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Subject: My Story retold once more


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Thursday, June 05, 2025, 04:09: am

In the archives of this forum is my enema story.
I didn’t grow up in the period of doctors making house calls,
but during a time where my mom answered that call instead.

I spent over 20 plus years posting on a forum that no longer exist sharing my story and reading other’s people’s stories and struggles. I now look at writing about my struggles as therapy to help me. I have come a long ways.

Part 1
When I was younger, I did not grow up around other children who received enemas as for as I know. I had no one to talk to about my feelings or experiences. I literally believed I was the only one. I am not sure how I got started. The pain associated with a BM I did not like. Honestly I think due to poor eating habits, I made myself constipated through time by fighting the urges to go. I was young, 6-7, for sure, when mom started enemas on me. She simply used an enema bulb, 10 ounces. I was stubborn and she was even more.
Mom was determined to force me to go on the toilet. I pooped in my pants often. I was a fighter and resisted the best I could. Mom had to take my clothes off of me. I would come to blows, bow up, and everything. Kick, swing, pull, tug, with all my might. When mom got me naked from the waste down, she did not hesitate bringing fire to my bottom with many swats. The bulb was ready on the sink counter. I already knew what was happening. She quickly sit down, took my body so fast, laid me over her lap, and inserted the bulb. I always received two bulbs as well. So there was this period where I had to hold the first solution in me as mom refilled the bulb. As I got older, 8-9 years old, still a fighter, still hated BM’s, still hated the pain. Mom moved to given me enemas after my evening bath. I was already naked so that fight was over. All she had to do was get me over her lap and insert the bulb. Mom’s enemas were called “soapies” because they were really really soapy. She wanted me to be completely cleaned out plus not able to fight any urges as I sit on the toilet. I was the youngest boy and still had two older brothers in their teens still at home. From early on as I grew, my brothers were always part of my enema experiences when mom needed them to help. I did not like my two brother’s helping. So, me being submissive, laying across mom’s lap, taking the enema without resistance or struggle or a fight prevented them from coming unless mom was tired, really didn’t have the time to continue doing this, wanted it over as fast as I did, or I was giving her trouble, my brothers were in from the beginning. One held my arms and the other held my legs. I reached back often to remove the bulb as mom was trying to insert it. I would kick my feet like a wild child to try to stop her from reaching the target. With my two brother’s help, mom had full control. No reaching, no kicking. Just breathing and crying, and holding the solution as she refilled. Another reason to not have my two brother’s helping was I always received 3 bulbs instead of two. Mom was able to do her work as the enema did its work as well.

To be continued.

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[> Subject: Story retold part 2


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Friday, June 06, 2025, 05:45: am

I decided to come journal my struggles growing up once again. It’s been almost 2 years since I spent time doing this. For me, journaling is healing. It’s releasing. It’s healthy. It not only helps me, but perhaps there is a silent reader that can relate in some way.

This is part 2:
Mom always gave me two bulbs from the enema bulb before allowing me to sit. Through the years, I have read on many forums including this one where an enema bag was used and sometimes a special retention nozzle. Mom never used a bag, only a 10 ounce bulb filled twice. I can’t even imagine the struggle, the fight, the resistance, I would have done if mom used an enema bag. The bulb experience for me was bad enough. Just the thought of an enema nozzle in me with solution continuously flowing. It would have been resistance for sure.
It was probably 8-9 years old, mom decided to start given me enemas after my even bath. It was to her advantage of course because I was already without clothes.
I did not have a specific enema night.
Mom had three rules in place for an enema after the bath that evening.
One, I pooped in my pants. Mom would not say anything. I would go and change clothes, even tried the old hiding game, but mom simply washed the underwear out and later that evening washed me out.
Second, I was a holder and strainer. So If I was caught straining, face even red, I could expect an enema that evening to give me a reason to strain.
Third, was what mom called the “grumpies.”
Yes, she tied in unusual behavior or attitude to not having a bowel movement.

Bathroom time was simple.
Mom came to the door to tell me to get out of the tub and try to have a BM.
Regardless if I sit in the tub or on the toilet, soon after, I would hear water running through the walls from the kitchen sink.
It did not take long for me to make the connection if mom came to the door and told me to get out and try to have a BM, I was going to receive an enema soon.
I would get out, sit on the toilet, and try to have a BM. Breath, relax, even had an imaginary friend. Anything to show mom I went and no need for an enema. Now, of course when she first started this, I had no clue what was going on. She would simply come in, sit the enema down, take my arm, close the lid, sit down, flip me over her lap and proceed on giving me an enema. It happened so fast.
Eventually, it turned into a process. Mom would come in and place a jar of soapy water and the bulb on the sink. She would see me sitting and ask if I had went?
Of course the answer seemed to always be no. Even though I was trying. She would say “I will return shortly” and leave.
My mind would go directly to the enema bulb and stare at it. I always believed from the beginning that bulb had a smirky smile knowing it was going into my bottom and there was nothing I could do to stop it.
Mom would return and take my arm and stand me up. She put the lid down and sit. I knew the routine well. I would immediately beg for more time trying to tell her I didn’t need an enema, just give me time. I would try to resist. Pull back to get my arm loose and kick and swing. Whatever I needed to do. Mom was ole school and she didn’t hesitate popping my bare bottom with her flat hand and bring the fire. As quickly as possible, she had me over her lap and if more pops were needed, so be it. Of course I was kicking and crying and then she would press the tip into my bottom and squeeze the first solution. I became even more active and animated with warm soapy water in me. I could hear the refilling of the bulb and would turn to check. My eyes watched as she squeezed and dipped the bulb. I would cry out, “hurry up i gotta go i gotta go.” I watched as she would skim the suds off the top of the water. I could hear the suction as the suds disappeared into the bulb. This was a process of also giving the first bulb time to work on me.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 3


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Friday, June 06, 2025, 11:06: pm

Typing and sharing my emotions are therapy. I encourage it because it helps bring healing in so many ways.
I don’t know if anyone else has experienced something similar but this has happened many times. If I am having a hard time having a BM, it feels like an outer body experience, my feelings, my emotions, my mind takes me back as a child sitting on the toilet and mom coming in with the bulb.
There is this split between reality and this visual. In reality I’m taking deep breaths, relaxing, pushing, trying to avoid this visual of the enema. However, in the visual, mom has sit the bulb and jar on the sink and left. There I am as a child sitting in my thoughts.
Moments later in the visual, mom is back, lifts me over her lap and reaches for the bulb. In real time, movement is taking place and I remind myself if I can get started, it will be difficult but the BM will move and flow. In the visual, I have been given the enema and I’m fighting the urges. Real time, I have those same tingling childlike feelings of fighting my BM. Eventually, the enema in the visual takes over and I completely empty my colon. In reality, same thing is happening. I have broke through. The visual seems so real when it is happening and the feelings in reality are so real.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 4


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Saturday, June 07, 2025, 04:26: am

Coming and writing and remembering honestly feels so good. It’s like I am a free person. No longer bound to these feelings that have tormented for years not having anyone to talk with.

Part 4
The time lapse between the first enema and mom refilling the bulb for the second enema is a vivid remembrance in my mind as a child flashing back to what was going through my mind as I waited for the second bulb and the feel of the bulb tip once again.
My mind knew I was going to take the bulb, and I knew I had to relax to allow the solution to go inside of me, but not dare release any. I remember many times, looking at mom over my shoulder and saying, “hurry up I gotta I gotta go,”
and remember mom saying,
“you better hold it! You better hold it, you better not release it.”
Next, the feel of the tip. I was open and coated with the soap from the first bulb, so stopping the second was impossible. The tip easily slid right in. Mom squeezed the bulb, I felt the warm agitated soapy solution enter me once more as mom would hold me in place a few more seconds. I was so ready to go, and would say with a breath,
“let me up, i gotta go! I gotta go!”
Mom, let me up, stood up, lifted the lid, and went to stand by the sink and start cleaning up. Remember, I fought my BM urges until the urges stopped, and here I am, with an enema in me. I was no different. I hated the pain associated with a BM. And I instinctively started trying to fight the urge to go. The enema was clearly working on me and here I am with all my effort and child strength still trying to win this war. My answer, to release a little solution at a time and that would help with the urges and they would go away. And so that’s what I would do. Release a little. Slowly, release a little more. However, the BM was moving and I did not want it to hurt. The solution was coating me, clearing that run way, making its slip and slide. The urges were getting stronger because the BM was moving plus the soap was agitating me. As a child, I didn’t understand all of that. I thought release enough solution and the urges would go away. But what happens next happened so fast and quick. It was like I was poltergeist, tazed, ghostbusters arrived. The locomotive was moving out. The baseball bat was coming. In an instant, like I was tazed to do so, my legs lifted in reaction off the floor straight out in front of me, both hands gripped the side of the toilet, and my body lifted up. I could feel the BM traveling through my body, through my colon, what a rush, a feeling, an inner body experience, as I completely emptied and filled the toilet. I relaxed, collapsed, exhausted, out of breath, eyes heavy as if someone gave me a drug. Mom was still standing by the sink, running water and cleaning the bulb and the jar of solution out.
She would look at me and say,
“That wasn’t so bad was it?”
And I would be trying to catch my breath, empty feeling, stomach flat, deflated.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold once more


Author:
Shelly
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Date Posted: Saturday, June 07, 2025, 10:34: am

I hope you are doing okay with your meds now. You take care of yourself. So our young lady said she would not be seeing me this summer. She didn't know what the plans were for her school this fall. I talked to her mom before we left for vacation. She said she planned on getting some enemas in her daughter at least twice a month but didn't ask me to be the administrator so I'm actually sort of glad. But I worry about the young gal because she had been a holder for so long. It is hardest to break a teenager from holding than it is younger children. They tend to go into adulthood holding like Susan does now. So our little guys are pretty unhappy that their kind and nice enema giver is no longer going to be giving them their enemas. Oh well!

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[> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold once more


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Sunday, June 08, 2025, 03:51: am

Shelly,
I am doing ok. Taking it easy.
Thank you for the update on sitter and the boys.
I wish sitter would consider coming to spend time with the boys, that’s cold turkey. They love her. You be nice to those broken hearted boys since their hearts are crushed.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold once more


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Monday, June 09, 2025, 04:52: am

Not going to lie.
Coming and spending time reflecting has been difficult. Emotions rise, memory flashbacks. Healing is so important though. Why live with the torment?
Why not release it?
Mental battle is one of the hardest to overcome.

Part 5:
Like so many, I pooped my pants and strained my underwear. As a result, that is for the most part, I was given enemas.
I also received enemas if I was caught straining. Also, for having what mom called the “grumpies.” But for most of the enemas given, it was because of stained underwear.
I was a holder like so many. Remember, I grew up knowing no one else receiving enemas. Had no one to talk to. Was alone in this battle. Week after week, an enema or enemas. Yes, I could stain my underwear, get caught straining, and have a grumpy attitude all in the same week. Didn’t happen often because the cure for all was an enema, took one to wear me down. I wasn’t really a wild child, but I had a willful disobedient spirit at times and mom tamed me regularly.
Did I know when I dropped my clothes in the basket and they were dirty, an enema was coming my way? Truth, I wasn’t too busy trying to hide it hoping mom would not find it to even think about the consequences. I was a child 8-9-10 years old.
The bathroom was on the left, my bedroom was on the right. Oh, so many times, I would walk by and mom would be standing at the sink washing my underwear.
Yep, she found them of course.
She would lecture me on going to the bathroom and why would I stain my underwear. Then, those words, “after I finish washing these out, im washing you out later.”
Now, this was the time period, she would wait until my evening bath to give me an enema to not have to fight to get my clothes off of me. Prior to that time, enemas were immediate. In other words, If I walked by and she was cleaning my underwear, she would tell me to come into the bathroom right then and now and tell me to sit and try to go, which I would try. She would say,
“after I finish washing these out, im washing you out.” She would leave and I would hear water running through the walls from the kitchen and knew what was coming.
She would return with the bulb ready and a jar of solution and I would get an enema.
Now, straining fighting the urges. Oh, I had to be sneaky doing that. Getting caught straining and fighting the urge to BM resulted in an enema. This is how hard I fought the urges and crazy I was. I would even go into the bathroom and even sit on the floor next to the toilet, yes, on the floor, not on the toilet. I would fight the urges. I would sit with my legs crossed or even with one leg under me pressing down so an accident would not happen.
Take deep breathes and wait until the urges would pass. I even flushed the toilet, washed my hands, as if I accomplished something. I didn’t want anyone asking questions. Now, I couldn’t keep doing that. Why am I going to the bathroom a-lot would certainly be a red flag. I had to find ways to fight the urges without looking obvious that I was straining. You know, try to look cool, like everything is ok. But it wasn’t. Never worked. The urges were strong at times, giving me red face as I tried not to look like I was straining as I was going about my daily life of playing and watching tv.
Mom knew. But enemas were now giving at bath time, not immediately.
Mom would wait until my evening bath and as she would come in with the bulb and say, “you didn’t think anyone noticed you straining today did you? Well, i did. Try to go and I’ll be back shortly.”
Well, as I sit on the toilet, there was no denying it.
No amount of begging, crying, explaining, mom was going to make sure.
Moments later, I was fighting and losing the battle with the enema doing its work on me as I emptied out.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold: part 6 An Enema for Grumpiness


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Sunday, June 15, 2025, 04:30: am

Even though I understand and believe writing and journaling is good therapy, included with it are feelings and emotions.
I grew up not having anyone to talk to or not even knowing anyone else who received enemas, I believed I was the only one.
From mom, I did not like her enemas.
I did not like losing control.
At around 12 years of age, mom decided to stop giving me enemas. Yes, at 12, still pooping my pants, still straining, hiding, fighting, resisting, losing the enema war with mom. Mom told me, “if you want to go into junior high pooping in your pants, go ahead, im finished giving you enemas.”
I always wondered why I pooped in my pants? Why I didn’t just sit and go?
I hated the pain associated with a bm.
I was constipated probably due to all the wrong foods as a child I was eating plus holding back the bm just made it more difficult. Even when I was told to go, there I was sitting, trying, doing everything to produce a bm to avoid an enema but I was sealed up tight. My bottom and that enema bulb had a relationship and were working together to make sure their relationship worked and lasted. So many evenings I would stare at the enema bulb imagining it staring back smiling at me saying, “in just a few more minutes.” I knew the soapy water solution inside that bulb would be inside of me shortly and there was no stopping it. Nothing i could do or say to break up this relationship. If I was not getting an enema for staining my underwear or getting caught straining, it was for having a grumpy attitude.

Part 6
Enemas for Grumpiness

Mom believed one answer for my grumpiness or attitude was cleaning my bowels out. There was a connection. She she would call it “a soapy.” She would say to me, “do you need a soapy? I think a good soapy would help.” And it did not take long for me to understand what she was talking about. Once it was in her head I needed “a soapy”, there was no stopping her.
Enemas wore me out and made me tired and mom knew that. She knew shortly after having an enema, I would be laying down taking a nap and sleeping. She used that for her advantage. There I was fighting, resisting, struggled, kicking, reaching back, wiggling, avoid her grabbing me, swatting her hands away, getting a few swats back on my bare bottom, thinking if I resisted long enough mom would give up if she could not get the tip in my bottom.
Another advantage she had was my brothers. They were 7 to 9 years older.
They were teens by the time mom was giving me enemas. And even though they talked to me about having a bm and why not just go to avoid an enema, when mom needed them to come help, they would come running. I would plead to her not to call them but there they came. One took my arms and the other my legs and held me down over mom’s lap. Mom would even continue and finish up the swatting of my bare bottom once I was in place. As she was telling me to stop, settle down, quit fighting, she would be tearing my bottom up with her hand. I would be crying and trying to kick and reach back but my brothers held me tight. Mom took her time making sure I was getting the message. Suddenly she stopped. Seconds later I knew why.
I felt the tip of the enema touch my bottom as she pushed it into me and squeezed.
My volume would go up as I tried to reach back and even straightened my legs out as before but could not do either.
My cry, “hurry up! I gotta go! I gotta go!” And mom saying, “you better hold it, you better not release it. You know better.”
I turn my head and watch as she dipped the tip back into the jar. I hear the soapy water sucking into the bulb as she slowly pulls it out. My mind imagining that bulb, smiling at me, getting its way, having its relationship with my bottom, and there I am, not able to stop it as it touched my already soapy coated bottom from the first bulb. Mom squeezing the second in me as I take deep breaths trying to avoid releasing but allowing the tip to enter.
I cry, “i gotta go! Let me up! I gotta go!” Mom saying, “one more for calling your brothers in to help.”
My pitch would increase as I cried even louder. I would turn and mom was serious every time. She dips the tip once more but this time she would pull it out, let it get its form back, slowly squeeze it again, and dip it, and I could hear the suds from the top of the water sucking into the bulb.
Seconds later, that tip easily went right into me as mom squeezes as I stare at the tile floor breathing crying to be let up I could not hold it much longer.
Moments later, my brothers would let me go, mom would let me up, stand up, and I would quickly sit down. My brothers would leave and mom would start cleaning up.
I trying to release the water gently without any pain but it was a battle I was going to lose as the soapy enema worked on my insides the more I held it in.
It didnt take long before the urges took control. It was like being placed on an automatic machine and I lost total control of my body movements. Like I was tased and
this was my reaction. The track is already made. The locomotive is coming. The three foot baseball bat is moving. The soapy urges take over. Within seconds,
My feet lift off the floor, I grip the side of the toilet. I lift myself up.
I completely empty, fill the toilet. Take a deep breath from exhaustion. My body lowers down. My head falls to the left and down as my eyes roll. All my energy. Gone. I am sitting, catching my breath, breathing, relaxed. The fight is over. The urges, the enema, mom, declared the winner.
Mom would look and say,
“now that wasn’t so bad was it.”
A few minutes later, I would be laying down napping so empty and exhausted as mom had her peace and quiet from my grumpiness for the day.

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[> Subject: Thank you for this AV


Author:
Sue (UK)
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Date Posted: Wednesday, June 25, 2025, 07:04: am

all the horror, the anxiety, paranoia and pain, of being dehumanized and enslaved - i.e: being "a child" - reverberate through these words

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[> [> Subject: Re: Thank you SUE


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Monday, June 30, 2025, 05:55: am

Sue,
Thank you.
Writing these is a struggle, of course as you can imagine I understand that writing is therapy and helps. It does pull the pain back out, though in the memories. You can see I don’t post as often or as quick. I still have a few more.

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[> Subject: My Story part 7: lesson learned from my brothers


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Monday, July 07, 2025, 06:44: am

I decided I would come journal.
Iowa One of the most vivid memories is of my brothers. They were 7-8 years older than me and many times did not want me, their younger brother hanging around. They also knew the house rules of my enemas that mom laid out especially about if I was caught straining i would get an enema. When they didn’t want me around, they would warn me if I didn’t leave them alone or go somewhere they would tell mom they caught me straining. Stubborn me, at first, tested them, and to teach me a lesson, they would tell me they caught me straining, all the way, red face, sitting legs crossed. I denied and cried of course, and depending on if mom sent me directly to the bathroom or if I was older and waited until after bath, those were resisting and fighting days. I think mom caught on eventually, but she would always say, “well it’s too late, if I made the enema, you’re getting the enema.” The fight was on. I made up my little mind I was not getting that enema. I refused to go over that lap. I threw a fit, cried, pulling away as mom was tugging me closer. Mom eventually got me over her lap, but i continued to wiggle, kick my feet, reach back with my hand to stop her, with a lot of crying, until, mom called my brothers in to help. Of course they came in smiling knowing this was a teaching moment from them to me. More wiggling and a lot of crying as my brothers took their place and gripped my arms and legs and got me in place and held me tight. The kicking and reaching back stopped. There I was going through my other motions of “hurry up!”, “get it out!” and “i gotta go” as I was now over that lap, getting that enema plus the threaded third bulb since my brothers were called. Then finally my last automation of me gripping the side of the toilet, lifting my legs, and relaxing as I empty and I heard those words, “that wasn’t so bad after all.”
Afterwords, my brothers went on their way without me and mom even had peace and quiet and no grumpiness as I lay once again in my bed napping, exhausted, and emptied.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story part 8: straining in pants and non-resistant days


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Thursday, July 10, 2025, 06:36: am

Now my brothers did catch me straining sometimes and instead of telling mom they would do something else to make sure I still got an enema. I would be sitting with my legs crossed or one leg under me and would press down with both arms straining to hold and stop the urges so I would not poop in my pants. I would be either sitting on the floor playing with my toys or sitting on my bed playing. Either way, when my brothers noticed I was straining and fighting the urges they would even ask if I was. And of course I would deny deny deny and so my brothers would wait until I was back to straining or had evidence I was fighting the urges to avoid pooping and they would each grab one of my legs and stretch them out and basically lift them into the diaper position as I would fall on my back so i could not press down against my bottom. At the same time I would still be trying to press with my arms down and try to kick my legs loose but to no avail. Once they got my legs bent back and my bottom up and im laying on my back, there was no fighting them and at the same time fighting the urges. Of course they would laugh as I would start crying to be let up and let go but they would simply watch and wait and hold me. What they were waiting for would happen, I would simply let go and let loose my bm which I could not control any longer. The bulge would appear as the baseball was smearing against my pants. They knew then they didn’t have to tell mom they caught me straining because they knew i would get an enema for pooping in my pants. They would threaten me that If i said anything they would make sure I got an enema everyday. All I could do was cry knowing they would. The room smelled with the oder of poop. Mom would hear me in the room making all kinds of noise and would come in to check on me. She would know immediately what happen but still ask, “did you poop in your pants? Get yourself up and to that bathroom right now!” Of course I would jump up and waddle myself to the bathroom. I would basically empty my underwear in the toilet as I was trying to take them off. Mon would come in and say, “run some bath water and clean yourself up.” She would take the underwear and put it in the sink and run some water on it. She then would leave. I would be sitting in the tub as it filled up and wash and clean my self up. I would hear water running through the walls and knew what was happening but always hoped something else was taking place. Mom would return with the bulb and solution jar and sit it on the sink. She would not say anything but would start cleaning and washing my underwear in the sink to put them in the dirty clothes basket. We both knew what was going to happen or should I say all three of us knew as I always imagined that bulb smiling at me knowing it was sitting there filled and ready for action. Eventually mom would look at me and say those words, “after I wash your underwear out, im washing you out young man.” Of course, i would try to talk her out of it and cry some more as she would tell me to sit on the toilet and try to go. I dared not say anything about my brothers making me poop my pants because their threat was real. Few minutes later she would take me by the arm and lift me up and close the lid and sit down. I knew I didn’t want my brothers to come in and be a part so I tried to go over mom’s lap without any resistance. Once in place, my head looking down at the floor tile and my bottom in the right position, i could feel the tip slide in and press against my bottom. Mom would squeeze and I would feel the soapy warm water enter me. I might reach back to try to get the bulb out but mom would tell me to stop and threaten to call my brothers in. I might lift my legs straight out but mom would tell me to put them down and I might start kicking them. She would take the bulb out as she finished and I would turn my head and watch as she dipped the tip and fill the bulb again. I would try to breathe and even count the floor tiles or something to get my mind off of what was happening. She would tell me to hold it as she would press the second enema tip inside of me. I might even start crying by this time begging her to let me up to go. She would squeeze the bulb and i would say hurry up hurry up i gotta go. I learned to do a lot of breathing and relax but not relax enough to lose my BM. She would finish up, let me up, stand up, and I would quickly sit down. I had already pooped pretty good in my pants earlier but mom was going to make sure I was cleaned out. She would start the cleaning up process at the sink and I would go through my motions of releasing water, fighting urges of not wanting to release all the water, and finally lifting my legs and gripping the side of the toilet as the soapy water took over and more poop would come out. Mom would say as always, “now that wasnt so bad was it.” She might even give me a lecture on going to the bathroom and not waiting so long and quit fighting the urges and just come in and sit on the toilet and poop. I did have plenty of those non resistant days but i still hated the enemas and losing the war.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 9 The urges


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Saturday, July 12, 2025, 07:33: am

Losing the war,
losing the fight,
losing control,
being forced on to the toilet,
not only fighting my mom
getting over her lap, or
resisting my brothers helping
the best I could,
but those urges,
those urges after the soapy solution
was inside me,
basically making soft served bm
as the soap softened me a lot.
My little mind though those urges would go away if I just released a little water at a time, plus trying not to have any pain but still in control. I released a little soapy water and not to my little minds understanding, I was also making a slippery pathway for the locomotive to make its way, and here it comes. I could literally feel it move through my colon as it moved through me. I was so afraid of the pain of a BM, so my reaction was to always grip the side of the toilet and lift my legs thinking in my little mind I needed to strain or stop it due to the pain.
There was no stopping it. It was an out of control water slide as I quickly lifted myself up, took a deep breath, relaxed, and emptied that 18 car locomotive. Mom of course would say,
“now that wasn’t so bad was it?”
I would be thinking
“Yes! It was bad, mom. Yes!
I was so tired and limp from all the reaction. Mom finished up and I cleaned up.
I lay in my bed napping feeling the effects of the emptiness in my stomach.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 10 The doctor visit and visiting friend


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Monday, July 14, 2025, 06:53: am

I was around 5-6 years old when mom started giving me enemas. What amazes me is all my young life growing up, I never once knew one person who received enemas also. I always thought I was the only one. Something else as well is no one in the family told either. It was like this “family secret” I received enemas and it stayed within the family.
I remember once though I went to the doctor for a shot around 8 - 9 years old and that shot was given in the butt back then. That is one thing I remember well. When it came time to give the shot, my pants and underwear came down, well I stained my underwear. Mom look at the doctor and quickly said, “don’t work about that, I’ll take care of that later when we get back home.” The doctor may not have understood but I surely did.
Leaving and mom driving home, we lived about 25 miles away, I vividly remember looking out the window at the corn field that stretched for miles hoping and praying mom would forget. Dang, how could see, I stained my underwear. But I still hoped and prayed as I looked out the window.
When we arrived home, one brother had a friend over. They were in our shared bedroom. Back then, we sleep in bunkbeds and shared the same bedroom. I joined the room quickly sitting on my bed playing with toys still hoping mom would not do anything since we had company. Now, this was prior to me getting enemas in the evenings after bath.
Eventually mom came to the door and called me to come with her. Of course I refused. Mom then asked my brother and his friend, yes his friend, to bring me to the bathroom as she left. My brother and his friend grabbed me and man handled me to the bathroom. I tried to break lose, pulling and tugging but to no hope. Mom was already in the bathroom as they pushed me in. Mom quickly shut and locked the door. She told me to get my clothes off and get on the toilet right now. She started helping me undress and swatting my bottom as I resisted. She quickly put the underwear in the sink and ran water as I sit down on the toilet. That is when I noticed something. The bulb and jar sitting on the counter, made prior my mom before calling me in.
She washed my underwear and quickly took my arm lifting me. She didn’t have to say a word. I went over her lap and got in position with my head down and bottom right where she wants it. I remember this enema vividly. I took a lot of breaths because I did not want my brother and his friend called in. Oh yes, If I resisted enough, mom would have called for backup. I cried as well because I heard outside the door the friend ask my brother what was happening. My brother told him I was getting an enema. I remember reaching back with my hand to either cover my bottom or to take the bulb out as mom was squeezing the warm soapy solution in me. Kicking my feet was something else I did. I thought if I kicked mom would not be able to get to her target. But she didnt hesitate stopping and popping my bottom a few times to get my attention. And always I turned and looked after the first bulb was in me and watched mom fill the second time the bulb. She would make sure there was no air left in it as she would allow it to take form and dip it again to get suds from the top as I listened to the suds suck into the bulb. I cried begging her to hurry up, i gotta go, i cant hold it any longer.
Mom would let me up and start cleaning up as I sit down for my auto routine. My thinking as a child was to release as little soapy water as possible without releasing any poop. And so that was what I always tried to do. I figured if I released the soapy water without the poop, I won. Nope! Never happened. When the warm soapy water took over with those urges, I gripped the side of the toilet, lifting my feet and myself up as the locomotive was rolling fast. I inhaled and exhaled, relaxed, and emptied, so defeated. As my brother and his friend continued to play, I took my nap.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story part 11 The pill


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Tuesday, July 15, 2025, 02:45: am

Growing up, we had dogs and I remember vividly how my uncle and brothers would “worm” them. They used a giant pill. It looked like a huge vitamin. My brothers would hold the dogs still while my uncle pushed the pill down their throats with his fingers. It wasn’t gentle, but it got the job done. I saw what those pills did—within hours, the poor dogs were practically emptied out.
One afternoon, all of us kids—me, my two brothers, and my sister—were playing outside. Mom and Dad were out there too. At some point, Mom called me over and told me there was some medicine for me on the top shelf of the refrigerator. I went inside, opened the fridge, and there it was—resting on a paper towel: a large pill. It looked just like those dog worm pills.
Back then, people used to joke that I was so skinny I must’ve had a tapeworm. “A good worming would fatten you up,” they’d say. So when I saw that pill, my young mind made the connection: Mom is trying to worm me.
I didn’t take it. I went back outside like nothing happened.
A little while later, Mom called me again and asked if I had taken the pill. I said no. She explained it wasn’t just for “worming”—it was supposed to help me go to the bathroom so I wouldn’t need enemas anymore. But that wasn’t convincing. I hated enemas, but I hated the idea of swallowing that pill even more. I’d seen what it did to the dogs.
Later that evening, my brothers were talking to me about it. I told them about the big pill and how Mom said it would help me go. They actually tried to reason with me—if I didn’t like enemas, the pill was the better option. But I explained it wasn’t just the enema that scared me—it was the pain that sometimes came with it. The whole experience was miserable.
Then Mom came in with that pill and a glass of water. One last try.
I refused again.
That’s when she told me I was getting an enema instead—a “good one,” as she put it. I said no to that, too. She didn’t argue. She just said, “We’ll see about that, young man,” and walked off.
My brothers knew what was coming. A few minutes later, they returned to our room and told me to come with them—Mom was preparing for the enema, and they were under orders to bring me. I resisted, twisting and turning, but they each grabbed an arm and walked me to the bathroom.
I’ll never forget it.
The sink had the usual setup: the enema bulb, the jar of soapy solution. I was told to undress, and Mom helped. I cried. I thought I was about to get the full “treatment”—a few bulbs, at least. That’s what “a good one” meant in our house.
But that’s not what happened.
As I cried, waiting for the first bulb, Mom grabbed my head, opened my mouth, and shoved her fingers—pill and all—down my throat. I gagged, coughed, and cried harder as she held my jaw open and forced the pill in. There was no getting around it. It was done.
She handed me the water and said coldly, “Drink it. Get dressed. Come sit up front. I’m going to watch you like a hawk. We’ll finish this enema later—when you’re good and ready.”
I was stunned. Broken, honestly. I got dressed and joined the family in the living room. Everyone was quiet. Mom kept her eyes on me. My brothers smirked now and then, watching TV. I just sat and waited. I knew what was coming.
Sure enough, maybe 45 minutes later, my stomach started cramping. That pill was doing its job. I tried to stay still, to breathe through the discomfort. But eventually, I couldn’t hide the shifting and squirming. Mom noticed and said, “Come with me to the bathroom so you can quit squirming.”
I followed her. On the sink, the enema setup was still there.
What followed was a full day of discomfort. The pill emptied my system, and Mom made sure the rest was taken care of. I’d be on the toilet from the effects of the pill, and then she’d follow up with a warm soapy enema.
Those words, “We’ll see about that, young man,” came to mind. Every time I thought I was done, Mom would come in with another bulb, fresh and warm, and leave it on the sink—just to remind me she wasn’t finished. She kept saying she wanted to make sure I was “fully cleaned out.”
I cried. I begged. I swore I was empty. But Mom was relentless that day. It was a purge, and a lesson.
I never took that pill again. Not because I didn’t need it—probably because Mom didn’t want to deal with the aftermath either.
When I turned 12, Mom told me she wouldn’t be giving me enemas anymore. What she didn’t know is that after all those years, I’d quietly started giving them to myself.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 12 My brothers


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Friday, July 18, 2025, 02:02: pm

I guess I was around 5-6 years old when mom started giving me enemas. I was a holder due to the pain associated with having a BM. I would fight the urges and by doing so would constipate myself making it harder and more painful for me to go.
Now my brothers were 7 to 8 years older than me. They were in their teens when I was given enemas. Maybe 13 to 14 at the time. Mom would use them to help her get me to the bathroom since I was a fighter of enemas and a runner as well plus resisted the best I could. As I got older, mom would give my enemas after the evening bath since I was already in the bathroom and nude. My brothers were called in to help mom hold me over her lap as one would take my arms and the other my legs. Many times they were called because I did a lot of resisting like reaching back to cover my bottom or stop mom from putting the enema in me. I would also kick my feet wildly and wiggle my bottom to stop mom from reaching the target. I did everything I could do. I would even reach back and grab her hand and also take the enema out of me if it was put in me. Of course there were a lot of “No, Stop, Don’t” from me as well as mom was telling me to behave and settle down. When she had enough she would call my brothers in and of course the “No” got louder. They would come in and take their place taking my arms and legs. I tried to resist but lost that battle. Mom would tear my bare bottom up with her hand next. She would wear me out popping me as my brothers held tight. Before I knew it she would have the enema in hand and putting it inside me and squeezing it. I would react still trying to reach back, still trying to kick but my brothers held strong. My bottom was in the right location and mom had full access to it. All i could do was cry and breath deeply as she squeezed the soapy solution into me. I would turn my head and watch her fill the second bulb and listen to the suction of the soap. My “get it out! get it out! I gotta go” cry was my trademark. My brothers held my arms and legs as I would continue to try to reach back and kick but no chance. Mom always gave me three bulbs when my brothers were called in and always skimmed from the top of the water to gather the suds in that third bulb. Mom took full advantage of having my brothers tearing my bottom up on the outside and then on the inside. She made sure on those days she cleaned me out as my brothers held tight.

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[> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 12 My brothers


Author:
A hurt
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Date Posted: Friday, October 31, 2025, 11:10: am

Hey Av just here in support are you male or female ? Have stories for you too .can you leave email so we can talk .so feel for you on enemas pain discomfort embarrassing and poop accident. Just wanna talk

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[> [> [> Subject: Reply to A HURT


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Saturday, November 01, 2025, 03:30: am

Sorry I do not have an email to give.
I am a male.
Feel free to share here.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 13 The Soap


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Saturday, July 19, 2025, 05:27: am

One thing I can remember and it’s crazy after all these years, is how soapy and open the first enema bulb made me. Amazing how I could sit on the toilet for as long as mom would allow doing everything I could do but without nothing, no results, completely stopped up. Then over mom’s lap I would go and the first 10 oz bulb of warm soapy water. I could feel the tip as it was perishing its way in through my skin and mom squeezing the soapy solution into me. Oh the first bulb coated me good as with soap, the second bulb had no problem going in. I was open and a diesel truck probably could drive on in. When the second bulb touched me, I could feel the lather of soap on me and how easy the second bulb went in. Mom would squeeze, as I was crying, trying to breath, trying to hold, as I would feel the warm, very warm soapy water of the second bulb enter me as I was begging and crying to be up so I could go. When the enema released in the toilet, there was so much soapy water I was in no way able to hold back the locomotive that was making its way through my colon and out. Mom had a 16 ounce mason jar she would bring in with her filled with more warm soapy water. I can remember her shaking the bulb to stir the soap up and I heard the water inside of it. She made sure the water was soapy as she collected the soap suds up through the sucking bulb. She was always determined to clean me out and clean me well. When she was cleaning my underwear in the sink, she would say to me,“after I clean these out, I am cleaning you out young man. No one had to tell me what that meant as I sit on that toilet trying to go. I knew an enema, a good soapy enema, was in my soon future.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story part 14: the sneaky bulb


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Tuesday, July 22, 2025, 04:57: am

I was around 11-12 years old, I remember it was prior to me going into junior high, I was still fighting the urges, still pooping in my pants, and yes, still receiving enemas from mom. Eventually, she said to me, “if you want to go into junior high and still be pooping in your pants, go ahead.”
And soon after, she stops giving me enemas.
The strange thing was I felt like I could not have a BM without an enema.
One afternoon, I decided to do something.
I decided to sneak into the kitchen and find the enema bulb. I found it. It was inside a bottom cabinet sitting inside the mason jar.
But I had an issue, the cabinet made a popping and squeaking noise when open.
I had to be very very quiet about somehow opening that cabinet and simply putting my hand into the cabinet and feel for the jar so the cabinet would not squeak so much. I would reach in and put my hand inside the jar. To be honest, even as I write this, I can feel the rubber of that bulb. Another dilemma was I had to squeeze the bulb to get the bulb out of the jar. Oh my, my heart was racing. There I was touching the sacred enema bulb, squeezing the sacred enema bulb. I quickly as I could went to the bathroom with it. I had to make my own soapy water mix since I did not know mom’s. I had the bulb sitting on the floor and I figured I would lay across the top of the toilet and give myself the enema.
About that time, dad came to the door telling me it was an emergency, he had to go to the bathroom, to hurry.
I got scared and nervous. I quickly lifted the lid, flushed the toilet, washed my hands and left as if I used the bathroom.
As I walked out, dad quickly walked in.
I went into my room and waited for him to finish. As he came out, I waited a few minutes and walked back in. My jaw dropped. I forgot about the enema on the floor. I immediately thought, surely there was no way Dad could have missed it. He didn’t say anything though. I was done. Finished with the idea with giving myself an enema. My heart was racing even faster.
I squeezed the bulb into the sink and washed it. I now had to return it back into the squeaky cabinet which I successfully did.
Later, that evening, I did get that enema after my evening bath, but at the hands of mom. As I was taking my bath, she knocks in the door for me to unlock and open it. I quickly get out of the tub, unlock the door and jump back into the tub. Mom walks in and sits something on the sink counter, turns and leaves. I look. It’s the enema bulb and the filled mason jar. I decide to finish my bath and get out to dry off. As I am drying off, mom returns. She doesn’t say a word, she simply took my arm, lowered the toilet lid, and set down. I did not want my brothers to come in. I didn’t want this to be an enema struggle with me kicking and fighting. I don’t know if dad said anything, but It was just enema business as i went over her lap and received two good soapy enemas. Of course, I breathed and cried for her to hurry, “I gotta go! That’s enough! I gotta go!”
That was one of the last enemas I received from mom. Soon after I was back to sneaking the enema in during bath time. The only difference was I didn’t know mom’s solution mix and I had to make my own. I would sneak a disposable paper cup in with me to use as my mason jar.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 15 The mental battle


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Thursday, July 24, 2025, 06:50: am

Taking a moment to reflect on something else that was going on during my childhood enemas and that was what was going through my mind as I sat on the toilet after receiving an enema by mom. Amazing after all these years, I can still remember. Of course, mainly because of how traumatic it was or how I made it. Remember my whole point of holding was because of the pain relating to having a BM. So now still my question as I am sitting on the toilet is how I was going to release the enema solution without it causing me pain? Here I am, forced, against my will, with warm soapy water now in me, crying as well, because I just experienced something I did not want. Now I wasn’t going to fight these urges for long. I never felt safe enough to just release. I always held even after crying “i gotta go i gotta go” over mom’s lap. It was like i was trying to have some control of an uncomfortable situation. In my child mind, I thought I could release a little warm soapy water at a time, I could eventually empty the warm soapy water out of me and still win the battle without having a BM. Did it work? Never. I was able to relax enough for some warm soapy water to come out. However, what my child mind did not realize was happening was two things. One, each time I released the warm soapy water, I was coating myself with the warm soapy water making a slippery runway for the locomotive. Two, the longer I held the enema in me, the longer time it had to work on me and soften the BM. The enema wasn’t just soapy water, it was warm soapy warm. Never hot, but very very warm. So that warm mixture of soapy water was softening the BM the longer I held it was I was fighting against not release it. I was really ignorantly helping the enema and doing mom a favor. After a couple of successfully releases of warm soapy water, the BM dropped lower into my colon and was ready to be released. I was losing control of releasing any more warm soapy water without the BM coming out. I had to take a deep breath and in my mind expecting pain and nothing else. But that is not what happened. It was like I was programmed automatically. I took a deep breath, gripped the side of the toilet, lifted my legs out, and relaxed to release what was already making its way out of me.
I had lost control. Everything in me, the rest of the warm soapy water first came out, then the baseball bat BM like a freight train. I was in shock mode of releasing my breath, gripping the toilet, body lifted and feet out, as everything in me came flowing out. When I lowered myself down, I was breathing for air because it was so fast and traumatic.
I literally felt the BM move through my colon, my body, and out of me like a snake.
It always completely emptied me. Mom always standing by the sink cleaning up waiting and always said, “That wasn’t so bad was it?” I always wanted to say, “yes, yes it was bad.” But I dared not give her another reason to put me back over her lap. I wanted this all over. My stomach was completely empty. I could suck my stomach in like it was touching my backbone. I was taking deep breaths trying to catch my breath. I was so exhausted that a nap was in my near future. Enemas just wasn’t a physical battle with mom and with my body but a mental battle with my thoughts that I always lost.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 16 The bulb bottom relationship


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Friday, July 25, 2025, 07:26: am

No doubt I was traumatized with all I went through with mom’s soapy enemas to my brothers holding me to even all the mental imaginations I had with the bulb.
What still amazes me is how I literally believed as a child, the enema bulb was smiling at me and the enema bulb and my bottom had a relationship I was always trying to break up but never was able since mom and my brothers were helping.
Then one day, around 12 years old, there I was sneaking the enema bulb and approving of this bond with my bottom.
Let me reflect.
Even now, decades later, I can still see it—clear as if I’m sitting there again.
Mom would bring the bulb and a mason jar into the bathroom during my bath as I got older and sit them on the counter.
The mason jar, warm and trembling with cloudy soapy water and suds, sending up soft ripples like it knew what was coming.
And the bulb… God, that bulb. And that bulb… already filled, swollen, slick, silent, and waiting like some small, silent judge, and some silent executioner. I’d sit there for a moment in the stillness, eyes locked on that bulb, almost certain it was smiling, grinning, at me, almost mocking me. It sat there not like an object, but like a living thing. Watching. Waiting. Smiling, mocking me in my helplessness.
I remember Mom’s voice, calm but distant, tell me to step out and give it a try on my own, promising she’d be back soon.
Even as a child, I knew deep in my bones: no matter how much I tried, no matter how I resisted, no matter how I struggled, no matter how I prayed, no matter how I willed it to be different, that little bulb always had its way and winning. And it did. Every single time. It had a kind of power over me I couldn’t explain, like it was inside my head, whispering in a language I didn’t understand but somehow felt. And here’s the part that haunts me the most—it never left. Years have passed, but the memory still lingers like it’s etched into my nerves. Here I am now, suddenly back there, frozen, staring at that smiling bulb. Trauma doesn’t care about reason. It’s not in my house anymore, but it’s still in my head. And I think it always will be like some memories never loosen their grip.
It became a strange kind of relationship with my bottom, the quiet help of Mom, sometimes even my brothers. I’d step out, trying to do what I could, trying to go on my own. Moments later, Mom would return, her presence soft but certain, like she already knew how it would end.
From the ages of five to twelve, it became a ritual of defeat—at least once a week, sometimes more. I’d feel the dread before it even began, a knot in my stomach that told me what was coming. I would fight it every time, telling myself this time will be different, but it never was. That bulb always won. Its warm, soapy water would shoot and surge right into my bottom and through me like it owned me, and every time it did, I felt a little smaller, a little more powerless… like pieces of me were washing away with it.
The bulb seemed to smile—almost enjoying itself—as it watched me struggle, releasing its warm, soapy water and BM as Mom washed and cleaned it, preparing it for its next visit. I always believed that bulb didn’t belong in that mason jar but belonged in my bottom; it had a life of its own, a home of its own, and it wanted me and my bottom.
The mental battle was relentless. I didn’t want that bulb in me even though my bottom looked forward to it. There were tears, so many tears—crying, pleading, begging, my arms swinging wild, feet kicking, body twisting, every muscle resisting. But it never mattered. The bulb just waited, perched on the counter, smiling in silence, watching me wear myself out until Mom got me under control… or called in my brothers to help.
When I was over mom’s lap finally and when Mom reached for it, the bulb seemed to beam with joy, gleaming like it had already won. In some twisted way, as it came closer, it was like I came alive too—but not out of joy. Out of sheer terror.
When that soapy tip touched me and made its way in, I could feel it—the moment when the bulb itself pressed flush against my skin,
letting me know it was in all the way.
Mom’s hand squeezed, and the bulb responded, releasing its warm, soapy water inside of my bottom, like it was proud of itself, like it had been waiting for this moment all along.
In my mind I didn’t not want it inside of me.
I had a lot of cries, “get it out! get it out! That’s enough!” I didn’t want it. I never wanted it. My cries filled the room, tears streaming as my hands reached back, feet kicking, body twisting against something I couldn’t stop. But the bulb didn’t care. It only seemed to smile, knowing its relationship with my bottom wasn’t finished and there was more to come.
And it never was, not after the first squeeze. That bulb would greedily drink another round of soapy water and suck up the suds from the mason jar, eager for more. Oh did I cry harder, “I gotta go! I gotta go! Let me up! I gotta go” as it easily made its return to its favorite home, as if it were happy to prove a point: “I am in charge. I will return again. And again.
By the time it was finished, I wasn’t just tired; I was broken, and that bulb sat there satisfied— job well done, like it had accomplished something, like it had won, letting me know with silent certainty that it would always with pleasure have this relationship with my bottom when needed. Always.
And now at 12 years old, I am sneaking that bulb believing I can’t have a BM without it. My mind finally gave in to that bulb- bottom relationship that, somehow, was always meant to be.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 17 The Racing heart


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Saturday, July 26, 2025, 12:39: am

After Mom stopped when I was about 12… I don’t know why it felt like that… like I couldn’t… I couldn’t do it on my own without the bulb.
Evening. Bath time. That’s when it hit the worst. I’d sneak it—slip the bulb in with me, like it was part of me, like it belonged there. I wish I could remember that first time… the first time I took it myself. I can’t. Doesn’t matter anyway. First time, second time… all the same. Always the same.
It never got easier.
I counted days by urges. Not Monday, Tuesday… no, just urges. That was my calendar.
It felt just like before—like when Mom would send me to the bathroom, bulb already waiting, already prepared. Only now it was me. My choice. My secret. My evening.
And that… that kept me from getting caught. From fighting urges where someone could see.
The heart. That’s what I remember first—pounding like it was trying to break out of me.
The second I decided—tonight, I’m getting the bulb—it went wild.
It was in the kitchen. Bottom cabinet. Mason jar. Always the mason jar.
But that cabinet… tight hinge, the kind that pops and then screams when you open it.
And the kitchen? Right off the living room. Mom and Dad in there, TV on, their voices drifting.
I couldn’t stop it—the need. The drive. It took me over.
I tried to pull slow, gentle, praying it wouldn’t pop. Just enough, just enough for my hand to slip in.
My fingers felt around, blind.
The glass. The jar.
It should be there—it had to be there—because she didn’t use it anymore.
And my heart just kept pounding, pounding like it wanted someone to hear.
I always wore pajamas first. Always. That was the plan—so when I got the bulb, I could hide it fast. Against my hip, inside the waistband, or if there was a pocket, I’d shove it in there. Quick. No stopping. Straight to the bathroom.
But fear never left. Every single night, fear sat with me.
Because from that kitchen, I couldn’t see them. Mom. Dad. Just the sound of the TV and the thought of footsteps.
All it would take—one wrong second—and they’d walk in. See me on the floor, hand in the cabinet, caught like a kid stealing cookies.
The cabinet always popped. All of them popped. But this one felt louder, heavier. Mom would call out, “That you? What are you doing?” and my heart would slam harder, trying to come up with something fast.
Getting a glass… I’d say, then turn the faucet on just to sell it.
Or, “Looking around,” like that explained anything.
I’d wait, freeze, listening. Did they move? Were they coming? My ears would strain for footsteps, my whole body locked in place, listening for them to get up.
Sometimes they went to bed early. That made it easier. Not easy—never easy—just… less eyes. But their room was right there, first down the hall, across from the bathroom. The pop still echoed.
I’d ease the cabinet open just enough to slide my arm in. My fingers reached deep, feeling, searching.
And then—
The rubber. Cold, soft, familiar. That touch, the texture of the bulb inside the mason jar… God, I can still feel it.
You had to squeeze it. Every time.
The bulb wouldn’t come out of the jar unless I pressed it, just a little. That squeeze… butterflies. Sick butterflies. Because it was the same bulb I’d fought against for years—and here I was sneaking it like it was treasure.
Reach in. Quiet. Fast. Feel around. Find the jar. Squeeze. Pull. Hide.
Against my hip, inside the pajamas. My heart pounding so hard I could taste it in my throat. Fear of being caught… but more than that, fear of not doing it, fear of stopping when the desire already had me.
I’d leave the cabinet cracked, just enough so I wouldn’t have to fight the pop again. It made it easier to put it back. Like I was planning my escape before I even started.
Then I’d make it official—say I was going to take a bath. Casual. Like nothing was hidden in my pocket.
The first times? I didn’t even know what I’d do once I got in the bathroom. Just me, standing there, door locked now—always locked now because I couldn’t risk Mom walking in. If she saw… if she said those words—“Oh, you want the bulb? You need the bulb? Let’s prepare you one, a nice soapy one…”—no. Never again.
So I locked it. Tight. Safe.
The bath ran, warm water rising. Soap foamed under my hands, slipping through my fingers into the tub. I’d search under the sink, frantic, for anything—bowl, cup, whatever would hold water. Later I learned to keep a plastic cup there, hidden, ready.
I’d dip the cup, scoop the warm soapy water from the tub, add more soap, watching the bubbles swirl. Then I’d fill the bulb, squeeze in the first bit of water, warm and slippery, getting it ready—ready for me.
I was setting the scene—just like Mom used to.
Container. Cup. Bulb. All lined up on the sink, same as she did.
Then I’d slip into the tub.
And there it was—the bulb. Sitting there. Watching me.
I’d stare at it the way I used to when she’d leave the room, bulb sitting like it had a face, like it was smiling back at me.
My mind would drift—float out somewhere else—while my eyes stayed locked on it. Anticipation twisting in my gut. Every time I did this, it was the same ritual, the same war in my head, and I always lost.
Years of fighting. Years of hating it. And now I was the one bringing it to life.
There was this twisted thought—like the bulb and I had a relationship I couldn’t break.
And now… I was saying yes to it. Approving it. Giving it power.
The bulb with its warm soapy water—it almost felt happy. Like it was waiting for me. Like it wanted me.
My heart wouldn’t stop. Couldn’t stop.
I’d move the cup and bulb to the floor, ready, while the bath drained.
These weren’t Mom’s bulbs. Her mix, I never really knew. I only knew it was soapy. So I made my own. My own bulb. My own control.
Then… the position. Over the toilet lid, just like I used to be over her lap.
And sometimes—it became reenactment. I’d kick, reach back, mimic what I did back then. Only it was me doing it to myself now.
All mental. All imagination.
Until the tip… that piercing tip. That moment it pushed in—
I still feel it.
I pushed it in—slow—until the base touched my skin. That same way Mom used to, that signal it was all the way in.
And I’d pause.
Pause and think about it—this “relationship” with a bulb. Like it was alive. Like it was back home, full, ready, waiting.
Then my fingers tightened—thumb and forefinger first, then the whole hand around it—and I squeezed.
The warmth flooded in. Soapy. Heavy.
And in my head, I’d hear myself—hear that voice from back then—“Get it out! Get it out! I gotta go!”
And I’d breathe deep, hold still, letting it travel further inside.
Pulling the tip out slow, gentle, always feeling it slip free, then repositioning.
Refilling. Watching the bulb gulp the soapy water, skimming the suds, sucking in that foam like it couldn’t get enough.
The second one always slid easier. Too easy. And again the thought—this bond, this thing with the bulb—it was smiling at me. Waiting. Loving every squeeze, every release.
And I’d hear the cries again in my own head—“Hurry! Hurry! I gotta go!”—as if I wasn’t alone, as if someone else was holding me there, like before.
Sometimes I imagined my brothers there, holding me down. And then came the third bulb—always that third. It drank the soapy water like it was starving, like it was alive.
And as it went in—easier, deeper—fireworks went off in my head. The third bulb, the final one, smiling wide in my imagination as it emptied itself inside me.
And me, crying out in my own mind, louder now—“I gotta go! I gotta go! Let me up!”
I held it.
That third bulb, I held longer—just to make it last. That relationship… like holding on to something alive, like if I stayed there it wouldn’t end.
Two bulbs minimum. Always. Just like Mom did to me. And suds—had to have suds at the top, had to watch them get pulled in, had to feel it load up like it used to.
The tub drained the whole time. That sound covered everything. Even me releasing—only water running, nothing else. It was all planned, all patterned.
And I knew… I knew it wasn’t Mom’s bulb, wasn’t her mixture. But it didn’t matter. Warm soapy water was warm soapy water, and it did what it always did.
My heart—God, my heart wouldn’t stop. Pounding as I stayed bent over, over the toilet lid, locked in. Even with the door locked, even knowing no one could walk in, I still feared it. Still imagined her stepping through the door.
And I’d reenact it. Every detail.
I’d stay bent over, longer than I needed to, letting my mind fill in the rest—her voice, her presence, the hold, the cries.
“I gotta go! I gotta go! Let me up! I gotta go!” I’d hear it in my head, hear it come out in whispers, sometimes louder.
Then I’d finally move, lift the lid, sit down. The ritual done, but not gone—not ever gone.
I’d set it back on the sink, the bulb. Watching me. Smiling at me—at least that’s how it felt. Like it always had.
And I’d release, slow at first, holding it in like control meant something, then gripping the sides, lifting myself, legs tensed as I pushed out the rest of the warm soapy water. Breathing through it. Forcing my heart to slow.
Then I’d glance at it—the bulb—and in my head came her voice: “That wasn’t so bad, was it?”
And I smiled back. Actually smiled. Because now I was in control.
And that truth—if it was truth—hit deep. Because these bulbs, my bulbs, weren’t punishment anymore. They were… enjoyable. That’s the word. Enjoyable.
Clean up was automatic. Wash the bulb carefully, almost like caring for it, like keeping it safe for next time. Then came goodbye, that strange goodbye, as I put it back in its “second home”—the mason jar, the bottom cabinet.
And if Mom and Dad were still up, that part was back to nerves—slipping it in quick, heart pounding, making sure the pop didn’t give me away.
Afterward I’d announce I was heading to bed, casual, nothing wrong.
And those nights? I slept hard. Deep. Breathing slow, empty, clean.
A calm heart.
A body I controlled.
A ritual I owned.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 18 The intimate moment


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Sunday, July 27, 2025, 11:34: pm

I was twelve when it all began—when Mom decided she would no longer hand me the bulbs. Week after week, the urges came anyway. My heart would race, my hands would shake, and yet I kept going—bulb after bulb, thrill after thrill.
For a year, it became my cycle, my secret. But by thirteen, it changed. I stepped into something new, something deeper, something that carried its own rush. The bulb wasn’t just an object anymore—it became an experience. A relationship. A way of life that stretched out for years, taking me places I never expected, holding me tighter than I ever imagined.
It started like any other bulb bath night. The bulb sat on the sink, waiting. I smiled, feeling that familiar rush as the tip pierced and the warm soapy water filled me. I imagined myself crying out, like all the other evenings before.
But this night was different. I was leaning over the toilet, slowly squeezing the second bulb into me, when something unexpected happened. My little thirteen-year-old soldier guy touched the side of the toilet—and suddenly came to attention, saluting like never before.
As I pressed and released, my body shifted against the toilet, and the soldier guy… activated. I was immature, isolated, and had no idea what was happening. Then—out of nowhere—he started shooting, hitting the bathroom floor next to the toilet.
Panic hit me instantly. I jumped up, lifted the lid, and released the rest of the bulb into the toilet, but I couldn’t stop it. My soldier guy kept firing while my heart raced out of control. I was scared—terrified, really.
I had no idea what was happening or what was coming out of me. My first thoughts? Something’s wrong. Something’s broken. I might be sick. Maybe I even have cancer.
In my mind, it spiraled fast: I’m going to have to tell Mom and Dad. I’m going to have to go to the hospital. They’ll all find out about the bulbs. I’m in trouble. So much trouble.
When it was finally over, I sat down, finished releasing the bulb, and checked myself. Everything looked normal, but I was exhausted—worn out, yet somehow feeling good. My soldier guy had his “workout” and was done for the night. I cleaned everything up, heart still pounding, and decided to wait and see what would happen to me.
Back then, the war on drugs was everywhere, and parents were being pushed to have “the talk” with their kids—not just about drugs, but about life and growing up.
I loved this one hospital drama on TV. In one episode, a boy was in the hospital with cancer. He had this beautiful female nurse who cared for him, and he kept slipping into a closet. I didn’t know why.
One day, his nurse wasn’t there, and a male nurse walked in and caught him in the closet. The boy was angry and embarrassed, denying everything, shutting down. But through the episode, the male nurse earned his trust and got him to open up. Finally, the boy admitted he had been “releasing his cancer.”
That stuck with me. It was his way of saying what he didn’t have words for. The male nurse gently explained that what he was doing wasn’t about cancer—it was something natural, something okay. The episode itself was basically a tool for parents, a doorway to have that conversation with their kids.
And in my isolated little world, it gave me a new piece of information:
This wasn’t cancer. This was natural. This was okay.
So now I wanted to experience it again—only this time, I wanted to be in control. I wanted to decide when it happened.
I started planning ahead—placing toilet paper on the floor for easier cleanup, setting the “environment” like I had done countless times before. But this night was different. This night was a test: could I actually make it happen again? Could I get my little soldier guy to stand at attention and salute on command?
As I went through my usual bulb routine, it worked. Halfway through the second bulb, my soldier guy activated again. I pressed slightly against the toilet, intensifying everything. The bulb was still inside me when my bottom squeezed it tight. Suddenly, the bulb and my bottom seemed to connect like never before. In my 13-year-old imagination, it was like my bottom was kissing the bulb, holding it close.
And then it happened—again. My soldier guy saluted and fired. My whole body gave in to the emotions and sensations flooding through me. I didn’t want to let go of the bulb. I didn’t want to release anything yet. I wanted this moment to last—my eyes rolling back, my toes curling, every nerve alive. I lifted myself on my arms, feeling every sensation as the bulb wiggled, as my soldier guy continued to fire, as my body experienced something completely new.
In that moment, I thought I was high. In health class, they talked about drugs and the feeling people chase—and now I understood. This was my drug. I was hooked.
After it was over, I collapsed onto the cold bathroom floor, breathing hard, heart racing out of control. Finally, I reached back, gripped the bulb, and pulled it free. My body still pulsed as I sat on the toilet, trying to calm down.
That night, I made a decision: next time, I would release the bulb first, then go back over the toilet so I could give in completely to those feelings. And that’s exactly what I did the next night.
And the next.
And the next.
Each night became another bath, another bulb, another high. The urges became nightly events, my soldier guy standing at attention and saluting every time. My heart raced every time. My mind kept telling me this was my secret drug, my private escape, something I could control. But deep down, even then, something about it scared me—how much I wanted it, how fast it was taking over. Yes, little solider guy, every night you standing to attention and saluting.
Reaching back, I touched the bulb. It was held tight, my bottom gripping it like it never wanted to let go. I paused, rubbing it gently with my fingers, almost like I was telling it, “It’s okay. You’re safe.”
In my imagination, the bulb understood—it was waiting for me to fully approve this bond, to accept that this wasn’t just an object, but something my body craved. It was no longer a bulb-and-bottom relationship; it was a bottom-and-bulb connection. My body wanted it. My mind wanted my body to want it.
As I traced the bulb with my fingers, a thought struck me: What if I tried a fourth? Could my bottom handle it? Could I empty the entire cup of warm soapy water inside me?
The desire was overwhelming. My heart pounded as I thought about how that tight squeeze would feel, how it would change everything—my bulb life would never be the same.
And in that moment, I gave in—not just to the bulb, but to the bond, to the high, to the part of me that wanted to keep chasing that feeling again and again.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 19 The early spankings


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Tuesday, July 29, 2025, 04:44: am

When I think back to being eight to ten, I remember the spankings.
Mom’s voice sharp, “Remove them. Get those clothes off.” Even before anything happened, I’d start crying, pleading for more time, hoping she might change her mind. But there was never any choice.
I’d resist, swatting at her hands, clinging to my clothes as if holding on to them could hold back what was coming. That only made it worse. She’d grab my arm, call for my brothers, and suddenly it wasn’t just Mom—it was all of them. My arms and legs pinned down, my clothes pulled away, and me left exposed and terrified.
There were a lot of crying, begging, pleading, tears, just trying to have more time on the toilet myself and of course trying to avoid that enema. Yes, that enema sitting on that sink counter watching and waiting, yes, waiting for that moment but not only waiting but smiling for when I was finally over mom’s lap, and my bottom was in the right position, that enema filled and ready on call to respond and have that bulb bottom relationship. But before any of that, something else had to happen, a spanking.
Once naked and in position, mom took full advantage with swats after swats on my bare cheeks. Mom would pick a spot and deliver 4 to 5 rapid fire spanks short strokes then return to her methodical random spanking then pick another spot and 4-5 or so rapid fire spanks and so on to one cheek only firing it up. Yes, fire, hot fire, as my cheeks were warmed up and changed colors to fire engine red as I was making the siren noise for the fire truck to arrive as mom was striking the match to my bottom with those swats. Mom continued to raise her hand up and bring it down as hard as she could on every swat. The result was me crying out loud with every swat on my bottom and jerking on mom’s lap, trying to escape the impact of each swat. Didn’t take long until my legs were trying to kick, as mom was landing every swat evenly on every inch of my bottom especially my sitting area. I was bawling every time mom swatted. My world would shrink down to the sound of each one landing, the fire on my skin, my tears soaking into the floor, and my own voice screaming out but changing nothing. It wasn’t just pain—it was powerlessness. The feeling of being small, of being trapped, of not having a voice that mattered. I was trying to twist and squirm and kick my legs, trying to free myself, but my brothers were strong and had me secure and pinned in place. I was unable to escape those swats that were setting my cheeks on fire. After a while I zoned and my whole world concentrated on nothing else except my burning bottom as it received fiery blows upon it. And then something changed.
And then, when I thought it was over, came the bulb. I hated even looking at it sitting on the counter because it meant more helplessness. The same control taken from me outside now moved inside. Could not squeeze my cheeks with the intense flames a blazing on each one. I felt the tip and then the flush of the bulb touching my skin letting me know it was all the way in and then next came the squeeze. I felt the warm soapy water release into me as I lifted my head and cried even louder knowing that bulb would be smiling sucking that soapy water from that jar for the second time around coming. The warm flush, the invasion I couldn’t stop, the humiliation of something happening to me that I couldn’t prevent.
Taking my mind off my fireball cheeks to the inside of my cheeks as it was now getting warmed up. I was sure that bulb was smiling as it comforted my bottom as it begin the bulb bottom relationship.
Afterward, the proof of those swats lingered. I’d try to sit on the toilet, only to spring back up because the pain burned too much to stay seated. It hurt to sit—hurt to just be still.
So I learned to grip the side of the toilet, lifting myself up, and stretching my legs out. It became automatic, almost like survival mode, finding any way to ease the sting, to make things move faster, to make it end sooner. So there I was forever gripping the side of the toilet and lifting myself up stretching my legs out as it always helped make the locomotive baseball bat flow out faster as the enema urges took over.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 20 journaling bringing healing


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Thursday, July 31, 2025, 07:14: am

For me, writing about this is not just journaling—it’s survival. It’s the only way I can try to take back some control over something that still hits me like a freight train decades later. What happened wasn’t just “unpleasant” or “embarrassing”—it was traumatic, and it left scars I still wrestle with. Trauma doesn’t just show up in war stories or car crashes—it lives in childhood moments like these, too.
My mom thought she was doing what had to be done, but to me, it felt like punishment. It wasn’t just the 10-ounce bulb—it was how it was handled. I’m grateful it wasn’t a bag or one of those retention type nozzles like others have written about, but the bulb alone was enough to break me. There was no explaining, no gentleness, no space for trust. Her mindset was simple: “If you refuse to sit on the toilet and go, I will make you sit on the toilet and go.” And at an early age, I learned exactly what that meant.
I was already potty trained. I wasn’t lazy. I just hated the pain, so I became what they call “a holder.” I would hold until my body couldn’t anymore—and then I’d mess myself. Food, diet, all of that didn’t help, but nothing mattered once that bulb was in Mom’s hand. Once it was filled and ready, there was no stopping it. No words I said—no crying, no pleading, no begging—could change what was about to happen. I fought like my life depended on it—arms swinging, legs kicking, tears streaming—but I never won.
And then there was the worst part—the betrayal. My older brothers, 7 years ahead of me, helping Mom. I remember their hands holding me down. That memory alone feels like it’s branded into me.
Even now, I still feel the fear, the panic, the helplessness, every time I think about it. It’s not “just a memory”; it’s a trigger. And writing this out, as painful as it is, feels like one step toward breathing again.
I can still feel it, like it just happened yesterday—laying over Mom’s lap, every muscle tense, reaching back desperately to cover my bottom. Sometimes I tried to push her hand away, other times I tried to pull the bulb out after it was already in. That sense of panic wasn’t just fear, it was terror—the kind that makes your whole body fight for survival.
I remember my feet kicking wildly, thrashing like I was drowning. Mom was “old school”—if I fought too hard, if I didn’t just submit, I got popped on my bottom. And if that didn’t work, my brothers were called in. That’s when it got worse—two or three against one, all just to force me to accept something I didn’t want, didn’t understand, and couldn’t escape.
I cried. Crying wasn’t an option; it was inevitable. It was part of the bulb experience. My words still echo in my head—“Get it out! Get it out! I gotta go! That’s enough!”—but they fell on deaf ears. My pleas were just noise to be silenced, resistance to be overcome.
And afterward, the humiliation didn’t stop. My brothers mocked me, reenacting my cries and my flailing. That’s what trauma does—it freezes moments like that in time.
This wasn’t just “a thing that happened.” It was the day Mom decided to make it routine—a weekly ritual of, “If you don’t sit, I will make you sit.” That sentence alone is enough.
It’s amazing how a memory can stick like it happened yesterday. I used to imagine that bulb was smiling at me, almost mocking me, as if it knew it was in control and I wasn’t. Its home wasn’t really in that mason jar—it was in my bottom. It sat there on the sink, waiting and watching while I tried to put up a fight, only to lose every time.
Over my mother’s lap, under her control, that bulb would make its way inside, releasing warm soapy water deep into me, and I felt completely powerless. That was my reality for 7 to 8 years, weekly, sometimes more. I’ve read stories of kids who went through even worse—daily routines meant to “control” them, leaving no part of their day untouched by humiliation. I can only imagine what those children are feeling inside because I know what it felt like for me: trapped, voiceless, and stripped of control over my own body.
Looking back, I wasn’t even a sick child, at least not in the way people think of sickness. Some experts say colon cleansing prevents illness, and maybe that’s true because I rarely got sick physically. But what about the sickness on the inside? The kind you can’t see, the kind you carry with you for years—the anxiety, the shame.
That’s what it feels like: a war inside, triggered by the smallest memories.
Today, I’m thankful I can even write about it because for years I couldn’t. And I’ve learned I’m not alone. Others have similar stories, similar battles, similar scars. Speaking it out loud doesn’t erase what happened, but it takes back some of the power it stole. It reminds me that I’m still here. I survived. And I’m healing.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 21 the foot bottom relationship final words


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Wednesday, August 06, 2025, 11:55: pm

Something else I vividly remember is how I learned to fight the urges. When a strong BM hit, I would drop to my knees and press my foot hard against my bottom—my heel locked in like a plug. That simple act became a ritual. It wasn’t just a way to hold it in. It was how I fought for control in a world where I had none.
I’d kneel quietly, breathing slow, grinding my heel into myself as if I could hold back everything—my body, my fear, my shame. And somehow, I got good at hiding it. There are old photos—family pictures where I’m kneeling like that while others are smiling, playing, living. But I remember what they don’t see.
I wasn’t part of the moment. I was in the middle of a silent battle.
Because I knew: if I lost that fight… the bulb was waiting.
And the bulb always waited.
Most nights, it didn’t stay on the counter.
It showed up during or after my bath—when I was soft, exposed, freshly scrubbed. I’d be sitting in warm water trying to breathe normally, and then I’d hear her footsteps. Mom would come in, calm and casual, and place the bulb on the sink. And then she’d say it:
“Get out and try to go.”
Five words that dropped like a sentence.
She’d set it down gently, but I could feel its weight. My heart would start racing. The warmth of the bath would suddenly feel like a trap. That bulb wasn’t just a tool. It was a threat. And those words were the countdown.
I’d sit on the toilet like I was supposed to, trying to go. I’d press and push and beg my body to cooperate. Because if I didn’t… I knew what was coming.
The bulb was already filled —warm water, soap swirling—and I would brace myself. I’d squeeze my eyes shut, and try to disappear inside my own body.
The bulb was filled and pressed into me, and suddenly I was no longer a child—I was an object. A vessel to be emptied, managed, flushed out.
The pressure built. My legs kicked instinctively. My arms reached back, trying to stop what had already started. I cried out, loud, broken, as my insides twisted and filled.
It didn’t matter.
The bulb didn’t stop.
And the crying didn’t change the outcome.
The bulb didn’t listen. It claimed that space like it had a right to it.
And the water didn’t just clean. It erased.
It erased my voice.
And when it was over, when the flood had forced its way through me and left me emptied, mom would rinse the bulb clean… and place it into a mason jar.
Tucked away. Like it was just another item that had done its job.
But I didn’t believe the bulb belonged in the jar, it belonged in me.
That’s what it had taught me. Over and over. That my body was a container. A target.
And after all that… I would go take a nap.
Not out of rest, but from exhaustion. From defeat. My body drained.
I’d curl up, quiet, still trying to hold something inside… even though it was already gone.
And so the next day, the war would start again.
If I felt even the smallest urge, I’d kneel. I’d press my foot hard against myself. That foot became my last line of defense—my way of saying, not this time.
The pressing wasn’t just habit. It was trauma written into my muscles. My body learned even when I stayed clean…
Even when I obeyed every command…
Even when I got out and tried to go…
The bulb was still there.
The bulb didn’t scream. But its silence was louder than words.
And the worst part?
It didn’t just control what happened to my body.
It taught me that my body wasn’t really mine.
Because I knew what was coming if I lost.
And the truth was, even when I won… the bulb was still waiting.
The knee that once dropped, the foot that once pressed, the bulb owned me.

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[> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Sunday, August 17, 2025, 05:54: am

This is my final part of recaping.

Many people overlook the importance of gut health, but keeping the digestive system clear and functioning well has long been linked to overall wellness. Some parents share that when their children show flu-like symptoms such as fever or an upset stomach, they use a bulb or bag to help flush out impurities.
Looking back, I can see how this practice impacted my own life. I was rarely sick growing up. Even though I disliked my mother’s insistence on using the bulb, I now realize she was helping my body stay resilient. Nothing harmful was able to take hold because my system was regularly cleared out.
That habit carried into my adult years, as I continued using bulbs long after childhood. Because of this, I’ve become a strong supporter of parents using safe, careful methods to help their children maintain good digestive health. By cleaning the system and preventing impurities from lingering, the body can focus on healing, strengthening, and staying well.

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[> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
Percy K
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Date Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2025, 06:41: pm

My God AV, you've become your Mother! You now have her attitude, the attitude that kept you terrorized when you were a child. You who used to sit with your heel pressed against your rectum in fear of the moment the BULB would arrive, filled with warm soapy water. The agonizing moments on the toilet knowing what was coming next.
You're a grown woman now. It sounds as if you look back at those memories fondly.
I can only hope, if you have children, you do not visit the same terror on them that you were subjected to when you were a child.
Can anyone's memory be that short?

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[> [> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
Reality Bill (Wowed!)
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Date Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2025, 06:58: pm

Really Percy. Don't you recognize porn when you read it? And that was good porn! Really well done, by the way.
Good enough that it should not have been wasted. That has a commercial value that should be recognized. Some short story in an appropriate magazine, perhaps.
Anyway you look at it, you should have seen it as really good porn. I bet there wasn't a dry hand among the readers.
Well done AV!!!

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[> [> [> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Wednesday, September 24, 2025, 12:08: am

Bill,
Never really thought of my writings as porn, but I’m glad you enjoyed them. They were very good therapy for me to write..

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
Glenn W.
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Date Posted: Wednesday, September 24, 2025, 10:54: pm

Percy, I think you didn't read very many of the messages AV wrote. Sounds to me that AV is a male. Am I correct?

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[> [> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Wednesday, September 24, 2025, 12:06: am

Percy,
I am a man. I never really thought about I have turned into mother. My story did have a twist of fate that you are correct, the very thing I hated to now I love. I do not have any children but if I did they surely would have grown up with enemas

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[> [> [> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
Percy
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Date Posted: Wednesday, October 15, 2025, 11:53: pm

AV Thank you. I went back and read all you had written and I can say it has served a dual purpose, therapy for you and an interesting and fun read for me. Again, thank you.

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold part 22 HEALTH and ENEMAS


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Thursday, October 16, 2025, 05:23: am

Thanks Percy,
Writing this was good therapy for me.
You can imagine for 6-7 years growing up
I was fighting battles.
This part in the writings sums it up:

“The bulb was filled and pressed into me,
and suddenly I was no longer a child—
I was an object.
A vessel to be emptied, managed, flushed out.”

And that is the way it was.

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[> Subject: My Story retold THE PURGE


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Monday, October 20, 2025, 03:37: am

What followed was a full day of discomfort. I sat on the toilet for hours, emptied and aching from the sting of warm, soapy water. Every time I thought it was finally over, she appeared again—fresh, refilled, patient. She waited for me on the sink, her body round and ready.
She was warm. She was soft. She was full. She didn’t ask permission. She pressed in, and she emptied herself into me, again and again, until I no longer knew where she ended and I began.
I cried. I begged. I swore I was empty. But she didn’t believe me. She was relentless. Each time she returned, she carried a new lesson—one about control, about surrender.
Every sound carved itself into memory—the running water, the footsteps, the muffled silence of my own compliance.

I am a container.
A vessel.
Managed.
Filled.
Emptied.

She made sure of that.

Somewhere between the third and fourth bulb, something in me gave way. My body stopped fighting. My muscles loosened without permission, surrendering to her rhythm. I no longer felt the water entering—I only felt the leaving. The release. The shaking. The emptiness that followed.
I tried to hold on. I tried to clench, to resist, to keep something of myself. But she knew my limits better than I did. She pressed, and I broke.
The sound of the faucet became a roar. The air turned heavy, and the walls seemed to close in. I wasn’t crying anymore. My tears had run out, leaving only the hollow sound of breath and the echo of her purpose.
She spoke through the water now—through the warmth, through the pressure that demanded.
“You will be clean.”
“You will obey.”
“You will let go.”

And I did. I let go of everything—my dignity, my control, my ownership. My body became something separate from me, something she could manage and move and command.
I was no longer a person. I was a process. A container being emptied.
She called it cleansing. She said it would make me pure. But her warmth and comfort lied. It was never about hygiene. It was about control. It was about erasing the will inside me, teaching me that resistance only prolonged the ritual.
Even now, I can see her waiting—on the porcelain edge, gleaming and still, like a weapon disguised as medicine. I can smell the soap before it even enters the room. My stomach twists, my muscles remember.
When it was over, she rested where she started, empty and satisfied, then left the room as if nothing had happened. But I stayed. I stayed hunched over, shaking, trembling and raw, the tile cold against my feet.
And somewhere deep inside, as the air smelled of soap and surrender. something whispered, “it was a purge, a lesson learned.”

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[> [> Subject: Re: My Story retold THE PURGE


Author:
Percy
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Date Posted: Wednesday, November 12, 2025, 07:18: pm

A question for AV. You have no children, correct? Are you married to a woman, or are you gay?
If you are gay, do you think, maybe, all the fixation on your butt and sticking some thing in it maybe, helped you on your journey to homosexuality.
If you are gay, I think that is a fair question.
Well, are you?
If you answer, thanks.

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[> [> [> Subject: Re: Percy My Story retold THE PURGE


Author:
AV
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Date Posted: Sunday, November 16, 2025, 07:49: pm

Percy,
I do not have any children and am not married at this time. No, not gay.

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