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Compass ^ 
						Point
Ray thought 
						the view from his bedroom window was spectacular. As he 
						sat there, taking in the splendour of a perfectly clear 
						night’s sky and the setting moon rippling in the expanse 
						of ocean, he’d never felt more at peace. A contented 
						sigh escaped as he shifted slightly from his viewpoint, 
						the delicate rustle of his protection only briefly 
						reminding him why he was there. The doctor had been 
						correct, he needed to get away from his 
						responsibilities, he needed a place to recover, he 
						needed a place to be himself and at that moment he 
						couldn’t think of a more perfect spot.
						^
Compass ^ Point, 
						a four bedroom house at the end of a long peninsula was 
						isolated but beautifully positioned. With sea views on 
						all sides, long stretches of desolate beach, scrubland 
						that housed a host of sea-loving creatures, it was an 
						unbelievably stunning place in which to escape.
Ray shared the 
						house with three other patients, each needing this 
						secluded space to calm their growing worries. The doctor 
						who was treating Ray was also treating others with the 
						same internal response… they all found their ‘little’ 
						space when faced with what appeared to be unsurmountable 
						anxieties.
Ray’s marriage 
						broke down when his business spectacularly failed with 
						debts in the millions. His wife had arrived home to find 
						her tough, 30 year-old husband rocking backwards and 
						forwards in a daze, sucking his thumb and wearing soaked 
						clothing. It was debateable whether it was this image 
						that had sent her scurrying for a divorce or the sudden 
						lack of financial security... either way she left within 
						days of Ray being admitted to hospital. 
Ray was unaware 
						of the process that was happening around him. All he 
						really cared about was his toys, grown-ups and what they 
						said and did was beyond his understanding. 
						Not only that, he no longer had control over his 
						bladder or bowel so to all intents and purposes, he was 
						just an incontinent toddler. Pee would just flow from 
						him without so much as a warning and it was at those 
						crucial times he sought his mummy, his dummy and his 
						stuffed animals. Meanwhile, the nurse sought out more 
						thick protection for her charges.
Sharing the 
						remote house was Danny T. Yes, that Danny T, the cute 
						eighteen year-old lead singer of Xpoint3 - the band that 
						won the top rated TV talent show and, in their first 
						year alone, had sold the ridiculous amount of ten 
						million albums worldwide. The other three members of the 
						group had taken fame in their stride, actually loving 
						all the fuss and accolades that being famous bestowed on 
						the young, talented and good-looking. Unfortunately for 
						Danny, the pressure sent him back to the only point in 
						his life where he felt safe; wrapped in his nappy and 
						hugging his Winnie the Pooh bear. His life on the 
						council estate had been tough; two alcoholic parents, an 
						abusive older brother and vicious older sister all of 
						whom now demanded a part of young Danny’s talent and 
						money. The singing and dancing his entire family had 
						once so readily chastised and ridiculed him over was now 
						the very thing they thought they should receive 
						credit for. 
As Ray gazed out 
						of the window at the wonder that this place seemed to 
						emanate, Danny was fast asleep in his Tigger onesie, 
						swaddled in his thick night time nappy, sucking on a 
						dummy and clinging to his comfort object - Winnie. This 
						place had a calming effect on the troubled teen. He’d 
						not been able to sleep for several months; anxiety about 
						success, song writing, performing to thousands of fans 
						and everyone, including his selfish, money-grabbing 
						family, all wanting a piece of him, had left its mark, 
						which was being emotionally and physically scared of the 
						world. He slept much better in his little world, a world 
						that had no pressure and one he could just about cope 
						with. To see him lying there, untroubled, at peace and 
						looking like a sweet baby was just what the house had 
						been designed to do – let people be who they 
						wanted/needed to be.
Meanwhile, in 
						bedroom three, facing east, was Dominic Priestly, the 
						demon hunter from the successful TV series, The Hellgate 
						Letters. Now in its eighth series the character had just 
						about taken over his personality. At thirty three, he 
						looked much older and even though he and everyone about 
						him had kept saying “It’s only a TV show” the pressure 
						to be the svelte, straight-talking, funny, brilliant, 
						crack demonologist had left its mark. The production 
						crew had found him in his trailer crying for his mummy. 
						He’d shit and wet himself and screaming that someone had 
						stolen ‘Teddy DumDum’. Thankfully the show’s 
						psychologist had spotted the signs fairly early on and 
						the star was surreptitiously whisked away to Doctor 
						Greenbaum for urgent attention. He’d slunk into a 
						toddler world where he was safe from demons… of all 
						varieties.
Doctor Greenbaum 
						looked after many celebrities and high-powered, if 
						slightly ‘damaged’ patients. His area of speciality was 
						the regressed mind but Dr Greenbaum had taken that to 
						another level, he saw it as a possible place of 
						attainment rather than a place of retreat. 
						Reverting to being little, and enjoying what 
						freedom that age gave, had made the residents of Compass 
						^ Point ‘brothers’, a fantastic cross-section of lives 
						in ‘crisis’, which the psychologist thought would be 
						helpful to each other. 
Meanwhile, in 
						the north facing bedroom four was the sanctuary of 
						twenty-three year-old Marcus de Winter; Ninth Earl of 
						Cressington, who slept in a large crib surrounded by his 
						staff - hordes of stuffed animals. Although normally 
						enjoying something more sumptuous than a four bedroomed 
						detached house stuck in the middle of nowhere, his 
						anxieties were the same as his fellow residents. The 
						rich very rarely find sympathy when they fail but Doctor 
						Greenbaum had offered both sympathy and a solution to 
						Marcus’s troubles. His recent desire to walk around the 
						castle dressed only in a nappy, pulling a toy duck 
						behind him had been seen as a slight eccentricity (his 
						ancestors had been far weirder) but with paying visitors 
						arriving by the busload, the family had shipped him off 
						for ‘specialist’ treatment.
There were two 
						other people who shared the building and they were Mrs 
						Lofthouse (Lofty to her friends) who, as an ex nurse, 
						sister and matron was trusted by the Doctor to look 
						after the people left in her charge. Although she was 
						direct, efficient, and a practical type of woman she was 
						never short of good humour and her old but sparkling 
						eyes held a quick and compassionate mind. The other was 
						Karen Warmsby, Mrs Lofthouse’s assistant and one who 
						herself had been through the Doctor’s psychological 
						treatment when she had found herself in ‘little’ mode 
						several years earlier. She also cooked for her ‘boys’ 
						and did most of the daily chores, she saw it as giving 
						something back and hopefully helping in whatever way was 
						needed.
*
“Age is not 
						chronological – it’s what goes on up here,” Dr Greenbaum 
						said tapping his head. 
“More to the 
						point,” he continued, “when do you lose the 
						wonder of being a kid and start behaving like an adult?”
His students 
						listened intently to his process.
“When under 
						stress people are often asked to find a ‘safe place’; a 
						place for protection that holds a nice memory or some 
						comfort to the individual.  Some have a 
						bolt-hole to run away to when the going gets rough, 
						whilst others might slip into a world of drugs or 
						alcohol to flee from troubles… there are many ways to 
						‘escape’.”
The Doctor 
						looked around at the faces of his engrossed students. 
						Some in the first year of university life but for many, 
						perhaps away from home for the first time and wondered, 
						which of them were already missing the days when, until 
						recently, they were looked after by mummy and daddy.
He posed the 
						question. “Is it better to have the freedom that being 
						grown-up bestows or better to have no responsibility, be 
						cared for and all decisions made by others?”
The group of 
						young voices mumbled in a sort of internal struggle with 
						this seemingly simple question but, and this is what the 
						Doctor had found, a sizable minority would chose the 
						lack of accountability as their preference… though 
						perhaps not out loud.
It was Doctor 
						Greenbaum’s assertion that: The human psyche is there to 
						help deal with everything the world can throw at us in 
						our daily life but not everyone can cope at the same 
						level. Stress to one is an opportunity to another, where 
						a chemical stimulant is social to some it is a 
						dependency to another. Where a secluded bolt-hole is 
						comfort to one, to someone else the isolation might be 
						the worst possible prescription. But, when we find the 
						thing that not only helps our general well-being but 
						offers a solution to our problem, we tend to grab it 
						with both hands and cling on for dear life.
*
Although Ray was 
						having difficulty in sleeping he had to admit that 
						watching the world go by from the advantage of the house 
						was wonderfully calming. Even when the sea was in 
						turmoil and waves were crashing against the rocks, he 
						felt nothing but peace, tinged with excitement. His 
						feeling of well-being was certainly helped by the thick 
						disposable nappy he wore, the warm comforting material 
						hugging him in such a way as to make his ‘restricted’ 
						world into an enjoyable sensation. 
Even the soft 
						rustle as he walked around the house or along the beach 
						was reassuring and offered a comforting hug. He didn’t 
						know why such a strange object, clinging to his privates 
						and swaddling his groin, should be the thing that worked 
						so well, but it did and he wasn’t about to lose the 
						sense of security it offered. He loved the walks along 
						the beach best of all, especially when Auntie Karen held 
						his hand and they paddled or built sand castles. 
Compass ^ 
						Point’s patients, although all ages, did in fact react 
						as little kids. They were petulant, cried a lot, messed 
						themselves and could only view what was happening to 
						them from that viewpoint. Of course Danny T had 
						disappeared to babyhood and could only react in the most 
						basic of ways that an under twelve months baby would.
Karen had been 
						through this regressed state and knew a nappy is more 
						than just a thing to soak up urine or collect faeces. 
						It’s a thing, which offers freedom, contentment, safety, 
						comfort and that indefinable sense that overwhelms your 
						entire body and says: “Everything is going to be 
						alright.” She understood what all the patients were 
						going through because she’d been there. She was the link 
						between childhood and an adult world and, in Doctor 
						Greenbaum’s opinion, bridged the two perfectly.
Mrs Lofthouse 
						relied on Ray; he was the least regressed of all the 
						patients at the house and was, despite his nappy, always 
						childishly helpful. Often these moments of effectiveness 
						might only last a few moments before he’d plunge 
						headlong back into his ‘safe’ world where he’d cry for 
						his mummy, suck on his dummy and often fill his crinkly 
						protection. The Earl also occasionally had moments of 
						lucidity and was able to hold a conversation but 
						inevitably drifted into baby babble complete with the 
						desire to get naked and run around pulling his string of 
						ducks on wheels. It was a joy to watch someone so 
						unencumbered by any responsibility, so childlike and 
						deriving so much fun from such simple pleasures. 
Once in this 
						state it was often difficult to get Marcus to wear any 
						clothes but Ray (when not so ‘little’ himself) had a way 
						of calming him enough, through distracting him with a 
						game, which enabled Mrs Lofthouse or Karen to put him in 
						a thick disposable and a tight pair of lockable plastic 
						pants that stopped him removing them all the time. 
						However, once imprisoned in such a way he more or less 
						accepted the situation and went off to find other toys 
						to enjoy. Although his perceptions of self were skewed, 
						to some extent at least, he understood being a kid meant 
						adults were in charge and he had to do (and wear) what 
						they said… eventually. 
Sometimes he’d 
						use a blanket as a cape and put something on his head, 
						crouch down and say “I’m on da frone” and happily fill 
						his nappy before getting up, completely unconcerned, and 
						carry on with what he was doing. Thankfully, his vinyl 
						pants and bulging disposable kept everything well 
						contained, as they did with all the patients. 
For Dominic the 
						Hellgate Letters was a show that made his name and was 
						seen in over 100 countries. His personal following was 
						tremendous and he often topped the ‘Sexiest Man on TV’ 
						league year upon year, well for the last three at least. 
						His tall, commanding charm, his svelte Britishness, his 
						good looks and the show’s award winning script meant he 
						was a man in demand. The comedic throwaway lines were 
						never forced or obvious (often they’d slip by unnoticed 
						by many of his young audience, but seized and analysed 
						by his millions of Comic-Con followers). It was clever, 
						wise and way ahead of anything else on the box, and 
						Dominic carried it off to perfection. To see him now 
						sucking his thumb and wearing a loaded nappy whilst 
						looking vacantly around would have had most of his fans 
						weeping. It could actually have been part of the 
						Hellgate Letters script, so bizarre, weird and 
						uncomfortable was his situation.
Nothing in the 
						house was done to embarrass, hurt or objectify the 
						patients. Mrs Lofthouse let each one of her charges, if 
						they were able, to choose what was best for them, what 
						they felt comfortable wearing. However, like with 
						Marcus, Danny T was too far gone in his head to know 
						anything other than sleep and eat. He sucked his food 
						from a bottle and slept most of the time. Mrs Lofthouse 
						kept him clean and tidy as best she could but in truth, 
						he was having great difficulty in joining in with the 
						others. In fact, he was, literally, the baby of the team 
						and as such needed constant supervision and everything 
						doing for him.
Xpoint3 were 
						huge, a boyband that had swiftly taken over the world 
						and Danny T was the ‘X’ whilst the others were the 
						‘point3’. Not that the rest of the band didn’t have 
						talent, but it was understood that it was Danny who was 
						the creative force, lead singer and who made the band 
						what it was. Of course the other three members had their 
						own following, and each was the ideal, boy-next-door 
						good-looker but, as they quickly found out whilst Danny 
						was ‘recuperating’, solo projects were easy to launch 
						but success didn’t match the heights the band had 
						achieved.
For the moment 
						at least, and until the good doctor could work his 
						magic, the pop star’s world was his crib, his fluffy 
						animals and his nappy. If he was out of his crib he 
						would be put in a playpen and left to suck on his dummy 
						and hug his bear. Despite Mrs Lofthouse’s efforts and 
						visits from Doctor Greenbaum Danny T was firmly, and 
						apparently happily, stuck in his babyhood. He wanted 
						nothing more than colourful toys, rattles, bricks and an 
						array of stuffed animals to keep him entertained. His 
						nursery print plastic clad bottom was often seen 
						crawling around and investigating (occasionally eating) 
						anything he found. Anything that was done to encourage 
						him not to act as a baby was met by huge doleful tears 
						that would have made the hearts of his girl fans 
						especially, run to comfort him. He could be distracted 
						easily with a noisy or a fluffy toy but his big, 
						sorrowful eyes would haunt you for the rest of the day. 
						He was happy playing simple games and ‘singing’ along to 
						some of Auntie Karen’s rhymes but he tired quickly and 
						often would just curl up and go to sleep in the corner 
						of his playpen.
#
“Today,” 
						Doctor Greenbaum addressed his students once again, “we 
						are going to discuss the benefits and drawbacks of 
						regression.”
An audible 
						murmur echoed around the lecture room - most of the 
						young faces didn’t know there were benefits to 
						regression.
“Sir?”
First year 
						student Claire had her hand up first to ask the question 
						everyone was thinking, everyone except the Doctor that 
						is.
He nodded his 
						head in her direction. “Yes, you have a question?”
“How can 
						there be benefits to such a situation. If a person has 
						blocked themselves off from the real world surely it’s 
						our…” she corrected herself, “the psychiatrist job to 
						help them back?”
The Doctor 
						looked over the eager faces that waited on his every 
						word.
“How many of 
						you here agree with that statement?”
Slowly the 
						majority of hands from the class rose.
The Doctor 
						took a few moments to compose his thoughts.
“Of course 
						you may be correct… but… you have to ask yourself… Why?”
The student 
						murmur increased as they shuffled wondering which Why 
						was the correct Why to ask.  Why are 
						we correct? Why do we want to change things? Why did the 
						subject regress in the first place? Why had that person 
						choose regression as their escape? Why…
Yes, there 
						were many reasons to ask Why and perhaps they all needed 
						some attention. The students began to debate and argue 
						between themselves searching for which Why was the most 
						important. Which Why would lead them to a conclusion and 
						then ask Why that was the case?
The Doctor 
						watched in satisfaction as his students grabbed the 
						offered verbal ball and ran with it. 
He also knew 
						that asking Why was not always the question because 
						often the psyche didn’t respond to a Why… just an Is.
For his 
						patients at Compass ^ Point – this ‘Is’, is how they 
						are, this is what they need, this is… now. 
^
Compass ^ Point 
						was more ‘refuge and research’ rather than a medical 
						establishment. Doctor Greenbaum, in between lecturing 
						and his practice, visited regularly though mainly left 
						it in the capable hands of Mrs Lofthouse. She sent daily 
						updates to his clinic and supervised any changes to 
						routine/medication the doctor prescribed. 
Through his many 
						years of dealing with this psychological problem of 
						‘regressive retreat syndrome’ he had learned that 
						patients themselves often found a ‘cure’. Some times 
						that meant a complete return to the world they had 
						inhabited before the ‘breakdown’ with nothing more than 
						a few weeks of recuperation needed. Others liked what 
						they had found in their regressive state and decided to 
						incorporate that into their day to day existence. So, 
						nappies, ‘little’ time, play dates, or a variety of 
						things they had found comfort in or being useful at 
						times of stress, would be vectored into their daily 
						lives. Very occasionally the mental trauma would be so 
						overwhelming that a return was not the solution, or 
						indeed possible, and the patient remained cocooned in 
						their juvenile world.
The last outcome 
						was very rare and one of the other two variants the 
						norm.
However, the 
						solitude of Compass ^ Point meant that nosey press 
						coverage was non-existent. The celebrity patients had 
						time to recover at their own pace without pressure from 
						outside sources. Even their agents, managers and 
						families didn’t know exactly where they were being 
						hospitalised so involvement from those areas was also 
						kept to a minimum. 
Doctor Greenbaum 
						was the only conduit for information, no visiting was 
						allowed and the world for his little patients was who 
						and what surrounded them. He observed their individual 
						processes. He tried not to interfere in their 
						rehabilitation, letting his patient decide the speed of 
						their recuperation. What he found these damaged 
						individuals needed was; time, understanding, benevolent 
						authority and loads of love... at Compass ^ Point they 
						received all of this.
The wild ocean 
						may have crashed around them but in the house they were 
						safe and secure... their nappies and binkies saw to 
						that.
						####
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