Department Of Yep, This Is It:
Succinctly Brilliant Life Advice (Before The Inevitable Snark)
“You’ll regret it if you get married. You’ll regret it if you don’t.
You’ll regret it if you have kids, and you’ll regret it if you don’t.”
The following is attributed to Kierkegaard [1] (my emphases):
“Regret is inevitable because the human mind
will always romanticize the life it didn’t live.
It’s not about making the ‘perfect’ choice;
it’s choosing which regret you are willing to make peace with.”
So. Choose your path.
* * *
Department Of, And Now, On To The Snark:
Could This Be The Sign; Is This The End Of The World?
Dateline: Monday morning; 7:54 AM; watching My Big Fat Greek Wedding III [2] while doing an elliptical workout. During the commercial break I behold an advertisement moiself has never see before – it’s from [3] a series of ads for Cottonelle toilet paper known as the Come Clean campaign. [4] The ad begins with a discreet shot of some guy sitting on a toilet, then we see him (after he has presumably done his business and hiked up his trousers) [5] walking into a family/TV room in a (his?) house, where friends and family wearing team jerseys and eating copious amounts of snacks are watching a football game on the room’s wide screen TV. The man has a beatific smile on his face, as if he’s just received enlightenment from a guru or had another kind of spiritual experience. Apparently, after having used Cottonelle toilet paper to wipe himself post-deuce-dropping he has the cleanest hindquarters he’s ever had. [6] He is so overcome with the bliss of butt cleanliness he decides to “come clean” with his friends, confessing, among other things, the fact that he doesn’t really “get” football….
* * *
The Saga Continues: Department Of Bodily Functions Sell Products,
The Neverending Story
Back to moiself on the elliptical, continuing to watch My Big Fat Greek Wedding III (which primarily takes place in – surprise! – Greece). [7] After fifteen minutes, there is another commercial break: three ads in a row featuring products related to those pesky bodily functions:
* #1: [8] It’s one more Cottonelle come clean ad, this one featuring a woman, who, after having the tush mop of her life, comes clean to her homework-doing child about the fact that she never “got” algebra;
* #2: Yet another ad for that [9] ( “doctor-developed!” ) whole body deodorant, Lumē. And by whole body, the Lumē folk mean your entire body – including parts you maybe didn’t realize you had, much less had to worry about being…reekified.
“Anywhere you have odor but wish you didn’t….just a pea-sized amount rubbed in like a lotion…all over your body: “pits, privates, underboob, belly buttons, tummy folds, thigh creases, feet….”
Underboob?
You name it, if it’s a body part, Lumē wants to you to be concerned that it might stink.
feet; tummy folds; thigh crease…. I think they left out that space between your fingers – for which there should be a name. Actually, there is: the interdigital folds. But, moiself suspects there’s a better word for it in German, like FingerSchlitzen….
Ahem. That omission aside, the not-so-subtle message these Lumē advertisements convey is that your entire body is an odiferous swamp in need of aroma-masking. As for the bemused skeptics who ask, “Um, why not just take a shower?”
Silly geese! If you feel felt cleaner after taking a shower, they can’t sell you anything. Check here if you’d like An Expert® to explain why you’re so stupid as to think that bathing is better than using Lumē products. [10]
Just in case you’re not sure how the product should be applied to someone’s, er, privates, here are the handy instructions (found here; my emphases):
“For privates – the short story:
A little goes a long way. Using fingertips, swipe onto thigh folds, undercarriage,
and sweep up between the butt cheeks to the tailbone.
For privates – the full story:
Working front to back (never work back to front due to increased risk for urinary tract infections), apply to the clitoral hood & labia majora (not inside the vagina or around the urethra), continue back further to the perineum (the space between the rectum and vaginal opening), and sweep up between the butt cheeks to the tailbone.
Apply around the base of the penis and between the folds of the legs, work back to the space between the scrotum and rectum, and finally sweep back between the butt cheeks and up to the tailbone.”
Undercarriage. In all my years in health care…
… moiself never heard the word at word undercarriage – heretofore used for the structural and mechanical foundation supporting the body of an automobile or truck – to refer to human anatomy.
Listening to this insulting shill ad, moiself be getting my undergarments in a knot ( this could be a job for Lumē! ) as I consider the commercial’s underlying premise: your entire body is a stinkpit. Yeah, thanks for the empowering message, brought to us by a woman OB/GYN ( a fact much touted in the product’s various ads).
Ah; once again, moiself digresses. On to Advertisement #3, which was concerned with infant and baby number two – specifically, with the idea that not all baby BMs are manageable ( as in, containable ) – via the average disposable diaper. And this certain brand of diaper – damned if I can’t remember the name, [11] is for “…people who’ve seen some sh*t.” [12] Translation: it can handle your biggest baby’s biggest poop!
Now then: although moiself wasn’t paying close attention to My Big Fat Greek Wedding III, I’m fairly certain it contained no overt nor clandestine themes of cleaning up after defecation and/or malodorous body parts. Thus, I’m forced to conclude that the clustering of these particular ads during MBFGWIII commercial breaks was just a happy coincidence.
* * *
Speaking Of Products Related To Crap…
Freethinkers’ Thought Of The Week [13]
Notes I wrote to myself a few years ago after someone, who’d discovered my “unbelief,” tried the What-you-need-is-a-personal-relationship-with-Jesus crap on me:
What I do not need is a “personal relationship” with Jesus,
or the Christian god, or any deity.
What religious believers need is a personal relationship with reality – the same reality to which they appeal when they critique the tenets and validity of Scientology, Islam, Hinduism, Mormonism – of any faith but their own. The same reality they use when they evaluate evidence to make any important decision in their life: such as, which investments are sound, which physician to see for an illness, etc.
Oh and by the way: How is it that, for all their much-touted (but in reality, scantily practiced [14] ) reading of their scriptures, Christian fundies never seem to recognize that their “personal relationship with their personal savior” rhetoric never occurs in the Bible. Jesus is never quoted as speaking this way in the gospels, nor does the founder of Christianity, Paul, do so in his epistles. This “personal savior” piety is no older than 18th century Lutheran Pietist movement in Germany.
* * *
May we all have a personal relationship with reality;
May you not romanticize the path you didn’t take;
May we give our respective undercarriages the honor they are due;
…and may the hijinks ensue.
Thanks for stopping by. Au Vendredi!
* * *
[1] Søren Kierkegaard, (1813 – 1855), Danish philosopher.
[2][2] It was either that, or some May Day Airline disaster show…which I actually like – the parts about the investigations and the problem solving involved (not the crash reenactment).
[3] Yep, I googled it afterward.
[4] Slogan: “We are coming clean: your booty deserves gentle care.”
[5] I could have written pants, but I think trousers is a work we should all use more frequently.
[6] doesn’t say much for the character’s potty hygiene and/or showering skills, does it?
[7] So I don’t really mind or pay attention to the plot; I just enjoy the scenery.
[8] Shouldn’t this have been add #2, since it’s about cleaning up about number…you know?
[9] I say that because you’ve likely seen at least one of those ads – you can’t spit (or sweat) without hitting one.
[10] BTW, the company is facing several class action lawsuits accusing Lumē’ of false advertising/deceptive marketing of their products.
[11] Which I attribute to my brain being overloaded, at that point, with this ad shit.
[12] The word is bleeped in the ad
[13] “free-think-er n. A person who forms opinions about religion on the basis of reason, independently of tradition, authority, or established belief. Freethinkers include atheists, agnostics and rationalists. No one can be a freethinker who demands conformity to a bible, creed, or messiah. To the freethinker, revelation and faith are invalid, and orthodoxy is no guarantee of truth.” Definition courtesy of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, ffrf.org
[14] The bible is a huge collection of writings; still, it’s mind-boggling how many Christians cherry pick their readings to “the happy” or familiar, G-rated stories stuff. Most of them seemingly have no idea what is in their scriptures, from the three different version of The Ten Commandments ( Version 1: Deuteronomy 5:6-21; Version 2: Exodus 20:1-17, differs slightly from the Deuteronomy version; Version 3: Exodus 34: 14-28 – Hmmm, these commandments are wildly different than the first two versions, although the writing claims it is the LORD speaking. Guess he’d forgotten what he’d said the first two times? Also, although this list is never referred to when religious leaders and politicians talk of the Ten Commandments, this version – in verse 27- is the only version referred to in scripture as the “ten commandments” ) ,to the passages where Jesus contradicts himself, to the scriptural guidelines for killing and raping women….