Bed-WettingAll Stars The best DiaperDaze Comic yet.
Celebrate the natural curiosity, daring and mischievousness of boyhood in this positive story of four boys growing up in the hills of Tennessee.
Twenty-five fully illustrated pages detail their experiences of waking up
in wet diapers every morning and playing baby throughout grammar school and
high school.
If you like the idea of a boyhood filled with friends who are silly,
playful and free from inhibition, then you'll love seeing these images of
boys being diapered by mom, boys being diapered by girls, and boys having
fun playing baby and fooling around with other boys in diapers.
The Story: Three brothers and their younger cousin grow up in the hills of
Tennessee where the youngest boy is kept in diapers full-time untill age
seven. The older brothers wet the bed like a lot of boys in the hills and
are put in cloth diapers and plastic pants each night. The two younger boys
like playing baby and get to wear diapers, suck pacifiers and baby bottles,
and sleep in a crib at home. They especially like to visit some girl
cousins who love to play house, dress them as babies and show they off to
the other girls in the neighborhood.
During Spirit Week at high school, the girls make it a baby day so they can
plan baby games and contests. All the team members and popular boys dress
as babies and party in diapers. A lot of boys do it all in their diapers!
One of the brothers meets a rich boy on the swim team who is totally
turned-on by playing baby and not caring what people think. The two high
school seniors dress as toddlers to school, sucking pacifiers and baby
bottles, and always wet their diapers and baby pants under their ourfits.
The rich boy turns his bedroom into a giant nursery, and they have lots of
exciting fun seeing how infantile they can be as they fool around in their
wet and sometimes messy diapers.
After graduating from high school, the boys return home every sunday for
church. But before returning to college, they always sneak in some wet
diaper fun just like they did growing up.
|