Preteen Panty Wetting

Preteen Panty Wetting




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The dorm with all the beds made up for show.
This was the branch where Sister Pearl started her training looking after young boys, this stood her in good shape when 20 years later she tackled me, and with 21 years of service behind her, knew every trick an eight year old boy could pull.
The dorm was possibly set up for the NCH publicity photograph showing everything very neat and tidy, normally there would be at least one bed every day, fully stripped down showing the waterproof sheet on the bed after a boy had wet it during the night.
When she first started as a Sister some boys that wet the bed were caned first thing in the morning, after 21 years of service when she tackled me, there was no physical punishment if I had wet the bed during the night, at odd times there might have been a few cross words, but nothing else, she knew that punishing a boy for such a problem did little good, in her mind now it was better for a boy to wet the bed rather than wander the building when it was dark.
The only form of punishment was that you had to leave your bed stripped with the rubber sheet for all to see for the entire day. It might not have originally started out as a punishment, as the rubber sheet was just left exposed to dry off after you had washed it down.
There was no teasing between us boys if the event happened, whilst for those of us aged seven or eight it might be a regular event, a boy of 13 suffering the odd wet bed was just ignored by Sister and nothing more was said.
The NCH worked out 74% of school aged boys age would suffer wet beds on several occasions during the year, whilst in their Junior approved schools the figure would be 76%.
There were around 14% that would have a major problem, and wet the bed several times each week.
For boys not in a children's home environment that were aged 8 - 10 that would have a few problems during the year was 12% compared with our 74%, and for boys that often wet the bed 2% compared with our 14%.
The Sisters that had looked after us for several years knew there was no quick or easy solution to bed wetting. Most of us in some way suffered problems that caused us to wet the bed.
Our numbers compared similar to boys who were evacuated during world war II, the official figures for boys sent to live in ordinary family homes was 16% for regular bedwetting, compared to our 14% in the late 1950s to early 1960s, stress of non familiar surroundings was thought to be a major cause.
Alcea rosea, the common hollyhock, is an ornamental dicot (any member of the flowering plants that has a pair of leaves) flowering plant in the family Malvaceae. It was imported into Europe from southwestern China during, or possibly before, the 15th century. William Turner, a herbalist of the time, gave it the name "holyoke" from which the English name derives.
Alcea rosea is variously described as a biennial (having a two-year life cycle), as an annual, or as a short-lived perennial. It frequently self-sows, which may create a perception that the plants are perennial. The plant may flower during its first year when sown early. It will grow in a wide range of soils, and can easily reach a height of 8 ft (2.4 m)
The flowers are in a range of colours from white to dark red, including pink, yellow and orange. Different colours prefer different soils. The darker red variety seems to favour sandy soils, while the lighter colour seems to favour clay soils. The plants are easily grown from seed, and readily self-seed. However, tender plants, whether young from seed or from old stock, may be wiped out by slugs and snails. The foliage is subject to attack from rust (Puccinia malvacearum), which may be treated with fungicides. Commercial growers have reported that some closely related species (Althaea rugosa and Althaea ficifolia) are resistant to this fungus.
Growing up to 8 feet tall (this one is just a few inches), this plant usually does not require staking, producing large flowers around 5 inches in diameter. Its leaves are large and heart-shaped. They attract hummingbirds and butterflies.
In herbal medicine, Hollyhock is believed to be an emollient and laxative. It is used to control inflammation, to stop bedwetting and as a mouthwash in cases of bleeding gums.
This plant has self seeded at Crabtree Pantation which is a nature reserve of open space and partial woodland where one can look at panoramic views of Basingstoke. The entrance to Crabtree is marked by the Bolton Arch, a permanent reminder that the land was once part of the Hackwood Estate. This was once a impressive classical arch that led into the grounds owned by the Duke of Bolton, a title held by the Paulet family in the 18th and 19th Century. After Basing House had fallen and been destroyed by Cromwell’s troops, the Paulet family made the Hackwood Estate their main residence. The construction of the M3 divided Crabtree and the rest of the Hackwood estate and the arch fell into decline. No longer in private hands, the area is now managed by Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council.
This wooded area mainly consists of a mixture of oak, horse chestnut, sycamore, ash and elm trees. The elms are particularly important because they are the breeding and resting place for the rare White Letter Hairstreak Butterfly. The spread of Dutch Elm disease had a major impact on these butterflies as it decimated their habitat. The fact that they are present in this area means the every year a member of the Butterfly Conservation visits Crabtree to survey their numbers. A similar fate now faces the ash trees now that ash dieback is in the UK. Also known as Chalara dieback of ash which is a serious disease of ash trees caused by a fungus called Chalara fraxinea (C. fraxinea). Due to its south facing location and managed grassland, many different other varieties of butterflies can be seen. The area is also rich in other wildlife and flowers and in Spring you can see lords and ladies, rabbits, foxes and many other species.
In the dorm we have to keep things tidy, we are expected to make our beds and to change our sheets if needed. We will be told to straighten the mat I guess when the room is inspected.
The NCH beds had springs that always sagged, when they were new, it had been possible to bounce from one bed to another, but in my time these beds always seemed to sag in the middle, they were comfortable, the mattress was rather on the thin side and protected with a rubber sheet and under blanket beneath your lower sheet, in the summer you would only need a top sheet and single top blanket, when the winter came you could ask for a second top blanket.
The only question, what have they been up to at night, so as to wrinkle the mat up that much.
On Holiday in a Children's Home, ready to unpack and make up the beds.
The mattresses already had their rubber sheets fitted, the best type fully enclosed the mattress, during the night they remained quite even and were easy to wipe down, the loose type rubber sheets could move in the night.
Boys that were thought not to have regular accidents had a part rubber sheet tucked over the centre area of the mattress.
The staff knew that for some of us returning into care even if was only for a holiday, might bring problems.
On the first holiday I went on, we stayed in a completely empty children's home, every possession of the children that normally lived there had been removed, it was the feeling that would they really be coming back in two weeks. A few of us were unsure that we would leave at the end of our holiday stay, having been tricked many times before whilst we were in care by the staff. We might be on a two week holiday or we might soon be back in care.
During our holiday, any of us that had wet the bed were rewarded with sweets the following morning if we took our sheets to the laundry room and made the bed up with fresh sheets, unlike the normal telling off or the slipper for bedwetting.
On another of our holidays, one of the boys in our room was given the slipper as he had tried to hide the fact that he had wet the bed the previous day. On other mornings, when he admitted to a wet bed there were no punishments.
Life could be odd as to how the adults made up the rules.
Boys placed into Children's Homes and Orphanages from living in an ordinary household, from the age of six upwards might start to wet their beds as a regular event, when they had already grown out of the problem before going into care.
There were many reasons why it might start, few of the staff ever questioned us in a private over the matter, some might shout at you first thing in the morning while everyone was about as to why did you wet the bed, but this was at a time when no reply was really required or you were afraid to speak out in front of others.
Simple things like sleeping in a completely dark bedroom, where you may have been use to having some form of light, even if it was in a corridor. Fear of getting out of bed and walking to the toilet where other older boys might get you. Trying to follow some of the rules where the staff only wanted you to leave your room if you were really desperate and wanted you to try and hold on until the morning. In the larger dorms where only one boy was allowed out at a time, before leaving the room you needed to check that all the other boys were in bed, if an older boy then decided they needed to go, then they would go first, it might be for a pee or a cigarette, you would just have to wait until they returned.
Slowly you would get into the habit of thinking that all these rules were not worth bothering about, it might be in you sleep or slightly awake that you wet the bed, there would be no more problems until the following morning.
The staff had tried various methods of preventing us wetting the bed. Chamber posts failed, the older boys instructed to empty away the contents the following morning, would either threaten the younger boys from using them or empty the contents into a bed of a younger boy even if they had not had an accident.
The electric buzzer device that sounded if you started to wet the bed might work if there was a boy sleeping in their own room, in a dorm with several boys, if one boy sounded off their buzzer, it would wake every boy up, later just for fun another boy might pee his bed, waking up every other boy, in a dorm of twelve, every other boy repeating this action was just a bit of fun.
Some of the Sisters sent any boy under the age of five that had not become dry every night to bed wearing waterproof pants, the main reason was to stop the younger ones wandering around at night. Sometimes long waterproof trousers were given to boys, it might save the need for changing wet sheets if the accidents were minor. I was tried with long waterproof trousers over my pyjamas at the age of nine, I had no worries then about wetting the bed, or getting out of bed, that I was wet most nights when the trial was on did not matter to me and I managed to get a good nights sleep. Sister decided I was not trying enough and I went back to just pyjamas, and the general fear of wetting the bed.
My cousin is 15 and still wets the bed. Been there, done that, so I know it will pass. Guess it runs in the family. I'm sure he will outgrow his bedwetting soon! And until he does, the drynites and plastic pants will keep his bed dry.
My cousin would like to have you know that he no longer wets the bed and has been dry for well over a year now!
How to make boys cringe with embarrassment in later years.
Bring out the family slides from the 1960s.
Most of our holiday photos were in black & white, but a few were in colour, it really shows off our rubber sheets.
Many grown-ups over 60 will grimace at the sight of this photo, it will bring back memories of childhood and what went on all those years ago.
Preferring now to try and pretend there were no problems during their younger years, with the need to keep it a secret from friends that you still needed a rubber sheet on your bed when you were ten.
Boys wet the bed as much today as they did sixty years ago. Children are now given absorbent night time pants to solve any bedwetting, the modern waterproof mattress cover is very easy to hide, few friends that visit will ever know you have a night problem.
Sixty years ago very young children might have been given a nappy and rubber pants, once you got to around four you were just left to wet the bed, rubber sheets stayed on many boy's beds often into their early teenage years, until the parents were sure that the child was not going to wet the bed again.
In the children's home we always had rubber sheets on our beds due to the many boys wetting the bed.
Those under 50 will never have been exposed to such open matters of controlling bedwetting.
We could have hidden our rubber sheets from view, each of us had a white cotton lower sheet that could have been tucked over our rubbers, but that meant extra work and one more thing to wash in the morning.
We were allowed to fold up our cotton sheets and use them as a pillow, as we all had rubber sheets, there was no need to hide them.
On many of the camps where sheets and sleeping bags were provided, pillows were not due to them getting stained. If we wanted a pillow we needed to bring our own, which few did.
On one of the holidays we were from two primary schools, including a few from the Children's Home.
On arrival we were mixed together to allow us to make new friends during the holiday.
Those of us from the Children's Home thought nothing of finding a rubber sheet on our beds when we arrived for our holidays.
Ordinary primary school boys at first might not want to admit that they needed a waterproof sheet for fear of been teased by other boys. Days leading up to the holidays would have been spent worrying about a possible wet bed and what the others in the dorm would say.
Most took the matter of finding rubber sheets on their unmade beds as fun and were looking forward to finding the unfortunate few that would need them.
As the rubber sheets were on all the beds, no boy would have to tell the staff that they might need one. Which on some holidays when the staff came into the dorm and handed certain boys rubber sheets due to their records showing that they were bedwetters, or entering the dorm announcing "who needs a rubber sheet", meant it could be embarrassing. With us having them on every bed, everyone was equal.
The main question was what happens if we wet the bed, the adults in charge told us that it did not matter, instead of the early morning chores we would have to take our lower sheet or sleeping bag out and wash it, then hang it up outside if the weather was dry or in one of the empty huts if it was raining or might rain later. Spare sleeping bags and sheets were available for the following night if ours were not yet dry.
Most of the ordinary boys were worried that parents would be informed on their return home if they had wet the bed, we were soon told that nothing would be reported about any bedwetting.
Having to get out of bed and find your way across a large strange room in the dark and then venture outside, gave a very good reason in your mind for staying in bed and trying to last the night out, which often ended in failure. It did get us out of the morning chores like peeling potatoes, cutting up wood etc.
For those of us from the Home, that there were no punishments or extra chores after wetting the bed, meant we could go off to sleep without any worry about events of the following morning.
It was never really done on purpose, but the feeling that there was now no need in the middle of the night to sneak out of bed and go for a pee to avoid the normal punishment for either been caught out of our bed at night or peeing the bed.
I would try to see if I could last the full night without going for a pee, most nights I managed to stay dry, other nights I wet the bed.
Several of my new friends once they had seen a few of us had wet beds and suffered no punishments or teasing, were far more relaxed about not having to wander outside the hut to go for a pee in the night. Some said their parents thought they might not need waterproof sheets on their beds now that they were older, which brought worry about ever having an accident. With sturdy rubber sheets on the bed at camp, not to have to get out of bed made camp life much more fun, with no teasing and no records, it mattered little how many times they soaked their beds during the holiday.
Both at the Home and visits to my mother a wet bed would end in physical punishment, the relaxed treatment from the staff at camp over wet beds made the holiday go without any fear for me.
-------------------------------------------
Going to the camp that was organised by my school rather than the Home, I was not really looking forward to the idea that friends in my class would find that I might wet the bed.
My regular bedwetting in the children's home had never really been found out by my friends at school. All they knew was that those of us from the Home always had rubber sheets, as it was known that we did wet our beds.
Some of the Sisters allowed us to bring in ordinary school friends to stay in the Home for the odd night when some of the group were away on holidays, rubber sheets were left on the beds, often they were needed by our visiting friends, fear that they might not be allowed to return to their own homes was the main cause. There were no punishments on those mornings. We did promise them that we would not say anything to their friends at school.
When a couple of us from the Home had wet beds early on in camp, it made it easier for them to accept their own night problems for the rest of the holiday.
They later admitted to friends at school who had not been to camp that everyone had a rubber sheet on their bed. None of them claimed that they didn't need them, at the ages of 9 & 10 we took it that wetting the bed would happen. Friends that had not been to camp with us asked if we were punished if we had a wet bed. When we told them that there was no physical punishment all we had to do was to wash out our sleeping bag or sheets, they told us that if they were allowed to go to the next camp, there would be no worries, even if they were a year older by then.
The staff at camp told us that the water in the ordinary taps was not to be used for drinking. Each small group had a bottle of drinking water to be shared by all who were thirsty at night.
When a section had done all its chores, kept their area of the dorm tidy and
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