Quote:
I only go where I know it is safe and I will not be judged.
I have family within walking distance that I have not seen (Yea it is easy to use covid as a reason but truly it is fear).
I fear having an accident around people that do not know the extent of what is going on with me.
Out and about in public, I still worry but not the same way. Most people in public I will likely never encounter again so, yea embarrassing, but only shortly.
Truly I am tired of not living life even though I am dealing with this.
I am not just diaper paranoid, I have public accident phobia.
It appears to me that you have quite a health struggle going on. Compared to you, I have it easy (recently urge IC). But depending upon your working relationship with family, I would think they would be understanding enough given your medical situation. So confiding in them may take a huge burden off and get you "out" more.
I think that at some point you're going to have to move to the "I don't care what *they* think and I'm going to do *whatever*" stage. Once you stop worrying about what others *might* think, you can make some progress. You got to embrace that "like it or lump it!" attitude.
When we worry about what others might think, we often get paranoid and imagine our worst imagined fears. Our imagination can really go wild. The reality is often much less than what we feared! We all fear making public embarrassments of ourselves. I think of pregnant women that suddenly find themselves in a pool of water when their water breaks in a store. Women (that I've heard about) just shrug the event off. That is just a part of life. The people that witness it might remember it for a time but it is soon forgotten. Does it matter? Will she see those same people again? Maybe. But will they taunt her if they do? No.
In public speaking, if you want your mistake forgotten, it is best to keep moving on. Nobody gives it a second thought. But if you want your mistake to be remembered, just keep digging yourself deeper by dwelling on it. I think that our diaper phobia works at a similar level. If we brush it off when we get embarrassed, I think the memory of it is diminished (by ourselves and our "audience"). If instead, we make a huge fuss about it, we substantially increase the impression on everyone and scar ourselves in the process.
Brushing it off doesn't come easy, but as someone else here said, it takes "baby steps". We win little battles along the way, one battle at a time. By winning the small battles, we can eventually win the war. It was a big step for me to buy a package of diapers for myself at the drugstore last December. Then another to wear them out in public. Then to pee my diaper in front of the bank teller later. One battle at a time we make progress (sometimes we need a distorted sense of progress
). There will be steps backwards at times but we learn from those mistakes and strain for success.
I hope there is something there that encourages. In my own situation I am straining to keep doing the things that I enjoyed before becoming IC. If my summer afternoon diaper ends up leaking all over, I'll know about something that doesn't work. But if I'm careful and plan things, I might only have to face some small problems. Adjust and repeat. Fake it until you make it.