When Adapting Fails, Epically
Oh, Dave. Dave, Dave, Dave. That’s sort of what the
voice in my head was saying, along with maybe a few curse words, when I was trying
to pee … in public, in broad daylight, in front of dozens of people. Let me
explain.
Multiple sclerosis forces those with the disease to
adapt as it progresses, to bob and weave around new disabilities, learning new
tricks. Recently I had come up with a brilliant one to overcome a common and
vexing problem. How to pee on long bike rides when a bathroom wasn’t an option.
In the past, I did what guys do on long rides: find
a tree. But as my legs have gotten weaker in the dozen years I’ve had this
disease, I’ve had to make changes. Avoid morning rides when my bladder tends to
be most feisty, limit cycling excursions to a couple hours, and wear adult
protection for emergencies (just in case). This worked okay-ish. But that MS
potty pressure—and if you have this disease you almost certainly know what I am
talking about—wasn’t going to go away and trying to jump off my trike when the
urgency flag was flying had been getting harder, especially with an overheated
body due to heavy exercise. What to do?
What my grandpa did when he needed a bathroom break
flying B-17s in WWII: pee in a tube. Brilliant! Why hadn’t I thought of that
earlier? A quick shopping spree on Amazon got me totally set up: condom catheter
and tubing. (Yes, I realize this is a guy solution, but the SHEWEE does exist
for women, although for obvious reasons I have not tested this.)
I know what you are thinking. What could go wrong?
Other than EVERYTHING. But you would be wrong. It was stealthy, comfortable, and
totally stress reducing. Indeed, my maiden voyage was going so well that at one
point on the trail I thought I was in a dreamy fairy tale. Running into Rapunzel—yes
that Rapunzel, the one with the long hair—will do that to you. Surreal doesn’t
begin to describe the experience. (And yes, I did not miss the opportunity to
make a lame joke about how long it took to wash her tresses.)
But minutes after our brief encounter, things turned,
ahem, hairy. I had to go. Worse, my urgency situation had become rather, er,
tangled. I had tucked the tubing deep into my shorts and extracting it meant
some rather noticeable (and panicked) hunting in the groin area. Worse, I had
just pulled into the MOST public section of the trail. On arguably the NICEST
Sunday of the year. Lordy. Bikers, joggers, walkers, dog walkers, picnickers,
kids, grandkids, great grandkids, people wandering aimlessly in my immediate
vicinity for no discernable reason whatsoever, the works.
Deep breath, Dave. The now-unkinked tube is rather
hidden, Dave. No one is looking, Dave, especially with you looking totally nonchalant
drinking out of your water bottle, which would explain any puddling. Dave, just
channel the theme song from another fairy tale, Frozen. Let it go, let it go, can’t
hold it back anymore, let it go. Sing with me now, Dave, you know the lyrics.
Okay, it was a good idea in theory. Stage fright, performance
anxiety, tinkle trepidation, call it what it you want. “It looks like you
spilled a tiny bit of your Caprisun after you tried to jam in the straw and it
broke.” Laura was unimpressed with my efforts and was tired of waiting for the
crowds to dissipate given that it was midafternoon and hours from nightfall, so
my maiden voyage ended with only limited success.
Comments
AMF
I have a "shy" problem myself. If there is a lot of commotion, noise, people around--"go-go" is a no-no for me. Being seated helps, I can hold it for hours when sitting. But stand up...and the floodgates open!
Thanks for sharing your story. Much enjoyed!