Shrinking Rolls

August 23, 2011

Boy, the Nordic Warrior Queen was really steamed this morning. It wasn’t thirty seconds after the toilet flushed that she rocketed out of the bathroom, waving the remnants of a toilet paper roll in my face.

I assumed I’d put the roll on backwards again. “What the hell is this?” she hollered.

Of course I defended myself. “What? I put it on the way you told me.”

“That’s not it.”

Cautious now, I asked the worst. “I used the last roll?”

“NO! Don’t you see what those bastards did?”

Now, I’m not the sharpest tool in the shed, but women sometimes leave me confused. “Umm…who?” I didn’t know what else to say.

“They’re trying to pull another fast one.”

What the hell was she on about? “Huh?”

“They made the tube bigger, see?”

Oh no, not the toilet paper conspiracy again. She’s been going on for years about how the toilet paper companies are screwing us: first they made the rolls bigger – Double Rolls, Mega Rolls, Giganto Rolls, huge Roll-o-Sauruses. All this gigantism meant only that you had to leave the buttwipe on the bathroom counter because it no longer fit in the holder.

Then they came up with the jumbo economy packages of toilet paper: 24-packs of Triple Rolls, 18-packs of Garganta Rolls, 48-packs of Super Rolls – packs of toilet paper large enough to wipe the asses of an entire troop of flu-ridden Boyscouts for a week. These things are so big you need a second mortgage to buy one and a pickup truck to bring it home.

And after that was the “ply, texture, and comfort” campaign, where the marketing brains at the TP factory dreamed up UltraPly, Cotton Soft, Baby Soft, TriplePly, Aloe Care, Clean Care, Super Soft, and now there’s even environmentally friendly paper, or E-paper, because everyone knows that when you’re sitting on the loo, you ought to be concerned with the world you’re leaving behind.

Through it all, the love of my life has ardently claimed that those clever toilet paper industrialists are only using these “improvements” as a smokescreen to hide the fact that they’re actually putting less paper on the roll. “See? Less paper!”

“Um, okay. I believe you. Can I get in there now?”

This was the last straw. “You need to write them an email.”

“What’s that supposed to do?”

“Tell them we’re onto their trickery.” She was really furious. “Tell them we’re not going to sit there and take it anymore.”

“Honey, they’re not going to retool the toilet paper assembly line just because I write them an email.”

“Don’t you get all technical with me. We have to complain or they’ll keep doing it.”

“But, but…why me?”

“You’re the man, that’s why.” Naturally, I knew better than to argue with that line of reasoning.

“Okay, dear. Hand me my iPad. I’ll go sit down and think about what to write.”

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