Warning: This post is
off-color. Skip it if you’re easily
offended or weirded out by human behavior outside the norm.
The prison library where I work has a two-stall toilet that
is poorly ventilated and stuffy, but for some reason the preferred choice of
many, so our workday is permeated with a malodorous assault, a barnyard stench,
that has resisted all deodorization efforts by our orderly (he even came up
with his own cleaning concoction, but only succeeded in adding a chemical waft
to the general stink). Of course, being
guys all locked up in a confined space, we end up making a joke of the
situation, competing for the most creative ways to warn all of an impending
noxious cloud. My own reviews typically involve
creatures that may have crawled up someone’s butt and died, etc. Or recipes such as: take the worst baby diaper you have ever run
across, mix in some rotten eggs, a dead squirrel and a hot day at a swamp and
you are a tenth of the way there. We
worry sometimes, too, that the odorific molecules will make us sick or that
they will burrow into our flesh, so that when we finally leave prison that
smell will forever emanate from our skin and our breath – scary thought!
Okay, so now that you have the background, here’s The Honey Bear Incident. This is one of those tales
where you think it can’t get any worse until it does. One day the usual stench in the library cranked up past
eleven. We just stood there looking at
each other, horrified that this new layer of stink had come out of a human
being. I mean it was both concerning and
sort of awe-inspiring. Whoever had dealt
it must truly be shitting his insides out.
So while lobbying for HAZMAT suits and masks for library workers, we set
out looking for the culprit of these new bio-terror attacks. Our investigation was made easier when the
horrible new smell went away for a couple days.
Like a Sherlock Holmes Brigade of the Toilet, we systematically eliminated
possibilities: The daily library
regulars? All present. Guys in ESL class? No change.
Users of the computer?
Check. GED students? Ah ha!
That’s it! A quiet 55-year old in
the GED class had been taken to the hospital for stomach pain and, yes! Abnormal stools! (Tell us something we didn’t
know.)
Then we learned that he would not be returning to the unit. We felt bad for the guy, of course, but
breathed a cautious sigh of relief that he would no longer be contributing his
stink bombs to the sewage treatment plant aroma of the library. And wondered how sick he must be if he wasn’t
coming back. And then we learned the
truth of it, directly from the Lt’s. mouth.
Now, don’t get me wrong. It is a
breach of protocol and totally inappropriate to share medical information about
an inmate, but in this case the weirdness of the situation must have warranted
a waiver. We learned that the guy was
rushed to surgery to extract a Honey Bear bottle from his rectum! Let that sink in for a moment (pun intended). Yes, that cute little plastic bear guy full
of honey that you probably have on your kitchen counter (I apologize if you now
will need to switch brands). They said
it was up inside him for at least two weeks!
Um, how? Um, why? You
can imagine the speculations. I’ll go
with that of his cellie, who thinks it may have been an attempt at a homemade
colonic. Okay, whatever, freak accident, but then you
don’t go to Medical immediately? You
haul this bottle around in your butt for two weeks? I mean, it must have hurt like hell, not to
mention the outrageously horrible-smelling stuff that did come out! But then maybe he hoped it would pass and he
wouldn’t have to tell anybody? Maybe he hoped it would dissolve or something? After
all, to go up to the triage nurse and when she asked, “What is the nature of
the problem?” could you just sweetly reply, “I have a Honey Bear stuck up my
ass?” I think the trick would be to play it
cool, like it’s no big deal, an everyday common cold kind of thing. Then when she did her double-take and asked,
“How in hell did that happen?” you’d mildly reply, “Oh, I tripped and fell on
it and it just went straight up in there, strangest thing.” Or maybe a smarter move would be just to
write the complaint down as a note and slip it to her, pretending to laryngitis
at the same time. So yes, embarrassing
to go to Medical, but dude, do anything but leave that bottle in there! Okay?
All this being said, word is he’s doing well. He probably won’t be returning to us to
answer our many questions about his misadventure (and to deal with his new nickname). And we can rest easy with just the everyday
stench that I’ll probably associate with books and libraries for the rest of my
life.
Sad, Sad, Sad.
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