The invention herein pertains to bidets and the like, and particularly pertains to bidets which are attached to flexible water bottles.
A bidet is not a toilet. The two appliances are often combined in modern bathrooms; but historically and functionally they're completely different devices. A toilet is used to capture waste; a bidet is used to help remove it from you. The bidet—whether full-sized model or portable—sprays water on the anus or genitals to remove unwanted material and wash you.
Some bidets, the full-sized models mostly, can warm your body, dry you afterward, or perform other functions. But all of them feature that same basic ability: removing feces remaining after elimination or in aiding feminine hygiene.
A portable bidet simply does that in a slightly different way than a full-sized home model. Rather than being built-in to a toilet or toilet seat (there are relatively few entirely separate bidet appliances in the U.S. today), the portable style is just what the name suggests.
It's typically a bottle containing a small portion of water.
The United States has largely ignored the bidet and its spin-offs.
Now Agrawal, along with other investors, is backing a toilet attachment called Tushy, which adds a small water spigot under the rim. It amounts to a spritzing jet attached to a standard toilet seat—there's no separate washing basin or washlet funtions. Tushy's website doesn't bother with euphemisms, plainly saying that its product is “for people who poop”; and bluntly argues “if a bird pooped on you, would you wipe it? No, you'd wash it off.”
With this frankness, Tushy is taking hard aim at the female millennial market. If Tushy succeeds, it will show that the bidet can be embraced for the very reasons it was once shunned: its feminine associations. And maybe as it finally crosses the Atlantic, it can also cross the gender divide.
The aforesaid and other objectives are realized by providing a bidet wand cleaning tool having first rigid section and second flexible tubular section connected there between.
The flexible section allows water to flow through the tubular body of the bidet wand cleaning tool without interruption even when the flexible section is curved or bent during use. An opening at the distal end provides streams of water for cleaning the anal and the vaginal areas. The tubular body can be threadably connected to a standard water bottle, proximate to a cutoff valve near the water bottle neck opening.
In the following, we describe the structure of an embodiment of a portable bidet 10 with reference to
In related embodiments, the portable bidet 10 allows individual persona use, and is a portable, self-contained, refillable, reusable, perineal-anal-genital washing device designed to replace or compliment hand wiping with toilet paper.
In a related embodiment, the liquid 21 can be warm, or lukewarm, and can have soothing medications added to water.
In a related embodiment, the wand 13 can be configured with a length of substantially 13 inches, or in a range of 8-10 inches.
For a better understanding of the invention and its use, turning now to the drawings, the preferred form of the bidet wand cleaning tool 10 is shown in
As it is often necessary when cleaning buttocks, to bend or curve the cleaning tool for greater convenience, flexible section 13 provides this ability.
As depicted in
The rigid sections 2 and 14 are formed from a relatively high impact plastic and extends radially from first rigid section 14 as shown in
Various changes and improvements can be made to the preferred form of the invention as herein descried and such changes and modifications are anticipated and the examples and illustrations are merely for the illustrative purposes and are not intended to limit the scope of the appended claims.