Bath Food Anyone?

Am I supposed to eat this? Is this a new food-service industry? Brand slogan: “Economizing your work day by providing bath soap that doubles as a nutritious breakfast!” Even the little wrapper it came in felt more like granola bar packaging than body soap. (It was body soap I rubbed all over me, right?).

Could this be another shampoo series? ch:

(Why the hotel soap post today? I’m staying in the beautiful Lackawanna Station Hotel for my annual Writer’s Gettaway with friend and co-author, Wayne Thomas Batson).

Intense Repair

shampoo_repair_small

OK. I admit it. My shampoo saga is now a legacy. (Or an obsession).

It took going to Madrid to finally start me on the path of true shampoo righteousness. I entered the shower, and this greeted me. Intense repair.

Now, I’m not sure what “Aufbau” means, but I’m hoping it’s not Swahili for “monkey urine.” But if that’s what it takes to grow me some stellar hair, then bring it on. I’ll try anything once.

But here’s my question: when does something damaged merit “intense” repair? How broken does it have to be? And when is something beyond a state of repair?

Enlighten me, please. ch:

Body Envy

Body Envy

My latest shampoo experience.

When I picked up this bottle in a shower in Switzerland I thought, “At last, the perfect shampoo that describes me.”

Until I realized it wasn´t talking about my amazingly hairy chest or tummy-man-pouch. The word “body” in reference to hair isn´t something I have thought about for a long time.

But it did fit well with what I was teaching on at the Yverdon School of Worship last week. Paul wrote in two different places about a jealousy with a Spirit of evangelism on it. (Romans 11:11, 2 Corinthians 11:2). That the world would find the Body of Christ so attractive they would be jealous. The concept being that we move from evangelism through intrusion and invasion, to evangelism by invitation.

Unfortunately, it takes more than amazing shampoo for that one. ch:

Update: Flying from Madrid back to Geneva today. Geneva to NY tomorrow. Appreciate your prayers.

Not Again. Tousled Hair?

shampoo_tousled

Over Christmas week, Jennifer and I stayed with a longtime friend of the family outside of Rochester as there was no room for us in the inn. The bed was incredibly comfy, the atmosphere warm and inviting, and the newly renovated bathroom very stylish. Gotta’ love a hot shower. As I didn’t have my own shampoo, I reached for theirs.

You’ve got to be kidding me. Tousled?

So I tried it. And here’s me sporting the tousled look:

ch_tousled

This is someone’s cruel idea of a joke, I can just tell. I’m half ready to start my own line of products now. For bald dudes who still want to use shampoo. We’re people, too. ch:

PS :: Upon completing this post, my wife informed me that it was her shampoo. I feel violated.

- – -

BOOK

The Wrong Shampoo, Snoring, and the Cruel Irony of It All

long_hair_shampoo_for_bald_man

A few days ago I reach down to “my corner” of the shower (the one with one bottle, not twelve), and pull up a new shampoo. Timely. I had just run out, and I’m married to a wonderful wife who always keeps me stocked up. Obsessed with good smelling shampoo (the real reason I still use it), I decided to see what my bald head was going to indulge in for the next few weeks.

But what caught my eye was not the flavor. It was the type of shampoo. Or rather, the type of hair this particular shampoo is used for. Shampoo. For long hair. And better still, shampoo for people who have apparently had, or are intending to have, a long term relationship with their long hair.

I have neither. And worse yet, it even mocked me in Spanish.

But the personal products story is not over. In an attempt to curb my hellacious snoring via the Dutch nose I inherited from my father, my wife bought me Breathe Right Strips. Only my genuine excitement for my wife’s long-awaited peaceful night’s sleep motivated me to apply the strange fitting latex band. A glorified Band Aid really. Why don’t I just spend less money and stick a Dora the Explorer bandage on my face?

I read the directions, stuck the thing over my nose, then went to sleep. Hoping for the best.

Surprisingly, my nose was unusually clear during the night. Deep breaths. I liked it. And not as uncomfortable as I would have thought. So much so, that I forgot I had it on when I woke up at 6:55am to the word “Done!” coming from the other bathroom. Done is the one word my kids use to signal Jennifer and I that, “Hey, Parent, I’ve just pooped a lot on the toilet, I lack the needed motor skills to properly wipe myself, and I really need you because I’m tired of sitting here with this smell I’ve created.” I climb out of my bed, walk into the hallway, and find Eva sitting on the toilet. Waiting. As I reach down to do the deed, she says, “Dad, what the crap’s wrong with your nose?”

ch_nose_strips

Note to self. Remove Breathe Right Strip before wiping 4 year old’s butt. (Why wasn’t that on the directions?)

I crawled back into bed only after sending Eva to try and “sleep in” on this Saturday morning (a term I don’t think she’ll ever quite grasp, as she’s this morning-guy’s daughter). I’m just about to enter my REM stage when something wakes me up. No, not “done” again. Not my 5 month old telling the whole house he’s hungry. Not even my 3 year old playing WWF off the rungs of his crib. What was it you ask?

Jennifer. Snoring.

And when asked how my Breathe Right Stripes worked? She said, “Uh, I think it was louder.” Nice. ch: