychiatric disorders. In time, experience led all of us from the several disciplines involved in this enterprise to the conclusion that the crude diagnostic techniques available to us circa 1945-1965 had garnered little valid information on which to base such complex, differential diagnostic decisions. It now is gratifying to look back and review the remarkable progress that has occurred in the field of clinical neuropsychology in the four decades since I was a graduate student. In the late 1940s such pioneers as Ward Halstead, Alexander Luria, George Yacorzynski, Hans-Lukas Teuber, and Arthur Benton already were involved in clinical studies that, by the late 1960s, would markedly have improved the quality of clinical practice. However, the only psychological tests that the clinical psychologist of my immediate post Second Wodd War generation had as aids for the diagnosis of neurologically based conditions involving cognitive deficit were such old standbys as the Wechsler-Bellevue, Rorschach, Draw A Person, Bender Gestalt, and Graham Kendall Memory for Designs Test.