Timing is Everything
I recently came across an interesting factoid of
nature: that the average mammal, from mouse to elephant, takes about 21 seconds
to urinate. Clearly I am not the average mammal, as it often takes me 21
seconds just to unbutton my jeans with my bumbly MS fingers. And then, if you
permit me to discuss the 16th letter of the alphabet a bit more
candidly, it takes minutes for me to fully empty my bladder. Poor Laura could
get through not one, but two sections of the New York Times before I’m done
tinkling. Admittedly, it is a touch embarrassing when friends and family wander
back into restrooms to “make sure I was okay”—as if I might have forgotten to
lift the toilet seat and gotten my ass wedged into the bowl or needed a new
Sharpie for all the graffiti I was scribbling onto the stall walls—but that’s
life with multiple sclerosis. Docs call it urinary retention and hesitancy. I’ve
gotten used to it. But that doesn’t make it any easier. And after a recent trip
to Northern Europe, I discovered that having a rather slow flow can make using
the restroom a lot more memorable.
Take this pristine handicapped bathroom at Oslo’s
airport. Look at how brilliantly clean it is—sunglasses should be mandatory.
Heck, a heart surgeon could do a triple bypass in here without risk of patient
infection. There’s a good reason why. If you look on the wall, you’ll see a
digital “hygiene monitor” with a countdown of the number of minutes left before
the next inspection. Exactly. I had precisely 55 minutes left to pee before a
coordinated team of uniformed Norwegian inspectors wearing orange jumpsuits barged
through the door to clean the very toilet I was sitting on. It’s challenging
enough to pee when you’ve got a disease that affects the bladder and how
swiftly it empties. But add a timer?! Now I was on the clock, and we all know
how easy it is to pee under pressure when you have MS. Thank god I made it out
in time.
But I wasn’t so lucky in Hamburg. When I started
to trudge down a long flight of stairs at one German restaurant to get to the
facilities (bathrooms are often downstairs in Europe), the wait staff ushered
me instead around the corner to a handicapped restroom that was being blocked
by boxes and brooms. No wonder I had missed it! Upon entering the bathroom, it
became clearly apparent that the folks tending to this toilet were worried
about gimpy people with loose stools. There were 16 rolls of toilet paper
within arm’s reach of the potty. But if you were to run through those (yikes,
one of those days), you had a full pallet
of TP in the corner. If felt like I was taking a leak in aisle 16 of Costco.
While I was laughing to myself about the ungodly amount of paper products at my
disposal, I heard boxes moving, brooms being propped against my door. I had
taken too long—I was being entombed. Quickly I assessed the situation: I had
access to water, so I could live for weeks, and I had a lifetime supply of
Charmin. But horrors, no German beer. It was indeed a desperate situation, so escape
was mandatory. I gingerly pushed open the door and the result was as
predictable as the sunrise. I made such a racket that the restaurant goers that
afternoon probably are still talking about it to this day.
It couldn’t get much crazier, could it? Oh, don’t dare
underestimate me. Just ask the poor residents of Copenhagen. In the heart of
the Danish city, there is a large public unisex bathroom that is manned by a
couple of attendants who keep the facility in ship shape and direct
cross-legged visitors to open stalls. When they saw gimpy Dave, though, they
pointed to a special door. With the turn of a key, the automated sliding door quickly
whooshed open like I was on the set of Star Trek. Totally trick. Instructed
that the door closes by itself, I wandered into the large, handicapped
accessible bathroom and waited for the door to slowly track back into a closed
position. (It’s important to note that the closing of the door is much slower,
probably so it doesn’t slice a wheelchair user in two.) In any event, I was
proceeding with the business at hand when I realized that I technically hadn’t
locked the door. Heck, the door itself didn’t even look fully closed. I then
determined that locking said door was the most prudent course of action lest
the attendant forget about me and open the door while I was midstream.
Fortunately, there on the wall, was a button with a key. The lock button. So
with pants and underwear around my ankles, I waddled with my gimpy MS legs over
to the lock button to properly lock the door. Only when I pressed the lock
button, it dawned on me that it might not be such a button. WHOOSH. The door
flew open, and suddenly I wasn’t on the set of Star Trek. Or Star Wars. Or
Battlestar Galactica. I was in a horror movie taking part in the obligatory
naked scene as I was suddenly flashing all of Copenhagen. I waddled as quickly
as one can waddle with MS to the corner of the bathroom, and proceeded to then moon
all of Copenhagen, while waiting for the door to slowly—ever so slowly—close.
God only knows how many lives I’ve scarred in Denmark. I fear future Hans
Christian Andersens are no longer penning the next Little Mermaid but instead writing The Naked Dude. Jiminy crickets.
So is there a lesson to these three tales? Not
really. Just pee faster (no pressure). But with multiple sclerosis, good luck
with that.
Comments
Your articles are so well written--be they in humor or serious with medical information. Thank you! You're always welcome here if in the DFW area where our bathrooms are far from this fancy or clean.
Best regards,
Ann
My urologist settled the problem. Use a catheter. It helps me empty my bladder when I'm pressed for time or when I can't empty enough. Hope this helps.
Stella with MS
Your stories about bathrooms in Europe cracked me up. I used to live in Hamburg and am very familiar with the 'find the WC' adventures. I'm hoping to go back soon to visit and I'm spending just as much time working on going up and down stairs as practicing walking on cobble stones. When I was there the larger issue was finding a WC in a public area. I have the 'Bathroom Scout' app now so that may help. Did you remember to tip the attendants? :-)
Larry
Good stuff!
Isn't it nice MS knows no boundaries.
Not only is a time limit a distraction, but if a bathroom is too busy--I can't go.
I stumbled across your blog (no pun intended). I am approaching my diagnos-aversary in a month. I love reading about the humor that has to be part of MS. Thanks for writing it down.
thx for the best laugh I've had in awhile. I'm still wiping the tears away from laughing so hard. It is a true gift to take an embarrassing situation and find the amusement in it.