'Amazon Is Out of Toilet Paper and It Wont Answer Our Emails'
https://www.vice.com...swer-our-emails
But:
'I like to imagine that several decades from now we will look back on the absurdities of Modern Western civilization and find one towering above the rest: toilet paper.
In today's supposed age of carbon-footprint awareness, the mere idea of toilet paper should be offensive. We chop down trees, mash them up, bleach them, press them into sheets, roll them onto cardboard, wrap them in plastic, place them onto trucks, drive them to supermarkets and then pay money – actual money – for them.
[...] This is why four months ago I decided to remove toilet paper from my life completely. I now step into the shower after using the toilet and use nothing but water (a miraculous cleaning agent) and my own hand, which I wash afterward with soap. The process adds maybe 10 seconds to my shower. Since making the decision to quit, I have not used a square of toilet paper on my body, and I have never been more clean.
What has been a relatively simple decision for me has traditionally not been so simple for humans throughout history. Since forever, we have found wiping to be as perplexing as our deepest existential quandaries.
We have variously used fur, sand, shells and stones. According to the book The Porcelain God: A Social History of the Toilet, the ancient Romans used sticks with sea sponges attached. Medieval monks used cloth from old clerical robes, and French royalty used necks of geese. Until fairly recently, in many parts of rural United States people used corn cobs.
The ancient Chinese did use paper for bathroom hygiene, but most sources attribute modern-day toilet paper to Joseph Gayetty, who in 1857 developed Gayetty's Medicated Paper in the United States. In An Irreverent and Almost Complete Social History of the Bathroom, author Frank Muir astutely labels the development of toilet paper as "an excellent example of a go-ahead company creating public demand for a product for which there was no need."
'
https://www.theglobe...you-should-too/
A bathtub faucet should also work. However, since the virus can be spread through fecal matter, this is probably not the best time for people who use toilet paper to learn to use their hands (and wash them thoroughly enough... though the custom in some places of only wiping with your off hand and using your right hand to touch things would help). Best solution is to invest in bidets.
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 13 March 2020 - 06:22 PM