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To: Marie

how much more laundry and water are you using for your rear end cleaning and wiping? please don’t tell me you use the towel more than once to dry your bottom.

i can see this as a helper to people with medical conditions. but i think in terms of what it saves it’s marginal, as you use more water, some still use some tp, and if you use towels to dry, you’re now having to wash a bunch of crotch towels you didn’t have to wash before.


49 posted on 05/22/2013 11:29:13 AM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I can neither confirm or deny that; even if I could, I couldn't - it's classified.)
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To: Secret Agent Man

As I said, you don’t have to use the towel every time.

Next thought... after you shower and dry yourself, does your towel go straight into the hamper or do you hang it up to dry and reuse it the next day? (You do dry your crotch after you shower, right? You do realize that you’re using a ‘crotch towel’ to dry your face the next day, right?)

My experience with the bidet is this: hubby and I are ‘squeaky clean’ every day. There are no more issues with the occasional PSS (”post shower sh*t”). There are no more hemorrhoids, itching, irritation that we ALL live with (and we don’t even realize how much irritation there is until it’s all gone.)

So there is no need - in this house - for Preparation H, baby wipes, or Tucks. No more Monkey Butt powder in the summer. No more jock itch or yeast infections. As a matter of fact, the plunger hasn’t been touched once since we bought the bidet.

How hard is it to understand? Wash your crappy butt with water. Spend a little more to get the clear iodine to add to the spray and you’re actually germ-free.

If someone refused to wash their hands with water and insisted that ‘just wiping with a paper towel until it LOOKS clean’ is good enough, you’d think they were nutz.

But someone suggests the same thing with a butt and Americans lose their minds.

And yes, I keep a bottle of soap by the toilet and wash myself correctly every night before bed, rinsing with the bidet. It’s easy, fast and uses much less water than the shower.

How hard is it?

You sit your butt on the heated seat.
You poop.
You push a button to start the wash.
You push another button to adjust the flow.
You chill out for thirty seconds and think about fluffy ducks or something else that you may find pleasant.
You wipe once to dry yourself and to make sure that everything went according to plan.
You pull up your pants and walk away.

If you want to freshen up, you push a button to wet things down, turn it off, soap things up with the *smallest* amount of soap, then let the machine rinse it all off, dry your butt with a small towel and then the whole traumatic experience of getting your butt clean is over and you live to fight another day.

It is not that big of a deal.

I’m sorry, but now that I’ve lived for a year and a half *actually*really*clean*, I’m spoiled and I’m not going back to wadded up handfuls of paper. I’ll keep my ‘three seashells’ thank you.

Anyone with back problems or chronic butt problems (such as hemorrhoids or fissures) should have one of these wonderful machines.


65 posted on 05/22/2013 12:57:14 PM PDT by Marie ("The last time Democrats gloated this hard after a health care victory, they lost 60 House seats.")
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