by wmm9 » April 15th, 2011, 7:00 pm
So obviously with the goal being incontinence a diaper can be assumed. The problem is that any hollow plug you use is going to slide out. If it does so even a tiny little bit, it'll hit the back of the diaper forming a seal, making the whole thing kind of pointless.
The way solid plugs stay in place is to have a smaller base at the bottom, right before the stand part that prevents full insertion. The sphincter is supposed to constrict at this point. Same concept used for continence itself, basically. But that doesn't work for this hollow plug approach because we need that muscle to be fully open.
For a plug, it's supposed to go in with the larger part at the bottom, to prevent it from going in too far and to give you an easier way to get it out. In the very rare case it does get stuck that is one embarrassing emergency room visit. And given that you'd have to cut the end of the bottle, that would make the end you inserted very sharp o.O
And even then, holy cow. Almost all plugs have small tips and get wider. It's incredibly difficult to start with a very wide point like that. I should also add that it's going to be very painful to keep in for a long time, even with experience. And messing maybe once a day means it'll have to be there a long time.
I can't see this working for many people ...
I am curious though, if you were able to keep such a thing in 24/7 for a long time, most people say it would only strengthen the sphincter. But do the same with a catheter (same concept) and it's said to atrophy the sphincter, causing urinary incontinence. So why are the two different? If they aren't, then 23.9/7 solid anal plug use should cause fecal incontinence.
And that sounds particularly awesome. Either wear a solid plug or be incontinent. No susceptibility to hypnosis required.