Technology is a wonderful thing, but maybe it shouldn't be in control of when you can change your diaper...
I've started a brand new story @ https://www.patreon.com/posts/39933048
Here's a sneak peak:
The app worked entirely as expected over the next few days. Having a percentage mark against each diaper was weird at first, but it tickled an itch I never knew I’d need. The app was generous, and prompted a change when a diaper was somewhere between fifty and sixty-five percent wet, but I knew I could get a lot more use out of something this thick, and I often tried to fill one as much as I possibly could while wetting, and safe at home. It was definitely a thrill and accomplishment watching the percentage meter edge beyond ninety percent.
Adjusting to wearing full-time was a little trickier for me, but the excitement of the app and the encouragement from Dale kept it fun at first. I didn’t push the diapers to capacity in the office, but also didn’t change if I could avoid it, mostly out of terror of being caught wandering into the bathroom with a change bag, or someone hearing my tapes rip. I was nowhere near brave enough to carry a bag into the disabled bathrooms either, despite the privacy it would office.
Working eight hours in the same diaper, give or take some travel, didn’t really trouble me too much either, and my clothes were relaxed enough that the added bulk didn’t seem to matter. But I couldn’t shake the fact that I was in a diaper while I was working, and anyone could find out with the slightest slip up. It was like walking on a knife edge, but I was loving it to begin with.
After a full pack was used, reviewing the app’s data was fascinating. It didn’t just tell me how much I was using each diaper, but it also flagged the “changing points” and graphed when I’d piss myself, and how heavily. The data was so thoroughly recorded, that I worried it might out me as not really being incontinent. Still, Dale told me not to worry. No company would expect someone to sign up to such a program and not actually need to be in diapers.
The first warning about IncoSmart came after Dale talked me into messing.
I've started a brand new story @ https://www.patreon.com/posts/39933048
Here's a sneak peak:
The app worked entirely as expected over the next few days. Having a percentage mark against each diaper was weird at first, but it tickled an itch I never knew I’d need. The app was generous, and prompted a change when a diaper was somewhere between fifty and sixty-five percent wet, but I knew I could get a lot more use out of something this thick, and I often tried to fill one as much as I possibly could while wetting, and safe at home. It was definitely a thrill and accomplishment watching the percentage meter edge beyond ninety percent.
Adjusting to wearing full-time was a little trickier for me, but the excitement of the app and the encouragement from Dale kept it fun at first. I didn’t push the diapers to capacity in the office, but also didn’t change if I could avoid it, mostly out of terror of being caught wandering into the bathroom with a change bag, or someone hearing my tapes rip. I was nowhere near brave enough to carry a bag into the disabled bathrooms either, despite the privacy it would office.
Working eight hours in the same diaper, give or take some travel, didn’t really trouble me too much either, and my clothes were relaxed enough that the added bulk didn’t seem to matter. But I couldn’t shake the fact that I was in a diaper while I was working, and anyone could find out with the slightest slip up. It was like walking on a knife edge, but I was loving it to begin with.
After a full pack was used, reviewing the app’s data was fascinating. It didn’t just tell me how much I was using each diaper, but it also flagged the “changing points” and graphed when I’d piss myself, and how heavily. The data was so thoroughly recorded, that I worried it might out me as not really being incontinent. Still, Dale told me not to worry. No company would expect someone to sign up to such a program and not actually need to be in diapers.
The first warning about IncoSmart came after Dale talked me into messing.
Category Artwork (Digital) / Baby fur
Species Human
Gender Male
Size 900 x 1200px
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