by Clem Trilling » 13 Feb 2011, 01:43
I don't know. Capacity is a serious fetishist's game, with aspects that the omorashi-minded may not care to consider. I mean, ideally, I'm shooting my load in time with the first spurt of the lovely B2B models' urine. It doesn't even have to be visible, much less measured: any gasp or involuntary spasm will do, so long as I see something jiggle, and believe it reflects overwhelming need. There's a tidy little equation to orgasm there in most of our minds, I think.
The heuristic has been complicated in my mind, however, by hanging out online with the wide variety of watersport fetishists. Many "holders" stretch the bladder beyond the threshold of mere functional incontinence, entering new dimensions of bladder capacity and intense suffering. It certainly happens in real life, too, that a woman won't suddenly void her bladder completely just because her pantyliner is soaked, or because she's also starting to shit her pants. Some fetishists can apparently just continue holding it without leaking a drop; the only thing driving them to release is the fear that their kidneys will be shot.
In filmmaking, for guys of our ilk, an explosion of urine is undoubtedly the most effective, efficient conclusion. I only regret that we're missing the extreme, limb-flailing, chest heaving, red-faced desperation that accompanies the humiliating, gradual loss of bladder control as it would happen in real life. A mere half-litre difference in the over-stretched bladder, I suspect, would make a completely different kind of fetish video. I can't imagine what you would have to pay a model to confront the serious fetishist's real fear of self-injury. I do know that I'd love to see the movie that OPENS with a hot young woman leaking the first visible squirt (through her pantyhose, into the crotch of her back-zipped leotard), THEN plays out like a 2-hour "Flashdance" montage -- with some soft-core sex acts thrown in for good measure!
Oh yeah: voting. I say DON'T measure, because I would prefer to suspend disbelief and project the idea of that extreme level of suffering onto the B2B models.