Download Free The Fulltime Permanent Adult Infant Diaper Version Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online The Fulltime Permanent Adult Infant Diaper Version and write the review.

Maggie Joyce married Charlie, an Adult Baby, with eyes wide open, back in the 1980s when ABs were scarcely heard of and not at all understood. Over many years, Charlie became more and more of a baby and unlike most ABs, did not find a bottom to his infantile needs. Eventually, Charlie became a fulltime, permanent, adult infant with no significant adult behaviour left. This is a rarity, but it is not unknown. Maggie speaks from her many years of experience with a full infant and shares both her story and the advice of others who also have a complete infant and offers guidance to those who may be facing a similar situation or something approaching it. Most people – AB and non-AB alike – would recoil from the mere suggestion of a total return to infancy. For some, it is an appealing fantasy, but for others, it is a destination they crave, need and occasionally, arrive at. This book is part narrative of their journey and part guide-book for those entering that most extraordinary and most challenging experience: The Fulltime Permanent Adult Infant.
Maggie Joyce married Charlie, an Adult Baby, with eyes wide open, back in the 1980s when ABs were scarcely heard of and not at all understood. Over many years, Charlie became more and more of a baby and unlike most ABs, did not find a bottom to his infantile needs. Eventually, Charlie became a fulltime, permanent, adult infant with no significant adult behaviour left. This is a rarity, but it is not unknown. Maggie speaks from her many years of experience with a full infant and shares both her story and the advice of others who also have a complete infant and offers guidance to those who may be facing a similar situation or something approaching it. Most people - AB and non-AB alike - would recoil from the mere suggestion of a total return to infancy. For some, it is an appealing fantasy, but for others, it is a destination they crave, need and occasionally, arrive at. This book is part narrative of their journey and part guide-book for those entering that most extraordinary and most challenging experience: Permanent infancy.
Dylan Lewis' fourth book of the Adult Baby Identity quadrilogy: a self-help guide. Knowing who we are as individuals is the most important journey in our lives and for many, it is the most difficult one. Even for people we call ‘vanilla’, with no apparent kinks and oddities, it is a herculean task. But when you are an Adult Baby, it is a vastly more complex mission. Add being sissy to the mix and we are already pushing uphill and failing miserably. But if we don’t know who we are, we act as if we are someone we are not. We try to create a personality not fully our own. We create masks and in doing so, we create problems for ourselves and others around us. This is the true value of books like this and others along the same vein. ABDL is not like other identity problems. It is unique, different and requires a perspective all of its own. It is not about gender – although gender issues can be involved. It is not about sexual preference – although that can be involved as well. It is primarily about age, and being powerfully driven back to a time of life most have left behind and yet, we still literally inhabit.
Gwendoline Summers has a special style of writing to women about some of the unique options available to them. She knows what it is like to baby her husband. Her first book is a guide to other women seeking to take their partner in hand and make them the baby they both need him to be. This is not an enforced babying guide, but rather one to help women who already KNOW that their partners need the security of diapers, a pacifier and a babyish lifestyle, to achieve that goal. The second book covers the subject in a more extensive way about making your partner into a Sissy Baby - a baby girl And the third book brings up an interesting question: is potty training a thing of the past and is it time to reject it both for your partner and yourself? This book is not just for women with AB partners but for ALL women whether their partners are AB or not! She takes it step by step on how to slowly get your partner into diapers and other baby items. If your partner is AB then you are already partway there, but if they are non-AB, this book is still for you. It is a guidebook along a journey of letting our men express the infancy inside that is so often just beneath the surface.
Robbie is a troubled young man, He is an adult baby and to some, he is considered 'damaged goods'. Despite his best intentions, he could not control his desire to be an infant and it led to a confrontation with Angelica, his wife. In consultation with a psychiatrist, Dr Marie, it was decided that a course of intense babying may in fact, cure him of his baby desires. But it was a failure and together, the doctor and the wife turned Robbie from adult husband to infant boy. Would it be a good outcome for all concerned including family and friends?
Gwendoline Summers knows what it is like to baby her husband. Her first book is a guide to other women seeking to take their partner in hand and make them the baby they both need him to be. This is not an enforced babying guide, but rather one to help women who already KNOW that their partners need the security of diapers, a pacifier and a babyish lifestyle, to achieve that goal. This book is not just for women with AB partners but for ALL women whether their partners are AB or not! She takes it step by step in how to slowly get your partner into diapers and other baby items. If your partner is AB then you are already part way there, but if they are non-AB, this book is still for you. It is a guide book along a journey of letting our men express the infancy inside that is so often just beneath the surface.
The story continues with a new bedwetter moving into the house. Bronwyn is more than simply a chronic edge-to-edge bedwetter. She also wears diapers and uses a baby's dummy. A new larger house at Baker St means more voyages of discovery into why both boarders are such bad bedwetters and why they are showing infantile traits. Alice's backstory comes to bear as the three meet a group of Adult Babies and their lives are turned upside down. A wonderful story of discovery, nappies, love and bedwetting. And in the end, it is about overcoming the past and embracing the future, diapered and safe.
Dylan Lewis, in conjunction with Dax Jordan, has put together a lengthy and substantive book that addresses the crucial elements of the Adult Baby identity - a question that plagues us all. The author makes a well-researched and brilliantly written case that the core of the Adult Baby Identity is one that fits on the dissociation spectrum. It may be a long way from the Dissociative Identity Disorder we know much about, but it is still on that spectrum, if at the other end of it. If you are an adult baby or you live with one, this is THE book that will clue you in to who you are, how you behave and why you do what you do. A 65,000 word meticulously researched book that belongs on the bookshelves of every AB, every partner of an AB and every therapist tasked with helping an AB find the balance and understanding they so desperately crave. One of the best books on the topic ever written.
All around the world, parents are discovering their teenagers are trying out diapers and some of them keep wearing them long after they are toilet trained or cease to wet the bed. It is not a new phenomenon, but it is increasingly becoming a frustration and a fear among parents who simply don't understand it. But this is not the time to panic or be concerned. Rosalie Bent methodically explains how to handle your teen and their diapers. Hard and fast rules and simply forbidding it, will not work, but in this book, you will find some understanding and some tools for dealing with this unusual behaviour, responsibly and effectively. This classic 54-page book - "So, your teenager is wearing diapers..." - takes parents through the why and how of dealing with this as responsible adults. The diaper issue doesn't need to be a huge parent/child argument or a source of constant conflict or confusion. If you are concerned about your teen or you are that teen who needs to explain it to their parents, this is the book for you.
Understanding. Knowledge. Insight. It is the goal of most people and humanity in general to understand and to gain knowledge. To understand our natural world. To understand space. To understand those things so tiny we can never see them. We want to understand what other people are saying, insight into what they are feeling and what makes them tick. For most people, it is natural to want to understand more about a wide variety of topics and disciplines. Perhaps the most important understanding of them all is the knowledge of self. Adult babies have traditionally not fared well in the area of understanding of ourselves. The few professional attempts to explain ABDL behaviour and thinking have been less than helpful and often insulting and deeply offensive. Being described as a paraphilia alongside and adjacent to paedophilia and other serious disorders has been the nightmare that has haunted the community for a generation. Slowly however, the light has been dawning on the extraordinary world of the adult baby. The first step was the recognition that being an adult baby is no mere affectation, fetish or odd choice of behaviour. It was the understanding that the baby self is a genuine and subjectively real identity. Not a thing, not a concept or a feeling, but an identity. A few professionals have belatedly drifted onto the scene and made a few inroads, but they have been well behind the small group of hard-working ABDLs themselves who have sought to build a body of understanding on who we are. Knowing who we are is the key to success, happiness and the ability to move forward. The works of B. Terrance Grey, Rosalie and Michael Bent led the way to building an intellectual basis of understanding of who Adult babies are. Then came Dylan Lewis, whose canon of work in this area has no peer. This new book – Living Happily as an Adult Baby – makes a promise in its title that is almost obscene in its arrogance. Adult Babies have often struggled with the power of their baby identity and happiness - especially long-term happiness – has often eluded them. This work is commended to all adult babies, their family and friends as it seeks to further humanity’s understanding of this most complex identity structure. The Adult Baby.