You don't really want this, although it seems like a good idea. This would mean that your instances can only have local scope, and that you can't pass the disposable objects to other methods, or use them as field variables in your class.
What you should do is implement the dispose pattern in your class, so that they are cleaned up correctly.
A trick that I have seen used (and indeed used myself) is to note the call stack during object construction, then have a Debug.Assert in the destructor which notifies the developer of the call stack when the object was created. This helped a lot in tracking down where the non disposed object had come from and so helped find the place where the object responsible for the disposal was not doing so. Something along these lines (I don't have access to the code I used so this is my current best guess, YMMV):
private StackTrace m_stackAtConstruction;
private bool m_disposed;
public Constructor()
{
m_stackAtConstruction = new StackTrace();
m_disposed=false;
}
public void Dispose()
{
Dispose(true);
// Use SupressFinalize in case a subclass
// of this type implements a finalizer.
GC.SuppressFinalize(this);
}
protected virtual void Dispose(bool disposing)
{
// If you need thread safety, use a lock around these
// operations, as well as in your methods that use the resource.
if (!m_disposed)
{
if (disposing) {
if (_resource != null)
_resource.Dispose();
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("Object not disposed correctly - Stack trace at construction was " + m_stackAtConstruction.ToString());
}
// Indicate that the instance has been disposed.
_resource = null;
_disposed = true;
}
}