Tag Archives: toilet

Toilet difficulties

On Monday, I went to an event with some of my friends. We had a perfectly nice time at the event itself, and then a bit of a kerfuffle after it ended, because I didn’t have very much time for dinner, and wanted to grab a burrito outside, and my friend wanted not to be cold. ‘It’s a bit cold,’ she pointed out. I looked at her dismissively. It was quite cold, and it looked as if it were about to rain, but it was June 1st. What had she expected? I myself was wearing a knitted polo-neck, and a winter coat, but to be fair, I would have worn that whatever the outside conditions, because one of my daily fears is being cold.

Daily fears are very different to greatest fears, or even actual fears. They are panic-inducing nightmares that creep insidiously into even the happiest of days, and have to be managed by a rigorous regime of stern self-talking to and probability exercises. Here are some of mine:

1. Being in a public washroom, putting the soap on my hands and being unable to work the taps. Eventually, I am forced to leave, and spend the rest of the day smearing liquid soap over everything I touch, like an overly-hygenic Midas acolyte. 

2. Opening one of the Virgin Train loo doors when someone is inside it. Being in a Virgin Train loo is a clearly marked, two step process. There’s one button to close the door, and a second to lock it. The difference, though not immediately apparent, will be very clear once I press the ‘open door’ button, and we both have to stare at one another for an excruciating, unbearably long 30 seconds whilst you reach up to lock the door. 

3. Someone trying to shake my hand when I have a tampon in it.

4. Squeezing into a loo that isn’t really big enough (because of shoddy architecure. I am well within the limits for reasonable loo-going humans), turning around awkwardly and falling into the open loo.

5. Taking off my jeans to go to the loo (taking off might be a bit strong. Removing my jeans to a normal and convenient level for weeing), and watching something skid out of my pocket into the next door cubicle. The ensuing scrabbling under stranger’s loo cubicles scarcely bears thinking about. 

I did end up eating a burrito outside. I didn’t have a beer though, because of daily fear no.86: desperately needing to do a wee whilst stuck on the tube. 

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How to save time/ Show people how busy you are

It’s very important to multi-task, especially for someone as busy and in-demand as myself, so I’ve come up with a few things you can do, whilst also doing other things.

1. Household chores whilst cooking.
I trialed this yesterday, when I noticed that Tescos was advising me to cook my stir-fry vegetables for 8 minutes. ‘Well,’ I thought. ‘That’s going to be pretty boring. I might as well pop out and post those letters I need to send.’

Time saved: 7 minutes
Risk to life: high. Though not to mine. To my sleeping housemate, high.

2. Talking on the phone whilst doing household chores
Before doing this, it is important to determine what level of hygenie your flatmates expect when they ask you to ‘clean the bathroom’, because frankly, if you’re on the phone, there’s a whole side of the bath that isn’t going to get cleaned, unless it accidentally gets splashed by rogue water from the bath taps. (I have written before, at length, on my hatred of baths, so personally I feel even turning the taps is really going above-and-beyond)

Time saved: unsure, as I’ve never really cleaned properly, but I’m guessing 4 hours

3. Sending emails on the toilet (number 2, number one is more for tweeting)
The added benefit of this is that you feel like one of those super-high-powered business women. You’re like Condoleezza Rice, only even more impressive, because you are also taking care of your bodaay.

Time saved: A solid 2 minutes.

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I have a spare-therapist

Last night I was at Book Slam, where I sat between a woman who was the doppelganger of my therapist (which was both comforting and disconcerting, and made it difficult to stop staring at her) and my housemate. One of the many excellent things about Book Slam is that they give you bar/toilet breaks between each performance. I don’t mean to sound self-centred, but it really is perfectly designed for me.

‘OK,’ I said, as Simon Armitage left the stage to thunderous applause. ‘If you go to the bar, I’ll pop to the loo, and we’ll meet back here.’ ‘But I need the loo too,’ My housemate complained. She looked at me warningly as I leaned towards my spare-therapist (total stranger who had the misfortune to be sharing our table) to ask her to go to the bar. ‘OK,’ I grumbled. ‘We can go to the loo together.’

I would now like to briefly explain the layout of our flat. You enter by the front door (I know, we’re boringly conformist. But when I get rich I’m making myself a pirate bed, so there’s still hope), and straight ahead is the living room. If you turn right you pass the shower, then the kitchen, and then the toilet.

The bedrooms are on the left- though calling my little sister’s room a ‘bedroom’ suggests she keeps it in a state fit for human habitation, rather than as a perfect replica of a crack den. It is not a large flat (though, luckily, my bedroom is), but the acoustics are such that it is moderately difficult to hear people unless you are in the same room as them. Or, as we quickly discovered, you wee with the loo door open. (Our flat can be quickly defined by its occupants’ most prominent features- an endless supply of wine, a penchant for inappropriate jokes, and a terrible fear of missing out).

‘I’m so pleased I got to hear Simon Armitage live,’ My housemate said happily as we popped to the loo.

‘You know his poem, ‘Poem’?’ ‘Yes,’ I replied, undoing my belt in preparation for my wee. ‘Well, I think about it a lot,’ My housemate continued. She then launched into an excellently intimate and well-thought out discussion of how she has used this poem when faced with difficult patients. ‘Everyone has a right to life, She declaimed loudly as we entered the toilet. To be greeted by the startled face of a fellow loo-goer, who was not expecting two, variously dressed women to burst into the public toilet, apparently discussing abortion.

‘It is possible,’ I mused to my housemate as we left the toilet hurriedly. ‘That we need to work on boundaries. At least, I’m pretty sure that’s what my actual therapist would say.’ We headed back to our table, where my housemate hastily prevented me from asking the stranger I had appropriated as my spare-therapist what she thought.

http://www.bookslam.com/

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