Don't try to dig

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Toothpaste

Take toothpaste for example. When I was a child, toothpaste was white and came in a metal tube with a red screw-on cap. Said cap was the subject of much dissent in households everywhere. People (mostly children and men) were always being accused (mostly by women) of failing to screw the top back on the toothpaste. The top often went missing causing the paste to ooze out onto the window ledge where it was kept. This, in turn, would dry into a chalky white powder and give the bathroom a disused, abandoned air that distressed housewives nationwide. Failure to screw the top back on the toothpaste was seen as evidence of a dissolute nature and proof (if any were needed beyond the continual leaving up of the toilet seat) that men were a) incapable of looking after themselves and b) naturally inconsiderate. To corroborate this theory further one only had to look at how they (men and children) squeezed the tube at the top not the bottom. A quick, careless pinch near the top of the tube and a blob of toothpaste obligingly popped out onto the brush. However, due to the nature of the metal tube this meant that two weeks later you were left with a flat bit at the top and a bulge at the bottom. This necessitated rolling the end of the tube up in order to force the paste further up the tube. If people could only be trained to squeeze from the bottom in the first place how much more efficient the whole operation would be.

I think now you can see what I mean by progress. First they put cheerful coloured stripes into the white paste and then they put it into plastic tubes that needed considerably less coaxing. Then, finally, someone had the bright idea of attaching the top to the tube so that it could never get lost and practically closed itself. Nowadays we have pastes of all types plus a variety of gels and an endless array of flavours (bubble gum flavour was one that failed to attract me recently). Keeping your smile shiny has never been easier.

For the record, I favour Sensodyne blue gel for sensitive teeth and I always squeeze from the bottom of the tube. If I were to be stranded on a desert island then my luxury item of choice would be a solar powered electric toothbrush.

Do tell. What's your most vivid toothpaste memory?

3 Comments:

  • At September 18, 2006 1:05 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    Hi Kay, its little sister here! As I recall the bathroom was one of my designated household chores...I remember those chalky toothpaste stains with a warm childhood glow!
    Incidently - given the fact that the best teeth I currently seem to have are all crowns, I don't expect much toothpaste actually used to end up on my brush!
    Jillie x

     
  • At September 21, 2006 6:54 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    I remember the introduction of Signal, which was (I think) the first toothpaste in the UK with a stripe. A red stripe. I remember being very puzzled by how they got the stripe in there. A bit like the Ascot pie conundrum - how do they get the egg running all the way through?
    Am I right in thinking that the two sisters who have already commented on toothpaste - Kay and Jill - would both tend to say tuthpaste rather than tooooothpaste?

     
  • At September 24, 2006 6:23 PM, Blogger Kay said…

    Re Paul's question: Am I right in thinking that the two sisters who have already commented on toothpaste - Kay and Jill - would both tend to say tuthpaste rather than tooooothpaste?

    The answer is Yup. Def tuthpaste.

     

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