FRESH
YARN presents:
Get
it Out!
By Cara
DiPaolo
I realize
how this is going to sound and it's not what you think, but I've recently
become obsessed with bowel movements, and not just my own. A friend of
mine mentioned how he'd read this book called Get It Out! in which
the author stipulates that a healthy person should be "voiding"
at least three times a day. Three times a day. I'm lucky if I go
once. And to be honest, I'm not even sure I could afford the extra down
time for two more a day. I don't know about the rest of you, but I need
to let things
percolate for a while; maybe read a few pages of a
magazine, play with the cat, you know, ease my way into things.
And that takes time. Between my hectic work schedule, my active social
life, my infrequent exercising, and my 4.5 hours of TV a day, I barely
have time to take a shower let alone schedule in three "voids"
a day.
According
to this book, as humans became more civilized they started going
less. Apparently civilization made us embarrassed about our bodily functions
and as a result we began to "hold it in" leading to all sorts
of common diseases and ailments. The author studied some barbarian-type
people, who, unhindered by propriety, just dropped a load whenever the
mood struck them; be they working in the field, having dinner with family
or sharpening their nose jewelry, whatever. Out it went. No apologies
necessary. And by and large, these people lived longer, healthier lives
than us -- if you didn't factor in the high incidences of death by animal
goring.
In any event,
the book got me thinking that maybe I should be more concerned about my
regularity issues. The truth is, I have a very small window of poopertunity
in the morning between breakfast and my shower and if I miss it because
I'm rushed or out of coffee or the phone rings -- I mean if there is any
deviation in my schedule whatsoever -- that's it. I'm stopped up for the
day. And it doesn't just end there. If I miss one day it's not like I
can easily make it up the next. It's like missing a day of work. Your
inbox gets piled high with an extra day's worth of stuff, plus new things
keep coming in and you don't have time to go back and empty out the old
stuff. Your system gets all screwed up. When I miss a day, it can sometimes
take me a week to clear out my "outbox."
And traveling
is the worst. I can't go in strange bathrooms. I'm too distracted. Is
the door thick enough? How does the lock work? Which side is the toilet
paper holder on? What temperature is the seat ring? Will it be too obvious
if I leave the faucet running? It's all too much. I avoid going out of
town whenever I can. People think I'm a recluse, anti-social, but in reality
I'm just beholden to my bowels.
I began wondering
if there were others out there like me. Clearly I couldn't be the only
one if our so-called civilized void average was on the decline.
I started asking around. People were a little tight-lipped at first, but
eventually I got them to open up and I was amazed by my findings. Here's
what I discovered: women are perpetually constipated. Men are not. It's
that simple. Sure, there are a few exceptions to the rule -- the sensitive
boyfriend here, the liberal gal-pal there. But I'm talking maybe a two
percent margin of error.
In general,
I found that men can eat binding foods like bananas and bread and cheese
for days on end and twenty minutes later, ffft! out it goes. They
can go anywhere, anytime. They don't care if it's the only bathroom in
the house and it's right next to the living room and there's a line of
people waiting to get in. They take their time, stink up the place and
swagger out winking and waving an emphatic hand in front of their noses:
Woo! Sorry about that! Might want to light a match in there.
Women, on
the other hand, are much more sensitive to their surroundings. They can't
go if someone is near. They can't go if they think someone is near. They
can't even go if someone might be near in the near future. One of my girlfriends
recently told me she was stopped up for 14 days because she was staying
in close quarters at her in-laws' house and there was only one bathroom.
When she finally went, it was at a restroom in Wal-mart and she stayed
in the stall for over an hour to make sure no one witnessed her coming
out.
One of my
former co-workers used to use her entire lunch break every day to drive
home so she could go to the bathroom in private. Another woman described
how after seven years, she still gets up in the middle of the night to
do her business whenever her boyfriend stays over. And in all that time
she has never once passed gas in front of him. Not once, in seven years.
Meanwhile I have personally witnessed her boyfriend making a show of lifting
up his leg to punctuate his incessant flatulations: That's what I'm
talking 'bout, (FART)!
And it's
not like these women are choosing to be this way either. One of the ladies
I interviewed described how she goes out of her way to eat high fiber
foods like beans and prunes when she knows she's going to be put in a
compromising toilet predicament. I try. I really try. But my body just
won't let me go, the woman remarked sadly.
And suddenly,
it dawned on me. This is a major epidemic.
I mean, I
don't know exactly what I had hoped to gain from my informal research
-- it started out as a simple quest for knowledge. But my findings really
enraged me. It's not fair that women should be so afflicted
and men just don't care. Why should we be penalized for being nice and
conscientious? What's in it for us, except apparently a lifetime of common
diseases and ailments? Well I, for one, have had it!
I refuse
to be put in this box where I'm not free to express myself, even if that
expression is coming out of my ass. Don't you see, ladies? This is just
another self-inflicted barrier we've placed on ourselves, so we can appear
pure and ladylike. It's all in our minds! We're eating the same things
as men! We're drinking the same water! It doesn't take a genius to see
WE are allowing this to happen! Well, not me. Not anymore.
I am on a
crusade, and ladies, I dare you to join me. I'm making it my personal
mission to stink up every facility this side of the Pacific Ocean. And
even if I don't have to go, I'll make the noises, god-dammit! From now
on, I'm poopin' loud and I'm poopin' PROUD! And, whatever it takes, I
will GET IT OUT!
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