Ryan's Steakhouse
26/X/1998
A couple of weeks ago we decided to cruise out to Ryan's
Steakhouse for dinner. It was a Wednesday night which means that macaroni and
beef was on the hot bar, indeed the only night of the week that it is served.
Wednesday night is also kid's night at Ryan's, complete with
Dizzy the Clown wandering from table to table entertaining the little bastards.
It may seem that the events about to be told have little
connection to those two circumstances, but all will be clear in a moment. We
went through the line and placed our orders for the all-you-can-eat hot bar then
sat down as far away from the front of the restaurant as possible in order to
keep the density of kids down a bit. Then I started my move to the hot bar.
Plate after plate of macaroni and beef were consumed that evening, I tell you --
in all, four heaping plates of the pseudo-Italian ambrosia were shoved into my
belly. I was sated.
Perhaps a bit too much, however. I had not really been feeling
well all day, what with a bit of gas and such. By the time I had eaten four
overwhelmed plates of food, I was in real trouble. There was so much pressure on
my diaphragm that I was having trouble breathing. At the same time, the downward
pressure was building. At first, I thought it was only gas which could have been
passed in batches right at the table without to much concern.
Unfortunately, that was not to be. After a minute or so it was
clear that I was dealing with explosive diarrhoea. It's amazing how grease can
make its way through your intestines far faster than the food which spawned the
grease to begin with, but I digress...
I got up from the table and made my way to the bathroom. Upon
entering, I saw two sinks immediately inside the door, two urinals just to the
right of the sinks, and two toilet stalls against the back wall. One of them was
a handicapped bathroom. Now, normally I would have gone to the handicapped stall
since I like to stretch out a bit when I take a good shit, but in this case, the
door lock was broken and the only thing I hate worse than my wife telling me to
stop cutting my toenails with a pair of diagonal wire cutters is having someone
walk in on me while I am taking a shit. I went to the normal stall.
In retrospect, I probably should have gone to the large,
handicapped stall even though the door would not lock because that bit of time
lost in making the stall switch proved to be a bit too long under the
circumstances. By the time I had walked into the regular stall, the pressure on
my ass was reaching Biblical proportions. I began "The Move."
For those women who may be reading this, let me take a moment
to explain "The Move." Men know exactly what their bowels are up to at
any given second. And when the time comes to empty the cache, a sequence of
physiological events occur that can not be stopped under any circumstances.
There is a move men make that involves simultaneously approaching the toilet,
beginning the body turn to position ones ass toward said toilet, hooking ones
fingers into ones waistline, and pulling down the pants while beginning the
squat at the same time.
It is a very fluid motion that, when performed properly,
results in the flawless expulsion of shit at the exact same second that ones ass
is properly placed on the toilet seat. Done properly, it even assures that the
choad is properly inserted into the front rim of the toilet in the event that
the piss stream lets loose at the same time; it is truly a picture of
coordination rivalling that of a skilled ballet dancer.
I was about half-way into "The Move" when I looked
down at the floor and saw a pile of vomit that had been previously expelled by
one of those little bastards attending kids night; it was mounded up in the
corner so I did not notice it when I had first walked into the stall.
Normally, I would not have been bothered by such a thing, but
I had eaten so much and the pressure upward was so intense, that I hit a rarely
experienced gag reflex. And once that reflex started, combined with the intense
pressure upward caused by the bloated stomach, four plates of macaroni and beef
started coming up for a rematch. What happened next was so quick that the exact
sequence of events are a bit fuzzy, but I will try to reconstruct them as best I
can.
In that moment of impending projectile vomiting, my attention
was diverted from the goings-on at the other end. To put a freeze frame on the
situation, I was half crouched down to the toilet, pants pulled down to my
knees, with a load of vomit coming up my oesophagus.
Now, most of you know that vomiting takes precedence over shit
no matter what is about to come slamming out of your ass. It is apparently an
evolutionary thing since shitting will not kill you, but vomiting takes a
presence of mind to accomplish so that you do not aspirate any food into the
bronchial tubes and perhaps choke to death. My attention was thus diverted.
At that very split second, my ass exploded in what can only be
described as a wake. . . you know, as in a newspaper headline along the lines of
"30, 000 Killed In Wake of Typhoon Fifi" or something similar.
In what seemed to be most suitably measured in cubic feet, an
enormous plug of shit the consistency of thick mud with embedded pockets of
greasy liquid came flying out of my ass. But remember, I was only half-way down
on the toilet at that moment. The shit wave was of such force and of just such
an angle in relation to the back curve of the toilet seat that it ricocheted off
the back of the seat and slammed into the wall at an angle of incidence equal to
the angle at which it initially hit the toilet seat. Then I sat down.
Recall that when that event occurred, I was already half-way
to sitting anyway and had actually reached the point of no return. I have always
considered myself as relatively stable gravitationally, but when you get beyond
a certain point, you're going down no matter how limber you may be. Needless to
say, the shit wave, though of considerable force, was not so sufficient so as to
completely glance off the toilet seat and deposit itself on the walls, unlike
what you would see when hitting a puddle with a high-pressure water hose; even
though you throw water at the puddle, the puddle gets moved and no water is left
to re-form a puddle. There was a significant amount of shit remaining on about
one-third of the seat rim which I had now just collapsed upon.
Now, back to the vomit. . .
While all the shitting was going on, the vomit was still on
its way up.
By the time I had actually collapsed on the toilet, my mouth
had filled up with a goodly portion of the macaroni and beef I had just
consumed.
OK, so what does the human body instinctively do when
vomiting? One bends over. So I bent over. I was still sitting on the toilet,
though.
Therefore, bending over resulted in me placing my head above
my now slightly-opened legs, positioned in between my knees and waist. Also
directly above my pants which were now pulled down to a point just midway
between my knees and my ankles. Oh, did I mention that I was wearing not just
pants, but sweat pants with elastic on the ankles. In one mighty push, some
three pounds of macaroni and beef, two or three Cokes, and a couple of Big, Fat
Yeast Rolls were deposited in my pants. . . on the inside. . . with no ready
exit at the bottom down by my feet. In the next several seconds, there were a
handful of farts, a couple of turds, and the event ended, yet I was now sitting
there with my pants full of vomit, my back covered in shit that had bounced off
the toilet, spattered on three ceramic-tiled walls to a height of about five
feet, and still had enough force to come back at me, covering the back of my
shirt with droplets of liquid shit. All the while thick shit was spread all over
my ass in a ring curiously in the shape of a toilet seat.
And there was no fucking toilet paper.
What could I do but laugh. I must have sounded like a complete
maniac to the guy who then wandered into the bathroom. He actually asked if I
was OK since I was laughing so hard I must have sounded like I was crying
hysterically. I calmed down just enough to ask him if he would get the manager.
And told him to have the manager bring some toilet paper. When the manager
walked in, he brought the toilet paper with him, but in no way was prepared for
what happened next. I simply told him that there was no way I was going to
explain what was happening in the stall, but that I needed several wet towels
and I needed him to go ask my wife to come help me. I told him where we were
sitting and he left. At that point, I think he was probably assuming that I had
pissed just a bit in my pants or something similarly benign.
About two minutes later, my wife came into the bathroom not
knowing what was wrong and with a certain amount of worry in her voice. I
explained to her (still laughing and having trouble getting out words) that I
had a slight accident and needed her help. Knowing that I had experienced some
close calls in the past, she probably assumed that I had laid down a small turd
or something and just needed to bring the car around so we could bolt
immediately. Until I asked her, I'm sure she had no idea that she was about to
go across the street and purchase me new underwear, new socks, new pants, a new
shirt, and (by that time due to considerable leakage around the elastic ankles
thingies) new sneakers.
And she then started to laugh herself since I was still
laughing. She began to ask for an explanation as to what had happened when I
promised her that I would tell her later, but that I just needed to handle
damage control for the time being. She left. The manager then came back in with
a half-dozen wet towels and a few dry ones. I asked him to also bring a mop and
bucket upon which he assured me that they would clean up anything that needed to
be cleaned. Without giving him specific details, I explained that what was going
on in that stall that night was far in excess of what I would expect anyone to
deal with, what with most of the folks working at Ryan's making minimum wage or
just slightly above. At that moment, I think it dawned on him exactly the
gravity of the situation. Then that manager went so far above the call of duty
that I will be eternally grateful for his actions. He hooked up a hose.
Fortunately, commercial bathrooms are constructed with tile
walls and tile floors and have a drain in the middle of the room in order to
make clean up easy. Fortunately, I was in a commercial bathroom. He hooked up
the hose to the spigot located under the sink as I began cleaning myself up with
the wet towels. Just as I was finishing, my wife got back with the new clothes
and passed them into the stall, whereupon I stuffed the previously worn clothing
into the plastic bag that came from the store, handing the bag to my wife. I
finished cleaning myself off and carefully put on my new clothes, still stuck in
the stall since I figured that it would be in bad taste to go out of the stall
to get redressed in the event I happened to be standing there naked and some
little bastard kid walked in.
At that point, I had only made a mess; I had not yet committed
a felony and intended to keep it that way. When I finished getting dressed, I
picked up the hose and cleaned up the entire stall, washing down the remains
toward the drain in the centre of the room. I put down the hose and walked out
of the bathroom.
I had intended to go to the manager and thank him for all he
had done, but when I walked out, three of the management staff were there to
greet me with a standing ovation. I started laughing so hard that I thought I
was going to throw up again, but managed to scurry out to the car where my wife
was now waiting to pick me up by the front door.
The upshot of all this is that I strongly recommend eating
dinner at Ryan's Steak House. They have, by far, the nicest management staff of
any restaurant in which I have eaten.
|