An Inflation Question

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Inflation10
An Inflation Question

Hey im still learning english so thers gonna have some grammer errors.

I have been doing Enema Inflation as almost a year now and my inflation capacity is increasing. I move out three months ago and I stay a while without the inflation. When i come back to pratice inflation my stomach could got bigger than before, now my stomach can grown more than it used to and I have felt less inclined to put the water out, however I also have no more feel that pain that tells you when to stop inflating and that worries me. my stomach has already grown bigger than it used to, but without the pain that tells you when to stop I keep inflating until a point where I start to felt difficulty breathing and my stomach is hard. is dangerous not feel this pain that warns you when to stop because you can pass the point and things can get ugly. So I stop inflate when my stomach is already hard and bigger than normal and I'm afraid to continue.

anyone on this site already had the same experience. Like: one day this pain disappears. Or anyone here knows what happend is happening

Its dangerous because I always Stop inflate when im afraid to continue but i never know when REALLY stop. 


BalloonInflator
BalloonInflator's picture

The language barrier is a little tough, but I think I understand. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong. It sounds to me like you're concerned that you no longer feel discomfort when you are inflating when you used to before. As far as I understand it, this is the natural way things progress. As your insides get used to it, they grow accustomed to it, and so it doesn't feel as strange or uncomfortable. For most people, myself included, this is the signal that it's time to move up and take a little more.

Now, any pain is a bad sign. You should never, ever feel pain. Discomfort, bloatedness, cramping, yes. Full blown pain, no. That means you are damaging something. Of course, all this may depend on what you are calling "pain." I suspect either the language barrier or personal preferences are confusing things there.

Plain and simple, if you're not feeling pain, you're probably alright. I'm not a medical professional, so don't take my advice over that of a doctor. For a water enema, you most likely can't hold any more than 2 gallons. That's the most I've ever heard of anyone taking. Most people can't get nearly that much because of anatomy. Many struggle just taking one gallon. Your own body makes a huge difference in that regard.

For safety reasons, you're doing the right thing by not risking it. If that's satisfying enough for you, don't worry and just keep doing what you're doing. Otherwise, it shouldn't hurt for you to try taking just a little more from time to time, as long as you don't take more than your colon can hold.

Just a little more. You can take it...I hope...

Lopni

I'd like to point out on Tyler's work here: http://bodyinflation.org/node/34551

Not much to add, considering I'm not even into real inflation ^_^

You're good to keep safe. "Pain" you refer to is probably an uneasy feeling inside, not the actual pain. Because if you do have pain - you need to stop and see the doctor.

Inflation10

Yeah I dont mean literaly a Pain, just that warning your body gives you for stop. And thanks a Lot for the Answers.

Another Canadian Guy
Another Canadian Guy's picture

Balloon Inflator said it perfectly: If you don't feel pain, your probably alright. But the key word here is probably. Since I am not a medical professional I cannot assume that just because you don't feel pain means that you can safely continue. I've heard rumours around that (and this is medical knowledge I do not know myself) that at a certain point the blood restriction and nerves can become surpressed so you might not be getting enough blood and/or pain reception if you've inflated too much. 

Now in the past, I remember I could inflate so far that I actually could pass the pain and had I inflated too much the air would just escape into my small intestines then into my stomach, causing strong nausea and burping. You might just hit the same point, but I am afraid that the body might not do that and could possible rupture. I really can't say at this point because I don't know your body and the factors in it.

 

(Not on here too often, replies might be slow.)

BalloonInflator
BalloonInflator's picture

Agreed. The safest advice I can give is to test your limits slowly. Just do a little bit at a time, and stop when you feel like you've had enough. That point may change from time to time, but that's normal. Learn how your body communicates with you, and listen.

Just a little more. You can take it...I hope...