00.0060 Things you Need to Know



@25.0924-1242.99 by Atx


As you read this story, knowing the stuff below will be useful:

When?  Hypothetically. this story takes place between 2016 and 2020. The title of every scene begins with a datestamp indicating it's chronological position in the story. For example, a scene name on August 10, 2016, at 16:30 p.m. would begin with “16.0810-1630” as yy.mmdd-HHMM.

You may also see slightly different datestamp notations like this:

@25.0718-1317.49 by Atx
“@25.0206-1539.51 by GPT4All/DeepSeek-R1-Distill-Llama-8B”

Any text prefixed with “@” indicates bibliographic (author) information. (If it doesn't have the “@”,it is a scene in the story.)

'LocalDocs' is a AI reference to some or all of the 'word treasury' of my ecclectic research notes and the story drafts I have written since 2008. It's huge. It has all been indexed and 'embedded' by GPT4All for various text-based AI's (with weird names ;-) to use.

Rubber vs. Latex:

  1. In this work, the terms “rubber” or “Rubber” generally refer to the entire spectrum of rubber fetish, encompassing psychological, social, cultural, and practical dimensions, as well as the garments and contraptions associated with it.
  2. The terms “latex” or “Latex” specifically refer only to the garments and gear.
  3. Note that latex is a type of rubber. Other types include nitrile, neoprene, silicone, etc.

Heavy Rubber vs. Deep Rubber:

  1. “Heavy rubber” usually refers to wearing very thick rubber garments or engaging in ordeals, as well as the Gay, Gimp, and other Rubberist subcultures associated with this.
  2. “Deep” rubber refers to the life-long desire to cover 100% of oneself in latex, 100% of the time, and to live a “rubber-centric life” to the greatest extent possible. It is a quest often accompanied by a solo-sexual orientation and unique elements of masochism specific to rubber fetish.
  3. Note that one is a practice; the other is a goal.
    4. There is often significant overlap between the two.

It should be noted that, in this work, the concept of "Total Enclosure" or "100%" coverage always includes some sort of facility for unimpeded breathing which is both comfortably adequate and undeniably safe. This is seldom mentioned, but is always implied.  Safety is #1.