What happens if you eat tissue paper




















Hurry up and get your ass to North Korea so you can be safe from dangerous toilet paper. RichUK Lifer. Feb 14, 10, It shouldn't be a problem if you drink some toilet water to wash it down.

Warrior Member. Sep 28, 40 1 0. Did you wipe first? Reactions: HomerJS. Dec 12, 3, 0 0. You should write a poem about it. Perknose said:. You should write a pome about it. Nov 18, 28, BoomerD said:. MovingTarget Diamond Member. Jun 22, 8, 96 Look on the bright side, the next time you poop, the brown square will be right there. Jun 10, 14, 3, Try swallowing some bleach to rinse it out and let us know how that works for you.

Printer Bandit said:. Feb 13, 83, 16 Leros Lifer. Jul 11, 21, 7 You should be fine. Toilet paper was designed to break up quickly in water. I'm sure your digestive system will have no problem. Jeff7 Lifer. Jan 4, 41, 17 The only thing that comes to mind is the use of bleach to make the paper white. Then, I swallowed the lump of toilet paper, readjusted my dress so that my pit stains were as hidden as possible, and rejoined the dinner party.

I would later learn that not all toilet paper is equally appetizing — cheap one-ply varieties taste like chemicals and fluffy overpriced brands are too thick to swallow without water. Our Angel Soft double roll had the perfect taste and consistency. My mother had just taught me how to start counting Weight Watchers points. I knew I was overweight, but I had learned how to binge eat three years earlier when I started attending therapy. My therapist would bring in four bags of chocolate candies each session and, after preparing me a mug full of hot chocolate and whipped cream, lay the bags on the coffee table in front of me.

I also started having panic attacks and depressive episodes and expressing how I wanted to kill myself, how something must be wrong with me because I felt so very unloved. It should have felt safe. He and his wife and their children should have felt like family. It was all so different from the reality that only I seemed to acknowledge.

I had relied on eating paper any time I felt anxious, or sad, or angry, any time I wished I could reach for a candy bar or a bag of chips. That summer, I worked at the ticket booth at a waterpark. My favorite shifts were the ones where I was alone in the tiny locker rental shack across from the wave pool. I gave swimsuit-clad guests a locker key in exchange for a single dollar bill, then recorded the number of transactions on a piece of printer paper. In between customers, I read from a paperback book that I had smuggled in under my shirt.

During my breaks, I used my employee discount to buy nachos and Sour Skittles and giant cups of Sprite. I crammed toilet paper into my mouth and chewed on pens and bit erasers off of pencils. I started coming up with ways to pass the time alone in my locker hut.

I wondered if I could get away with pocketing some of the dollar bills I collected. Unfortunately, I only got locker shifts once every couple of weeks, which meant I needed to adapt my strategy for the ticket counter. It was a much trickier operation, considering there were not only cameras, but also at least five fellow ticket sellers and a supervisor nearby.

After a couple days, I figured it out. Once a day or so, a customer would come up asking for a replacement wristband because theirs had come off. During a slow period, or when the supervisor was on break, I would wait for a customer to come up and buy a general admission band. Then, I logged the transaction as a replacement band and found an opportune moment to reach down to tie my shoes, instead shoving the small bundle of cash into the side of my New Balance sneakers.

I realized I was becoming more like my father, who was a known liar and cheat. But I knew that my sneakiness was different than his. It looked more like me doing everything I could to control my environment, my behavior, my brain. It looked like praying and ruminating and isolating and never being vulnerable with anyone.

It looked like pulling strands of my hair out one by one and eating handfuls of toilet paper and sticks of chalk and the lead out of mechanical pencils when I was alone. Please help answer this query, the whole family is stunned, even her two children know that she does this! However, in direct answer to your question, it probably has done little harm to her digestion. The major component of the toilet paper, wood pulp would simply act as roughage. There might be some concern about the chemicals used to bleach and prepare the paper, although the quantities would be very small.

It would be sensible for her to discuss the problem with her GP who may suggest further help such as counselling. This would be greatly more effective if your daughter was herself keen to abandon the habit. I wish her every success. Certainly now that it is general family knowledge would be the ideal time to seek help. Addicted to chewing gum. Can you help me start eating again?

Depression and eating dissorders. Do have an eating disorder? Do I have an eating disorder? Do I have anorexia nervosa? Eating problems and diabetes. Helping a friend with bulimia. How can I help my daughter with her panic attacks and bulimia?



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