When I was nineteen I was the manager of a large multi-screened movie Cineplex. Before the doors were opened to the public and the staff had yet to trickle in, I would wander around the vast cavernous lobby and stroll up and down each theater and marvel that some middle aged man promoted me because I wore an insanely short skirt I was left in charge of this business. At nineteen. Somebody thought I was responsible enough to play God with the lives of the employees and trust me not to burn the place down.
Trippy. I like to think those days of micromanaging forty or more pimply faced teenagers gave me an insight and some skill into one day parenting my own little hormonal teens.
I used to marvel at the magnitude of responsibility I had somehow found weighing upon my shoulders. Then I had children and became a homeowner.
Now I’m wishing the only real responsibility I had was whether or not I remembered to order enough popcorn seed for the week.
Up until lately, I thought I had this responsibility thing down pat. The weight of twisting raising small children into productive members of society (read: Off the pole and out of the clink) never seemed a burden too heavy to bear.
Then my husband ran off to go and chase his dreams. Leaving the well-being and safety of not only his children but also his home to me, the chick who has trained her young and impressionable children to tell everyone their mom is an internet porn star.
Perhaps not the wisest choice on my husband’s behalf. But I love the misguided vote of confidence he gave me.
Now I’ve got all the responsibility of being a grown up with out the safety net of another to catch me when I falter. Good times.
But I pride myself on being a self sufficient, independent woman. I don’t need no stinking man. If I bury my car in a snow bank, I can shovel myself out. If my furnace stops working in the dead of the winter, I can call the furnace fixer people as well as the next guy.
So when I noticed that if one runs the water in my bathroom sink the toilet starts to burp and fart and overflow, I didn’t panic.

All right, I panicked a little.
But then I phoned my husband only to get his facking voice mail got a grip. I could fix this. How hard could it be to unplug a toilet, I rationed. I’m the only one who uses this toilet and I know what goes down it. And the particular size of ahem, what is going down.
Easy peasy. This is why God invented the plunger. Not just so my brother could suction it to my stomach as a small child and lift me up off the ground, leaving me squealing with laughter and sporting a giant purple plunger hickey. Right?
So I rolled up my sleeves, made friends once again with a plunger and eyed my toilet.
Picture me straddling my toilet and thrusting away at the plunger as though my very life depended on it, water splashing everywhere. This is what my son walked in on.
“Um, Mom? What are you doing?” he called from the safety of the bathroom door.
“Besides the obvious? Well, I thought I needed an upper body work out and the plunger looked lonely. Wanna grab some paper towels to mop up this water, please?” I responded as I continued to pump away at my blocked toilet.
(Side note: Ever notice what a disgusting sound the plunger makes? Kinda like a queef, but worse.)
“Not really,” was his response. Not that I blame him. But seeing as I was indisposed at the moment, I shot him my mom look and he slunk off to do what he was asked.
Just then the clouds parted and a heavenly light from up above shined on my head, bathing me in a golden glow. With a sudden gurgle, the overflowing water receded from it’s porcelain banks and flowed back into the ocean sewer line.
I couldn’t believe it. I did it. I fixed my own plugged toilet. I could hear a chorus of angels singing heavenly praise from up above.
Just then Frac walked back in with the roll of toilet paper. “Victory, my sweet son. Just look what a little bit of hard work and effort can do,” I crowed as I wiped the sweat off my brow.
“Um, Mom…”
“That’s right, sugar. Whose your momma now?” I chuckled as I started wiping up the mess.
“Well you are, I guess. But is the water supposed to be coming up into the bathtub like that? And why is it brown?”
Suddenly that chorus of angels turns into the cackle of a thousand little sewer demons, laughing as an inch of brown water filled my bathtub and just sat there. Great. My very own cesspool. I always wanted one. In my ensuite bathroom. Meters from where I sleep. Lucky me.
“Damn it.” Understatement of the year. (Granted the year is young, but wow, are we off to a fine start.)
“Want me to call Dad?” Frac offered. Apparently that snarl sound I made must have convinced him to back slowly away from me and he went to go hide in his room.
“What for? I fixed the toilet didn’t I?” I called after him. “Just because I’m a woman doesn’t mean I can’t handle a little shit in the tub, kiddo,” I muttered to myself, like a crazy woman.
But face it; there is shitty water in my tub and no signs of draining any time soon. And my husband isn’t home to clean it up while I pretend to be busy in another room.
I hate being a responsible grown up.
Doesn’t this give a whole new meaning to “losing my shit?”






Beth
Oh. man. I have never had that happen, but I do have a bathtub drain that inexplicably remains slightly clogged despite repeated Drano treatments. I think I would totally lose it if the toilet contents showed up in the tub. So what happens next? Call the plumber, or snake it yourself, or….?
LarryLilly
Ask WHO flushed WHAT down the terlet.
Then fill the tub halfway, CLOSE the tub drain, and have some resposnable kid hold a wet soon to be stinky wash cloth over the TUB overflow hole (thats the thingy where the tub drain thingy comes out. It allows air to let the water drain from the tub withouit gurgling. Closing it off will trap all stuff as best as you can for you to do STEP 2.
Step 2, while fric/frac is holding rag over vent, and tub drain closed with some water standing in tub, you then use a bucket of water and dump it into commode. The idea is to force water down the line.
If after you do that the water flows, then empty the tub slowly. If you see water starting to come into terlet CLOSE THE TUB DRAIN NOW!!!!
if not, and the water from the tub drains, then try the bucket test one more time without the tub drain closed.
If the mess into tub repeats, call I-800-PLU-MBER
casue then you have a drain line plugged.
Have you lost a hamster or small rabbit lately?
maybe he tried a Shawsahnk Redemption escape, and dint make it!
Great flushing!
Jennifer
I think the problem is that you’re NOT losing your shit! It keeps coming back! ha!
Oh, The Joys
Heh. I don’t think it’s lost if it’s in your tub.
Sarah at In the Trenches of Mommyhood
What a shitty situation.
Heh.
witchypoo
Your brother picked you up with a plunger?????
You have a very inventive brother!
Above Average Joe
Better start using that hole out in the backyard until you can get your plumbing looked at.
SciDi Dad
The visual of a little kid swinging from a plunger suctioned to their stomach made me laugh out loud (at work). Thanks.
While not a plumber, what Larry Lilly proposed makes sense… although with your history, it might just be safer (and more realistic) to just call the plumber now, lest you be stuck toilet-less in the wild.
verybadcat
Ooh! I had that problem once, but it was kitchen water in the bathtub. It’s plumber time, baby:
1. There is a clog in one of your main outgo pipes.
2. Your septic (you said sewer, but if you live as far out as you make out, fat chance) tank is full or malfunctioning.
It could be something else, because I’m no plumber, I just know that when shit (pardon the pun) comes out of the bathtub drain that never went down there, it’s beyond a simple repair……
Becky
We used to live in a condo with ancient plumbing. If you tried to flush anything larger than a pea, it would tremble impotently and not go anywhere. I became great friends with a plunger, and managed to get rid of most of our *ahem* waste.
Luckily, I suppose, the shit never hit the bathtub.
Patty House
Bummer. Called the plumber yet? =)
Mac and Cheese
You run water in the sink, and the toilette backs up. You plunge the toilette, and the bathtub backs up. Plunge the bathtub and see where the shit shows up next. I’m curious.
andi
And now I’m losing my shit. Laughing.
Sounds like it’s time to bring out my trusty friend, Bleach. Eek!
Bon
a beautiful photo essay. but i’m not sure you’ve managed to lose your shit, if we’re being picky here…really you’ve only spread it around from one bathroom appliance to another.
icky!!!
jasmine
What if you try plunging the tub too?
I love your pants. Are those Lululemon?
Kyla
2008 is a tub full of poo for sure. This was a perfect visual.
And you’re quite adorable, you know.
Serendipity, baby!
Having had similar uck in my laundry tubs check your line to the sewer or septic tank. You may be due for some septic sucking services. They may be able to get it by snaking the drain (easy enough to do, but easier to call the pros if you don’t own one now) but it sounds like you’re due for a pro. Sometimes tree roots will interfere with the drainage tile or pipes to the septic tank. Been there, done that.
Mrs. Chicken
Oh girlie, I love you, you know I do. But here is lesson No. 1 in terlet issues:
ALWAYS CALL A PLUMBER.
I learned that one from my dad, who was the world’s worst amateur plumber.
LarryLilly
When i first read the post, the pics didnt load. Now looking at it, you are a cross between “Absolutely Fabulously” and Ed Norton, the sewer guy on the Honeymooners.
You have a better rack that Ed, looks better than the blonde on AF, better dressed, but lady, I bet in those pants, when you bend over, your butt will look just like most plumbers. Smiling with a tall crack.
Get your grubbies on wrestling with that rubber honey cup!
mamatulip
When I was pregnant with Oliver I took a shit so big I plugged our toilet. It made this gurgling sound and all the water sucked out of it, so I did what I thought was the smart thing to do: I flushed. And within a few seconds my bathroom was flooded with water and my own fecal matter, and I was standing in the middle of it.
I lost my shit that day, even though I was standing in it. Literally.