PrincessSara said:
aside from airing out like maybe an hour a day I mean, I plan on doing wipes at every change, I can't do powder for sensitivity reasons and I've never found an affordable barrier cream that didn't make it too greasy (I have to wear my diapers not the best because of my proportions...I definitely can't leave the house in them due to how they fit me
) plus will have a shower if I mess in them at any point...
but any other tips/tricks/etc you lovely people have/recommend for enjoying the experience? :3
First off I'd say take this opportunity to see what works better for your sensitivity issue. You have the advantage of bailing out at any point. It's not like you try something and discover while you're at the mall that your skin is now on fire and you can't do anything about it but suffer till you get home.
I use a combination of zeesorb, talc, and cornstarch, in what some might consider a slightly elabortate way, but I've found it works the best for me. Before I put on my diaper for the day, I set it down open on the bed, sit down on it, and lay down a layer of zeesorb in the creases between my legs and crotch, where the front leak guards will be going. I need to do this because my skin seems to attract yeast even when clean and dry. (all over...) This prevents that from flaring up and trust me you don't want to go there. Then I get up and lay my diaper down on the floor below me and generously apply cornstarch to the insides of my thighs and genitals. Cornstarch prevents chaffing from friction, stays dry, and tends not to cause or increase skin irritation, and doesn't dry skin out too aggressively. I've gotten eccema on the insides of my thighs from using talc exclusively down there and drying my skin out too much, and again you don't want to go there. Then I tape up my diaper. Then I pull the left side of my diaper away from my hip and shake in some talc, to keep the unpadded plastic there from smothering my skin and causing sweating, itching, and pimples. Repeat on the right. I use talc here because aggressive drying is called for, because the unpadded plastic will tend to make your skin sweat. Lastly I put a 3-4cc dollop of baby loton on my fingertips and reach in back and apply between my cheeks, to prevent rubbing. (I have issues with my skin rubbing when I walk, in back and down below, "leak guards FTW!")
I found you never want to try to use talc on irritated or damaged skin, it will NOT help, it will dry it out and irritate it further. I tried using lotion as a barrier more on my skin, but it never worked out.
This may seem to some like a complicated "morning ritual", but it's been carefully worked out and tweaked, and lets me enjoy the entire day diapered and comfortable, on a daily basis, with no lasting effects on my skin. My recent change from Totaldry Plus to Snuggies Waddlers for my daytime diaper has forced me to increase the amount of talc on my hips to keep the pimples at bay, because they don't have as effective of a "cloth sheet" lining the inside of their wings and don't let my skin breathe as well. Keep in mind I wear a single diaper a full 9 hours every weekday, with
no changes. (though only use occasionally, and then only very late in the afternoon or on the way home)