19 March 2022 06:00 am Views - 413
My first ever introduction to an electronic toilet seat was in Tokyo, Japan. Landing there for an event accompanied by the usual crew of performers, dancers and models and my dear gay friend who was the choreographer for the show. We were tired, hungry and jet lagged and the first thought in our minds was a shower and food, so grabbing our room keys we proceeded to our temporary abodes to do just that.
At first glance, I wondered if one needed some kind of license to operate this miracle of modern technology. It had a row of buttons with little icons with images of gushing water, left and right arrows, all of it attached to the side like a giant remote control, and another tiny one after that, and an infra-red light just above the bum line. Furthermore, where the toilet paper usually reposed was a big box with a number of control buttons, and of course all the writing was in Japanese, so I simply had to rely on my deductive powers to figure things out on the go, very much like the Egyptologists on their first entrance to the pyramids attempting to decipher the hieroglyphs that adorned the tombs of the Pharaohs.
Anyway, I gingerly placed myself on this marvelous piece of machinery and got down to the business of going about my business and having concluded my meeting I now attempted the grand finale and began pushing buttons. This is when all hell broke loose, pipes and tubes began peeping out at me, looking at them from my vantage point they looked quite deadly.
Water began spraying to different parts of my lower extremities some in spurts, some in long extended intervals almost as if there was a fire down there. Then came the piece de resistance, a steady stream of water that began as a tickling sensation and then a strong jet straight up the Khyber Pass, when you least expected it. I now understood my dear Choreographers waxing lyrical on the phone and his reluctance to get off this (what to him would have been a multiple purpose) machine. I managed to extract myself from this modern contribution to hygiene by deciphering some of the icons that would have made a code-breaker proud, firmly deciding to stick to traditional methods in the future; I am rather old fashioned that way. But a thought did cross my mind while writing this, just suppose if the spread of Covid19 could be prevented not by washing of the hands but by washing, “south of the border,” to put it delicately, what a boon this would have been!