bcca wrote:
A few weeks ago I saw a post on here that read, in part, "If I'm in a webex meeting I may have to wait for a bit or otherwise awkwardly excuse myself at a moments notice, sometimes interrupting to do it. So far this has happened a few times now, but I was able to hold on mostly and only pee a little."
(hat tip to nomoore if they end up reading this, and thank you for posting something so raw and honest that really rang true and felt to me like, yes! That's exactly what it's like! -- I appreciated it and it got me thinking about my own situation and how similar it was)
Thanks bcca! I'm glad to have this forum to express myself openly and honestly with people who understand. I'm still pretty new here and to incontinence but the support has been very positive to all from what I've seen so far. This is a comfortable place and I hope you feel comfortable to express yourself here too.
bcca wrote:
For the last week I've worn diapers to the office, same as I used to pre-2011. And -- oh my goodness, there's so much less angst. I'm not in the bathroom a million times a day, and that's just the start. The first draft of this post had more examples of how much less angst there is with the diapers, but I'm not sure what would be TMI so I'm erring on the side of being conservative and I will just leave it at -- anyone reading this can probably make pretty good guesses, anyway. Things are just plain better.
I think the angst over whether someone "notices" a diaper bulge is much less than the angst over possibly wetting myself, my chair, the carpet, having to get facilities to clean it up, etc, and probably again and again if I didn't wear diapers now. I do fear someone noticing my diaper and constantly heckling me about it. But that is why I have an HR dept, to take care of issues like that. I am fortunate to work at a place with a good HR dept that would put a stop to it quick. I'm still working on sorting my wardrobe to hide it better but fortunately what I currently have isn't horrible.
bcca wrote:
Will there be downsides? If there are, they'll be over the medium to long term and they'll be in the area of "unconscious bias" in terms of how my coworkers see me. I don't know what to do about that other than just face the risk head-on and take my lumps.
I think I know what you mean about "unconscious bias". And I don't think it is an issue. Looking back at my own perception of others before I myself was incontinent, I know for a select few coworkers/friends I could tell that things looked odd down there. I remember sometimes wondering if they were wearing some sort of "protection", though I never was SURE because I never saw anything peeking out of pants or anything. I didn't have any idea what "level" of protection they had though or whether they had dribbles or full bladder voiding episodes. In fact full bladder voids weren't even on my scope of thought unless it was dripping off of them. And honestly I saw this more in young adults (and outside the work environment) than in older ones. I had the idea that full voiding "accidents" happened occasionally for a small minority of the population, which sucked for them and made me feel bad for their subsequent embarrassment. In my mind severe or heavy incontinence was something only encountered in a nursing home or "home health care" environment and diapers were used by people with much milder incontinence too. I don't feel like I ever had any negative "bias", unconscious or otherwise, about anyone I suspected as wearing any of the protection items I knew about. In my mind they had a common medical issue and were taking appropriate measures to deal with it and that's it.
bcca wrote:
I'm not sure what else to say. I've never had a "normal" ability to hold urine. It's hard to even conceptualize in my head what a "normal" bladder feels like, because I've never had one. Diapers are, and have always been, the way of dealing with it that works best with the least stress. But, yow, the past decade has had me doing a bunch of beating myself up over it. I don't even know what to do with all of these feelings -- feeling that I "should be" embarrassed, that I "should just try harder". None of them ever did me a bit of good. It's 2022 now and going diaperless still often means choosing between staying close to a bathroom, or wetting my pants. I guess I could be embarrassed about that, but I'd really rather not.
You're right. What good does it do us to beat ourselves up over it? Although I too am definitely struggling with the idea that maybe I "should just try harder". I struggle to make it to the bathroom in time but sometimes when my bladder is behaving itself more than usual and I'm feeling more like I'm faking I try to hold it as long as possible, really giving it my best shot at not wetting myself just to prove it to myself. And honestly, reality proves on most days that I need diapers. I've proven it to myself again and again and again, but whether I'm testing myself or not I can't get it through to my emotional self. I'm glad my logical self has better sense though or my laundry pile would be a lot bigger.
bcca wrote:
I will try to participate here more but it'll be less of the stuff about medications, cystoscopy, all that stuff that I was posting about here in 2011-2012. Peace.

Glad to have you here!