ObedientPigPrincess:
Yup I live with my feeder. We have a great relationship and practice our fetish 24/7.
Congrats!
3 years
SweetCaringBBW51:
I was not yelling I typed in caps so it was plain to see
Unfortunately some people are so effete that they're traumatized by capital letters.
3 years
FAsasquatch:she was legit sent me constant updates and everything and goaded me into sending her $90 then when she finally got back with the food she said her friend and roommate were there and she couldn’t do anything live, but would send me clips and that was 3 hours ago and I haven’t heard anything since.
Give her more time than 3 hours. Then, if she doesn't play ball, report her. Feabie administrators will ban her if she doesn't fulfill her part of the bargain.
3 years
I have no hard data, but it has always seemed to me that the people who enjoy this the most are always the ones who jump in with both feet. They just accept whatever risks there are and let themselves go. No looking back.
So I don't know if you should get fat or not, but if you do: don't be half-assed about it. Eat a lot, enjoy it, and get as fat as you want.
3 years
The site can post anything it's legal to post.
If it were my site, though, I would ban erotic stories involving children. I think it gives feedism a bad name, suggesting that we endorse or encourage that kind of stuff. There is also the possibility that people would be inspired to make such fantasies a reality. I don't believe kids should be intentionally fattened or even allowed to fatten themselves and would keep that stuff off the site.
Incest stories that are limited to consenting adults I would personally find creepy but would not ban them.
I'd also not allow stories that endorse stealth feeding. I wouldn't post how-to manual on practices I consider abusive.
3 years
Noname078:So basically I don’t know what I want or expect from you. I guess if there are people out there who feel the same/went through the same pls share your experience.
Also does anyone have experience in talking about this to a therapist? I sometimes wonder if it would help me sort this all out.
I have no direct experience but I think a therapist can help, if only to help you work these issues out. I'm not sure all therapists would be able to help with this particular problem, though, so be ready to drop them if they can't!
But I do have a question: If you were marooned all by yourself on a desert island (that somehow had terrific food) would you have less hesitation about gaining?
3 years
The downsides you mentioned are all things you knew when you decided to gain to 200 pounds. If you accepted them then, you should accept them now. If the food prep is too annoying, just go easy on the gaining...it's not a race.
As far as the guilt goes: There's nothing to feel guilty about. You're a grown man, doing what you chose to do, something that's well within your rights.
Now, if this is less enjoyable than you thought and doesn't seem worth it you can change your mind and stop gaining. Or even lose weight if you want.
But don't feel guilty about it in any event. It's your choice. Anyone who fat-shames you does not deserve your consideration. And don't fat-shame yourself. Feel _proud_ that you have the strength and courage to do what you want despite social taboos!
3 years
Annamk:
Do doctors in the US just routinely weigh you and record it every time, no matter what you go in there for? That's the impression I get from some of you and that seems crazy to me!
To be fair, weight change, positive or negative, can be symptomatic of many health problems and can help catch them early.
3 years
Miachu:
I'm wanting to get back to adding to my story here
was just wondering if anyone had advice for writing and tackling weight gain?
What many weight-gain stories lack is a story arc. They're like "Mary ate a lot and gained weight. She liked it. So she ate more. And gained more weight. And then she ate even more and gained even more than that."
You can pretty that up with adjectives and metaphors and descriptions and what-not, but it's not much of a story. There's no arc.
My stories always have an arc. Not saying this is the only way to do it, but my stories always start with a slim or average-sized woman. Something or someone causes her to gain a bit of weight--willingly or not. She is conflicted. For various reasons, she partly wants to lose weight or at least stop gaining, but also, for various reasons, she partly wants to gain more.
The bulk of the story is usually her (perhaps with help) working out these conflicts. She finally gets past them and gets fat and lives gluttonously ever after.
3 years