Letter 2
FRILLY DRESSES AND NAPPIES AT HOME
From Heather   
 

Dear Susan,

What a delightful site!  Now I can leave a note for Kimee Baby, my husband, telling him that after he has finished his
chores today he must sit down and read here for an hour and tell me just what letters and stories he really enjoyed, and
what new punishments he thinks would help with his development.

I have used petticoat discipline ever since we first spent an evening together. I simply casually handed him a cream
satin nightie and a pair of panties, and told him that I could not imagine spending time with a man who was not willing
to dress to please me. He was very hesitant and embarrassed and then began to get angry, just like a naughty little girl -
as I told him, as I made to pack my things and leave the hotel we had booked in to only that afternoon. He then tried to
'reason' with me, and said he felt silly and sissyish but if I wanted him to wear the lingerie he would. I simply told him to
do so and then to ask for forgiveness. He did squirm, but I knew he adored me, and I am very fond of him. That was seven
years ago and now he is just as I want him.

He is always dressed in a smart navy pleated, or grey pencil, skirt with a white blouse for when he looks after the house.
His hair has grown, of course and has been coloured a pretty strawberry blonde. He wears make-up which he has learnt to
apply flawlessly,, and is allowed to read only magazines which help make him a good little hubbie, my Kimee Babe.
The sort of things I send him out for are the comics aimed at girls aged between 7 and 11, and he has to tell me just what
stories he has read and how he has enjoyed them. Such a pity that 'Bunty' has finished, but he does have four years of back
issues.

All of my friends see him just as he is, and bring him their young daughters' comics and old annuals when they want to
pass them on. When they visit he is often called upon to wear an especially frilly dress and underwear, which really makes
him blush and go all squirmy, or school uniform - and he has to make sure he has just the right attitude and demeanor for
the clothes he wears. Shy and demure as my little schoolgirl, graceful and  attentive as a pretty little hubby-wife - I always
refer to him as 'she' and 'wifey', as this has a beneficial effect on his comportment.

Just lately I have been babifying him at weekends, making sure he is in big fluffy nappies and all swaddled up from Friday night
to Monday morning, and my friends are delighted. He is so cute in his little 'yummies' with the teddy bear prints and is
becoming more and more gentle, peaceful, and well-behaved. And if he isn't in nappies it's either a day in school knickers and
aertex blouse, or sometimes attired as a little boy in darling little shorts and teddy tee shirts. He has come along so well that
he hates this more than the most frothy of his dresses!

But I must close now. I have taken up so much of your time and must leave for work. Kimee Baby will be up at 7am sharp and
dressed in a smart navy gaberdine gym slip with box pleats, regualation school knickers, and a white blouse school tie and
white knee socks.He still feels very frightened and squirmy, even after being Mummy's little girl for seven years.He is still
very conscious of being under petticoat discipline, but he loves his mummy very much,and so always does what he is told.

Everything will be just as I want it when I come home. And he can tell me what a super time he had reading 'Mallory Towers' again, and the letters and articles on your site. I think I will tell him to write and thank you for publishing the wisdom of so many women, and to tell you all just how much he loves being little Kimee Babe. And if anyone has any ideas how I can further his education I shall be very pleased to follow it through.
Sincerly, with best wishes,

Heather St Claire
HeatherStClaire@aol.com

Yes, the passing of 'Bunty' was very sad. It was a smashing comic, and always brought out a really fab Christmas Annual. The end of the British children's comics has been a tragedy, and I don't really think it has left our children any better off from the point of view of either literacy, or imagination, or behaviour. Get a copy of 'Bunty' from the 1950s, written for girls of about 10, and give it to a modern child of 16. After this simple experiment, you will never need to trouble yourself again with the question of whether literacy standards have declined in the last forty years or so. That question will be amply answered.

I can't think of any further discipline which would help Heather with her little darling - as she herself says, 'now he is just as I want him'.
 

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