Can You Change a Toilet Paper Roll?

Enjoying the humor of Erma Bombeck is amplified when you are a mother of seven. For you younger moms and you older ones who synapses are misfiring, I will remind you that Bombeck was a famous author who wrote about the comedy of motherhood. One of her most memorable books, If Life Is a Bowl of Cherries, What Am I Doing in the Pits? Bombeck ponders the possibility of her death and fears no one in her family will be able to change a toilet paper roll.
 
I learned last week that I need not worry... my husband knows. I know this because he chose to start a date night with a soliloquy on how changing toilet paper rolls were such a burden on him. Do you want to know my response??!!! After a few choice words of mine own, I told him I was the choir and I would have to question his assessment since I am the one who carries the burden. I did agree with my husband that we do go through quite a lot of toilet paper. Surprised, our most frequent flier is our youngest son, Jacob and even more curiously, the amount of toilet paper he uses is inversely proportional to his BMI. In my husband’s words, “Jake you have the smallest butt in this family and yet you use the most toilet paper. How does that happen?” A rhetorical question, in part, but the reality of it is when my son did his “business” a whole roll of TP was used. Economical big rolls are out of the question!
 
As mothers know, learning how to change the toilet paper roll is only the tip of the iceberg. Of course, Bombeck knew that too! She stated in this same book, “The tissue spindle isn’t the only home skill that has been mastered by no one at our house. Consequently, I (Bombeck) have put together a single family survival manual when Mom is gone.”

After reviewing Bombeck’s survival manual, I decided some additions were needed. Think of it as an update for the new millennium.

First lesson Bombeck gives is “changing the toilet paper roll.” Check. My husband has that one.
 
Second lesson is “how to wash toothpaste off the side of washbowl.” I personally would include hair shavings and loogies, but unfortunately, this requires a higher level of thinking.
 
Third lesson is “turning on the stove.” I would include turning off the stove as part of the lesson. At this moment, only about three of our seven children, six, which are of legal age, show any tendency to mastering the stove, so hopefully they make enough to pay for a cook.
 
Fourth lesson is “closing a door.” Oh, this is a good one. This might even rival changing the toilet paper roll. From my experience, the inability to close a door includes, but not limited to, closing a cabinet, a drawer, a chute, a car door, a pantry and a freezer door. There is an upside to children leaving doors opens. When I come home, I can tell you exactly what my children have been doing by just following the clues of open doors. For example, garage door is open, so one or more of my children have arrived home. The cabinet with plates is standing open, silverware drawer is open, pantry door is open and cabinet with the glasses is open. Obviously, my child was hungry and required a snack. Follow upstairs and see my bedroom door open, the towel cabinet open, shower door open and the chute door are open. My child took a shower in my bathroom and surprised threw their dirty clothes down the chute. I walk back downstairs and I see the front door open. My child has evening plans.
 
Fifth lesson is
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