Dirty Enema

Dirty Enema




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Dirty Enema



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A shower enema enables a person to flush his or her colon at home, without the need for a trained professional's assistance. Among the different types of enemas, a home enema is considered one of the most cost-efficient, especially for individuals who undergo regular treatments. This type is accomplished by attaching special enema supplies to one's bathroom shower, which allows for quick and convenient colon cleansing.
Unlike other types of home enema, a shower enema doesn't require the use of an enema bag to pump water into the colon. The only necessary supplies are nozzle tips to insert into the rectum and a pressure valve to control the flow of water. Most kits also include additional tubing for greater ease of use. Special adapters might be needed to attach the nozzles or tubing to shower heads that cannot be removed from the water source.
After it has been assembled, an enema set is relatively simple to use. The nozzle is inserted into the rectum, often with the aid of lubricant. The shower is turned on, and the pressure valve is adjusted until the water flow is at a comfortable level. As the water flows through the tubing, the colon is cleansed of any fecal matter and other residue. After the colon has been moderately filled, the individual then removes the nozzle and defecates into the toilet.
Enemas have several potential benefits. Periodic colon cleansing may help to detoxify the body and promote regular bowel movement, making enemas a source of relief for individuals who are suffering from severe constipation . Enemas may also prevent the formation of painful polyps in the colon and rectum. A shower enema is especially useful for individuals who need to undergo regular treatment, because in the long run, the one-time investment in a set will be much cheaper than medical fees.
There are certain risk factors, however, that are associated with shower enemas. It does not regulate the amount of water entering the colon, unlike an enema bag. Overloading the colon with water can cause it to rupture, leading to severe medical problems. There also is no guarantee that the water pressure will be kept at safe levels, although the number of pressure-related injuries resulting from the use of these sets is quite few.
It is recommended, as with any self-performed medical procedures, that an individual who is considering a shower enema first consult a trained professional to determine if the procedure itself is safe for that person. In addition, all instructions accompanying the set should be followed precisely in order to avoid any possible medical issues.
I'll need to invest in the shower kit, the stainless steel nozzle type, so that I can just attach the nozzle and flush myself. I do the shower enema once every week or two; but I would like to do it nightly (I live with roommates, so I'd have to do it late at night while they're asleep) as I get more used to it.
As for the procedure itself, for now, since I don't have a kit, I detach the shower head from the hose and I press the tip of the hose against my anal opening (not sticking it inside) and let just a rush of warm water fill my rectum for 5 seconds, then I remove the hose, and "blow" the water (and funk) back
out. I repeat this step a few times until I'm blowing clear water out of my rectum. The warm water helps to break down the 'stuff' inside so it will all blow out with the water. I haven't had any problems with the water pressure, and after I'm done I can feel the difference in cleanliness and comfort. Then I clean the hose with bleach and replace the shower head back on. I also flush myself before having sex so that I'm clean and my partner is happy, knowing that we can enjoy a pleasurable time together without any 'accidents'.
I am doing this daily and I have not faced any problem until now. However, I would love not to use this and have proper bowel movements.
Obviously, making sure the water pressure isn't too forceful is a must. However, I must say that since I have started doing shower enemas I no longer am constipated or have hemorrhoid fissures. I can pass stools with no pain and haven't felt better in my whole life.
A shower enema can be extremely dangerous. Indoor plumbing is "famous"/notorious for wild water pressure swings. A Shower enema fed from this kind of water supply is very dangerous, if not fatal.
High water pressure can rupture your rectum, anal canal or lower intestines, long before you can pull the plug! Any water infiltration into the abdominal cavity can be the last. These types can kill. There isn't a safe pressure release sold in any of these kits. You are taking your lives in your hands.
The pressure is critical! I cannot stress too much that to much pressure will kill. Excessive pressure can kill you! Even if you have to cut the flow to a trickle then that's what you have to do. Doing this too fast can rupture the rectal or intestinal wall in a second, and before you can react it will be too late!
If you must use an enema on a regular basis, the old fashioned red bag is pretty safe to use.
If your shower is close to the toilet you can attach the enema shower and sit on the toilet. All you need is a shower cut off valve that you get at Lowes to cut the water on and off. Then slip a colon tube over the small stainless steel nozzle, adjust the pressure and you are set up for enema, anal douche, or a colonic. It's a great set up. LS
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Mel Brooks was once on Michael Parkinson’s chat show sometime in the early 1980s where he described the opening scenes to his proposed next movie. Brooks explained he wanted his film to begin like Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey —but instead of apes he wanted to show a neanderthal standing upright for the first time. His spiel went something like this— I’m gonna paraphrase so deal with it :
It’s early morning—just before dawn. The sun is slowly igniting the horizon. A band of gold appears as the theme from Thus Sprach Zarathustra begins to play under the picture. As the sun rises a group of neanderthals huddle together fearfully watching this magical giant disc rising up like a god. As the music swells a beam of pure golden light radiates across the landscape.
The neanderthals are scared and cower away form this approaching light—all except one who climbs on all fours towards the top of the mountain. As this inquisitive figure moves forward the sun rises. The sky is now fire bright.
The golden orb continues to rise—the neanderthal reaches out to grasp it. He begins to rise up on two legs. First one then the other arm reach out towards the sky. As the music reaches its dramatic climax—the neanderthal is standing teetering on tiptoe arms raised. The neanderthal looks up at the sun. Then slowly at his arms—at his hands—then down at his feet. He has risen up like the sun and now stands upright for the very first time . This creature has liberated his arms to create, to produce and to help him shape a new world. His fellow neanderthals scurry away in fear. As a new day begins the first homo erectus looks at his hands—mesmerized by his fingers, by their potential to grip and move, to adapt and change. He lowers his arms and looks down at them contemplating his new power and the potential now opened to him. The music finishes as this first proto-human looks down considering the significance of his actions. It’s a powerful moment in human evolution. He looks again at his hands—he’s free to use them to help others—to change the world.
And that’s when he starts masturbating.
Human evolution—the progression towards self-gratification.
Which brings us—in roundabout fashion—to these historic and seemingly erotic images depicting the use of the enema in medicine and sex. What begins as a series of etchings often satirically showing women and men seeking much-needed relief for their “night soil” evolves into more recent imagery where the enema is used primarily for sexual gratification. It is apparent that humanity has an unbridled ingenuity for finding gratification from almost anything—vegetables, furniture, house hold appliances and even medicinal treatments.
The drawings and paintings from the twentieth century were produced by various artists who made small change producing illustrations for various editions of erotica. Some names are aliases—most notably Julie Delcourt who may or may not be the pseudonym for Richard Hegemann—a German artist who also worked under the names A. Hegemann, A. Hegener and P. Rollmann. Hegemann excelled in depicting matronly women thrashing supplicant men and badly behaved boys and girls in sailor suits who seemingly relished the whack of their teacher’s belt. Many of Julie Delcourt’s other paintings (not included here) are decidedly NSFW and rather questionable.
An individual who derives pleasure from receiving enemas is called a klismaphiliac . The term klismaphilia was only coined fairly recently by Dr. Joanne Denko in 1973—which tends to make it seem as if klismaphiliac is only a modern practice. But as can be seen by these illustrations from the the 18th century and more recently the 1920s and 1930s— klismaphilia has a much longer history.
 

‘A fashionable lady being given an enema by a charming young man’—Dicuelt 18th century.
 

‘A peeping-tom spying on a fashionable lady receiving an enema’—Pierre-Antoine Baudouin.
 

‘A Frenchman receiving an enema from a Hungarian apothecary by order of a Dutch doctor’ (1742).
 

‘Miss’—Louis Malteste.
 

Louis Malteste.
 

Illustration from ‘Jacinthe’—P. Beloti
 

Illustration from ‘Jacinthe’—P. Beloti
 

‘Humiliations Cheries’—Dumoulin.
 

Eugene Reunier.
 

Margit Gaál.
 

N. Carman.
 

Julie Delcourt.
 

Julie Delcourt.
 

Julie Delcourt.
 

Julie Delcourt.
 

Julie Delcourt.
 
Via Wellcome Images , WikiCommons , Retroguy .
 


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Date Posted: 00:25:42 06/22/10 Tue



When I was six and my sister was seven, we went into a foster home for various family related reasons. Our new foster mom treated us very good but was also very strict about our health and us having eating right and having regular BM's. The first night we were there, she told us that she wasn't sure if we were constipated or had worms, and that she would give us both a very good soap enema that night before we had our baths and went to bed. When we asked what an enema was, she told us that it would make us both make lots of caca that very night. Neither of us believed her because the only thing we had had before was laxatives and it usually took until the next day to work if it worked at all. We were both in just our underpants in the living room when we saw her open the linen closet and take out what looked like a red hot water bottle but with a hose attached that had a black tip on the end. My sister got called to the bathroom first, and when she came out an hour later (cleaned out and bathed) her face was red and she told me that I would be on the toilet going alot in just a few minutes. I thought she was just telling me one of her stories, but a few minutes later I was called to the bathroom and shortly after I was laying over my foster mom's lap with my underpants down and with hose up my butt and the enema was going in and I had the strongest urge to make caca that I ever had had, plus a big tummy ache too. I was then too, much to my discomfort and surprise, a real believer in the the power of the enema bag. When I came out of the bathroom, my sister said "I told you so", and there was nothing I could think of to answer her back.


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Date Posted: 06:59:59 06/23/10 Wed




My first one must have been when I was too young to remember.

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[> [> Subject: Re: Our First Enemas




Date Posted: 07:08:17 08/10/10 Tue




JanetB:
You're not alone on that!
My sister is 10 years older than I am. She remembers having to hold me in position when I was only a few weeks old, while mom gave me an enema with an infant bulb.

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Date Posted: 14:03:54 06/25/10 Fri




I remember getting enemas as a preschooler, but none were special beyond being something I didn't like to happen. But the first special enema I really remember was when I was nine and we moved into our new house. After a couple days of getting stuff put into the right spots, mom noticed I was a bit quiet (by my normal standards) and asked if something was wrong. I just said "I can't go" and mom said, "well Dee, you will have the honor of being the first person to get an enema in this house. And we'll make it very special by letting you use the bag, not the syringe."
I don't know why it felt so special to get an enema fromthe bag ... but mom made it seem special. When dad and my brothers went back to the old house to get one of the last loads of boxes, Mom said "let's do it" and I ran (I don't know why) to the bathroom and undressed without being told.
She administered a small enema as I laid over her lap, then I expelled, and she gave me another and when she was giving me the third enema, I began to feel much better.
As I was expelling the last enema, she put the stuff away and no one, except mom and me, knew that I had gotten a very special enema in our new house. She said it would be our secret. And it was

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Author:
Little Sarah
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Date Posted: 16:11:10 06/25/10 Fri




I was 4 or 5 and had a bad cold. Mom came along with the enema can and told me it was for me (until then, it had always been for her). It wouldnt hurt and I would feel better after the enema. She asked me to receive the enema without fuss or crying - like she had received her enema when I was born. So I did. It didnt hurt and I felt better after the enema. Afterwards everyone we knew was told Little Sarah had received her 1st enema like a lady - gitl was I proud!
Clystered hugs
Little Sarah

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Date Posted: 09:13:19 06/26/10 Sat




When I should receive my 1st enema, I was very afraid. Mom told me it wouldnt hurt - but I was still afraid. Mom called Grandma and Grandma gave Mom an enema to show me it doenst hurt. Then it was my time.
Later I did the same with my 3 daughters.
And before my (by now) 2 grandaughters got their 1 st enemas, my daughters called me and I gave 1st my daughter and then my granddaughter an enema.
Enemaed hugs
Marianne

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Date Posted: 10:10:35 06/27/10 Sun




I got enemas from such a very young age that I don't remember even getting the first one. It was from a bulb which is what I got until maybe age 7 at which point all enemas were given from our family's combination syringe.

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[> [> Subject: Re: Our First Enemas




Date Posted: 10:07:38 06/28/10 Mon




I can't remember my first enemas, than again I can't remember when I wasn't getting enemas on a regular basis. Mom did not need a reason. If she or one of us kids needed an enema than we all got one. Assembly line style. First little sis, and while she was on the potty chair I got mine over the lap, than big bro got his on the floor as I was on the toilet and had to be finished when he was full and finally Mom took hers. Dad never took or gave an enema to any of us.

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Date Posted: 15:13:38 06/28/10 Mon




My first enema was at age 12 when my periods started. By the time my period was over I was pretty constipated. Mom told me that after every one of her periods she took an enema and now after my periods she would give me an enema and it was just a part of being sexually mature.

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Author:
Little Sarah
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Date Posted: 18:45:27 06/28/10 Mon




My grandmother, my mother and my older sister Helen have always taken enemas at the beginning of their periods. And when my periods started, Mom asked me if I wanted to try period enemas too - I wanted, and I have contimued. Later my 4 daughter decided to receive period enemas - several of their classmates knew this and found it a good idea. I am sure later my granddaughter will also receive period enemas.
Enemaed hugs
Little Sarah
BTW, Mom gave me several enemas before my first period.

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Date Posted: 17:12:00 06/30/10 Wed




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