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Transparent Sexy Inflatable Latex Swimsuit Zippers Rubber Body Suit Catsuit Bodysuit,Black,XS

£9.9£99Clearance
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News from Dezeen Events Guide, a listings guide covering the leading design-related events taking place around the world. Plus occasional updates. Dezeen Awards China The feeling inside a trance suit is hard to describe, because it is so special. But the best (although very coarse) description to unknowing people is like being in a warm bath tub. It's a little warm, a little humid, but pleasant and relaxing. And like with the water in a full tub, there is the sense of pressure on the body, but this is adjustable by inflation. To inflate a drysuits on the body, the seals have to be inverted. With neoprene seals always the smooth side has to touch the skin. Surf drysuits of neoprene often have no dedicated wrist and leg cuffs, but they inflate well when about 8cm of the smooth neoprene at the sleeve end and about 5cm of the leg end are inverted to form a seal with the skin. Inflatable trance suit of rubber can be an effective remedy for autism. They function similar like Temple Grandin's hug machine, but on a more subtle level with additional complex sensory interactions. My nonmedical practitioner recommended one for my autistic son and had great success. (Unfortunately my son later got a phobia from a TV show in that such a suit was burst. See here.) The most damaging factor to trance hoods is the natural fat of fatty hairs and scalp. To avoid preliminary decomposition, it is thus recommended for the wearer to get a hair wash with oil-free shampoo before wearing the hood.

Watch out that rubber can easily wear through by friction. Thus the user should avoid to sit or lie on rough or hard surfaces while wearing the trance suit. But the vulnerable material can also wear through over time from inside by friction between the outer and inner membrane. To make the expensive device last as long as possible, you can add some silicone oil (latex care fluid) into the air chamber to reduce this friction. Although the idea looks obvious, absolutely NEVER use an ordinary aerosol can of silicone oil to spray it in; the highly flammable propellant of it (butane) may cause a fatal gas explosion(!) by static electricity sparks when it mixes with air inside the suit. Instead you may use an air operated sprayer, or as the simplest (although awkward) method make a thin and long pipette from a robust plastic drinking straw; use the rubber part of a pacifier as a squeeze bulb and connect both parts with a rubber plug (e.g. piece of natural rubber pencil eraser) in that you drill a fitting hole for the straw. Use a cable tie to hold the bulb in place. Watch out that the straw must not have sharp edges. Slide it through the inflation nozzle and move the suit around to reach all important spots. The silicone oil especially should be applied to crotch and armpits, where the friction between both membranes is highest; also shoulders, knees and elbows are stressed much by friction, and of course the zones where you sit and lie on. I talked to my practitioner about this type of suit and also got the chance to feel how it is inside. He explained, the difference between an inflated neoprene drysuit and the trance suit is like between a tinny toy piano and a concert grand. The energetics of the neoprene thing are rough and coarse and simple, while the latex trance suit overwhelms with gentleness. My son does not like neoprene - it feels too rough. Never mouth-inflate a trance suit. Trapped breathe moisture in the air chamber can make the latex rot. Related story Harikrishnan's inflatable latex trousers create "anatomically impossible" proportions

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Unlike a loose fitting trance suit, it can be difficult to get out of tight fitting neoprene suits. In worst case this may cause panic to the autist, thus it should be trained several times under controlled conditions. Particularly the legs of a full body suit can be hard to get out. Do not use raw force; it can damage smooth neoprene and is not necessary. The main rule is "push instead of pull", thus push the sections of the suit slowly down a few cm at the upper leg and slowly work down the resulting small bulge to the lower leg and over the foot. (Think of how a caterpillar moves.) Repeat this with the next bulge at the top of the leg again until the foot finally reaches a large enough diameter to pull it out the normal way. Do not push too much neoprene down at once, else it will make a too large bulge that will jam on the leg and make it harder to work down (push that bulge up again to unjam). When the caterpillar technique is used correctly, it will not be strenuous to get out of the suit. Daily updates on the latest design and architecture vacancies advertised on Dezeen Jobs. Plus occasional news. Dezeen Jobs Weekly Despite surf drysuits were not particularly designed for inflation, they often inflate better and feel more pleasant than dive suits, because their thin and supple smooth neoprene is softer and stretchier. Diving drysuits of neoprene soon turn almost too rigid when inflated only a little larger, and because the seals are never perfectly airtight, it is desirable to be capable to keep a large enough air volume inside the suit without going through too extreme pressure changes.

News about our Dezeen Awards China programme, including entry deadlines and announcements. Plus occasional updates. Generally it is not harmful to wear a loose fitting rubber suit for a long time (several hours to a day). The old claim that the skin needs to "breathe" to stay alive and thus must not be completely covered is a false urban legend. But no patient should ever be urged by force to wear latex rubber in a situation in that he has a strong aversion against it; this may even trigger a latex allergy. Also regard that the rubber will wear through and decompose the faster, the longer it is worn (and the more sweat and friction is present); thus an expensive device like a trance suit should not be worn without reason. It e.g. should not be abused as regular sleepwear even when the autist yearns to do so. (Sleeping in inflated state may also cause sore spots by local squeeze and friction at protruding body parts.) The main effect of the pressure is to squeeze the inner membrane snugly against the body. It also presses on your chest, which can slow down and modify your breathe rhythm, but this only helps to relax and is not remotely strong enough to prevent breathing or risky things like this. Only when a rigid cloth overall is worn over a trance suit to prevent its outer membrane from expanding, it may be possible to inflate it tightly enough that breathing becomes difficult. But this is no condition in that a trance suit should be operated.

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The actual squeeze intensity is controlled by inflation pressure, thus lower squeeze can be always obtained by less inflation. Do not overinflate it; although latex rubber is very stretchable, it will damage it and make it permanently loose its strength. When higher pressure is demanded, a regular rigid cloth overall should be worn over it instead. (Do not use overgarments with any rough, pointed or sharp edged parts! E.g. metal zippers should be avoided.) For inflation a manual piston air pump of large diameter is recommended, which responds sensitive enough to feel the pressure at the handle. To control the amount of squeeze by himself, the patient should operate the pump so far he has learned to use it responsibly. If he tends to overinflate the unit, let him use it only under supervision and switch an external control valve between pump and suit when necessary. News about our Dezeen Awards programme, including entry deadlines and announcements. Plus occasional updates. Dezeen Events Guide Drysuits are water sports suits with airtight seals to keep water out. Like trance suits they are inflatable, but they are single layer, i.e. they have no separate inner membrane that stays in snug touch with the skin when inflated. I don't know much about this. But my nonmedical practitioner mentioned that the classic type of trance suit (dual layer latex inflatable) was therapeutically used already in the beginning of 1970th, but (like many other inventions) became almost forgotten later. Although these suits are not inflatable by design, they are quite stretchable. My practitioner told me that some people even like to put things like garbage bags or large latex weather balloons inside as air chambers to inflate them. Although this is rather a temporary test setup for sensual exploration, the relation to inflatable therapy suit is obvious.

The wearer should generally stay away from open fire; latex burns easily and can cause severe burn injury. In spite of this, especially surf drysuits of smooth neoprene can be a not that bad alternative to a trance suit, because they are less vulnerable and cost in used state less than 50EUR. Also the zipper should not be opened in tightly inflated state, because this may break its teeth or make it jam in the hair guard strip. With the optional 3 runner zipper a small section can be safely opened while the suit stays inflated. When deflated, the user can walk around more freely. Thanks to the flexible material choice of latex, the suit "actually has a lot of mobility", said SiiGii. Weekly updates on the latest design and architecture vacancies advertised on Dezeen Jobs. Plus occasional news. Dezeen AwardsPeople those meditate in trance suits report about energies and an intense feeling of becoming one with the universe. They often describe it as life force, flow, healing spirit or cosmic love. I am no expert for this, but it obviously can be deeply moving. Before closing the zipper, watch out that the hair guard strip of the suit is correctly aligned to prevent it from catching and getting damaged in the zipper. When the patient needs to close the zipper by himself and has trouble to reach or move it, pull a long shoe lace with a knot at one end through the zipper's eye. When necessary, also a drop of silicone oil (never other oil!) on the runner can make it move easier. Because the material gets destroyed by oils, the patient must avoid oily skin care lotion or ointments before donning the suit. The wearer anyway sweats like in a sauna suit, thus textile underwear can be unpleasant, and too much cloth also disturbs the perception of vibrations and gentle skin touch sensations. But he at least should wear underpants, because urine and genital secrete harms the rubber much more than sweat. People often recommend to use powder to get easier into the suit, but I can not recommend this (reason see above); when the suit is sufficiently loose fitting, it is easy to put on anyway - else a water based lube gel or silicone oil can be used. These suits can reach the autist on a much deeper level than where words can go. The response of the latex is complex and ethereal, but also very direct. It is immediate - nonverbal; it is vibration, touch and energy, and it just seems to touch their soul. No, the pressure inside a trance suit is very equally distributed and only some 10 mbar. (When you e.g. stand upright in a swimming pool with only the head out of the water, the lower parts of your body will be exposed to much higher pressure than what the suit can do!) Thus the direct effect on blood pressure is marginal.

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