Skip to main content

It's a Bidet

Years ago I attended a dinner party in an enormous house. This was back before the day of McMansions. There was a large game room along with a full size racquetball court.  However, the supposed crowning glory was a bathroom down in the recesses of the home.  The screeching woman sent her mousy husband ahead of the tour to prepare the bathroom for showing.

The bathroom was incredibly large and contained a steam shower which is what the obedient husband had to turn on for us (Oooooh) and, what I could only ascertain as two toilets, side by side. Why would someone put two toilets side by side?  "It's a bidet," the screecher informed us with superiority.

"Ohhhh," we all responded.  The group moved on.

"What's a booday?" I asked the quiet, computer geeky husband.

He blushed.  He stammered.  He stuttered.  He finally squeaked out something about a device from Europe that cleans the behind.  He also corrected my pronunciation.  "It's biDAY."

I have not seen a bidet since nor have I understood the point of one.  Toilet paper.  I'm a fan.

At a recent visit to much loathed retail store, my bladder called my attention just as I stumbled upon a family bathroom in the back of the store.  I walked past the paper towel dispenser.  It sensed my movement and dispensed a foot of paper towel. I continued past the hand dryers (they had both) and swept my hand under it until it turned on.

As I sat on the toilet, I mused how very little we need to touch in the bathroom when we go.  There are however, two areas we can not escape touching.  The toilet paper and the handle for the door.  I shifted my weight and then I got it.

The bidet. The accidental bidet, that is.

When I shifted my weight on the toilet seat, the sensor was set off and it flushed before I was finished.  With all the power that only a commercial toilet can produce, I was "cleansed."  It was not pleasant.

Thank you, founding fathers, for not bringing this atrocity into my bathroom. I still had to use toilet paper.

Comments

  1. How refreshing! Yeah. Ew.

    One of those Accidentally Bidet'ed my kid and now he refuses to be in the same stall as a flushing public toilet. Not so convenient. "Bad magic potty!"

    ReplyDelete
  2. Being 1/4 filipino... I am partial to the bidet. I don't have one, but I want one. I guess I kind of look at it this way... we're told to wash our hands with soap and water, so why not atleast rinse your booty too?
    The filipino way of doing this is with a tabo... in other words a laddle and a bucket of clean water. They're in every filipino home... but I didn't know that until a few years ago... I just thought my family was wierd.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I don't sit on public toilets. I hover- but I do clean the toilet seat if necessary.

    ReplyDelete
  4. DON'T love those premature auto-flushes.

    I heard a story about toilets on NPR recently. The speaker basically categorized the world into two main groups--paper or water. She (he?) said it was ironic that America, with all of our cleanliness issues, would prefer the lesser sanitary toilet paper option over bidets. Not that you wanted to hear about that . . . but it was interesting!!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Toilet paper has always been fine with me. Although if I had to wipe crap off of any other surface, and was given only a piece of dry paper to do it with, I would be horrified. Why is that?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hey there! I'm visiting from MMB. LOVED this post! It reminded me of a similar conversation I once had. Yeah, I didn't know what a "biDAY" was either. LOL, thanks for the laugh. I scrolled down and saw the hilarious pic of your kids. Again, more laughter. Seriously, the whole bidet thing, it just doesn't sound pleasant. *shudder*

    In fact, I just posted several weeks ago a story about one of my kids having to use a tire for their "facility"....it would make the "proper" dry heave :)


    I just grabbed your button--thanks for sharing!

    I'll be sure to visit again ;)

    ReplyDelete
  7. I have had that same thing happen to me...disturbing!

    ReplyDelete
  8. haha, that's funny. I never understood the bidet. I'm a tp fan too. I suffer from public restroomaphobia. I don't use them if at all possible.

    ReplyDelete
  9. You are so funny! Thanks for the laugh!

    ReplyDelete
  10. I agree. YOu still have to wipe to dry off right? Whatev? and wouldn't the cold water make you need to pee again?

    ReplyDelete
  11. You are hilarious! I love that you actually post what I am thinking. I wish I had the nerve!
    My husband thinks it is brilliant! Less yucky laundry for me to do with little kids....

    ReplyDelete
  12. I loath those toilets...I've been "bathed" by them one to many times, if only I could learn to sit still while I pee I guess. ;)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

How To Be A Dedicated Neurotic

Going through old files from graduate school, I found an invaluable pamphlet. Be a Dedicated Neurotic Remember the Past. . . and Regret it. Abhor the Present. Dread the Future. 1. Become preoccupied with the body, and make a long list of symptoms. Make them sound very clinical and professional... 2. BLAME your boss, your spouse, your partner, your neighbor, your kid. THEY are responsible for your miseries. 3. Feel trapped. You couldn't possibly declare your own independence without hurting someone's feelings. 4. Overeat. Rationalize and eat! Eat an insulated wall around yourself. Diet for a few days and say it doesn't work for you. 5. Self-pity. No matter what, feel sorry for yourself. Agonize over things about which no one cares. 6. Don't ever try. That way nobody can really accuse you of failure. You can always say, "But I could have done it." 7. Stress how shy you are. Insist that the world must come to you. You're special. 8. Your agg...

Pioneer Trek

Utah was founded by the Mormon pioneers in 1847 after enduring unimaginable losses and seeking a place of peace. July 24th marks the anniversary that the first wagon trains arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. Their numbers were greatly diminished by crossing the country in wagons and handcarts, dying of scurvy, tuberculous, malaria, starvation, unidentified fevers, and freezing to death. This, they found preferable to facing the extermination order put forth by Governor Boggs of Missouri. I believe this is the most courageous act of faith - to leave all they had that was familiar and travel the rough terrain in the unknown in search of a place where they could worship in peace. My daughters left this morning for a small re-creation of what the pioneers experienced. I don't love the idea since I know so many of the pioneers died but it is a way for many of the youth to connect to their ancestors and understand what many of the early members endured for their faith. The youth were asked...

Flu

The flu has been making its way through our family.  The first to be hit was the 15 year old.  She was very, very angry.  At me.  She had been begging for the flu shot for the past three months.  I kept forgetting.  She got better but it's one more thing to discuss on her future therapist's couch. Today I picked up my 5 year old from school.  He told me about making valentine's for his friends and how he gave his valentine to his best friend, Chase.  Chase is the little boy who grabbed my scarf on my way to my car today, looked at me earnestly and yelled his telephone number to me so fast I couldn't process it then ran away. "Today I felt so sick." "Why didn't you call me to pick you up?" "I told Teacher but she didn't call you." "What did you say?" "I told her my head hurt and I felt dizzy." "What did she say?" "She told me I wasn't sick." I took mental note to talk to his teacher about c...