Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
+1 I always use it and I sit on public toilet seats too.
Same. I touch public handrails and crosswalk buttons and don’t wash my hands immediately when I get home.
Thanks for spreading the germs. Touch whatever you need to, but wash your hands when you get home and before eating too. That's just basic hygiene
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
+1 I always use it and I sit on public toilet seats too.
Same. I touch public handrails and crosswalk buttons and don’t wash my hands immediately when I get home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
Pee outdoors? They don’t even like to *go* outdoors because of the terrible “outside” smell. I think it’s a bit like the princess and the pea; only DCUM noses are rarefied enough to smell the dreaded “outside” smell.
OMG, I forgot about that. Thanks for the memory.
I’m no germaphobe, and I always make coffee in the hotel room, regardless of the type of coffee and maker. I also let our cats walk on the countertops and I scrub my sink only with soap and water, never any bleach. But I can also attest that the “outdoor smell” discussed on DCUM is real, and it’s not the fresh smell of a lovely spring or crisp fall day. It’s chemicals and sulfur, has nothing to do with sweat, and it only happens on certain days depending on wind direction and humidity and pollution levels. I do have an acute sense of smell. My husband, who doesn’t, can almost never smell it.
PP here. I absolutely do believe you.
However, I think the original post was not a come-and-go thing, but something that was ever-present, invarying, and would cling to people and animals that had been outside, so that she could smell it on any person who stepped outside, anytime. Or am I misremembering? (I might be.)
You are remembering correctly. And it was HILARIOUS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
Pee outdoors? They don’t even like to *go* outdoors because of the terrible “outside” smell. I think it’s a bit like the princess and the pea; only DCUM noses are rarefied enough to smell the dreaded “outside” smell.
OMG, I forgot about that. Thanks for the memory.
I’m no germaphobe, and I always make coffee in the hotel room, regardless of the type of coffee and maker. I also let our cats walk on the countertops and I scrub my sink only with soap and water, never any bleach. But I can also attest that the “outdoor smell” discussed on DCUM is real, and it’s not the fresh smell of a lovely spring or crisp fall day. It’s chemicals and sulfur, has nothing to do with sweat, and it only happens on certain days depending on wind direction and humidity and pollution levels. I do have an acute sense of smell. My husband, who doesn’t, can almost never smell it.
PP here. I absolutely do believe you.
However, I think the original post was not a come-and-go thing, but something that was ever-present, invarying, and would cling to people and animals that had been outside, so that she could smell it on any person who stepped outside, anytime. Or am I misremembering? (I might be.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
Pee outdoors? They don’t even like to *go* outdoors because of the terrible “outside” smell. I think it’s a bit like the princess and the pea; only DCUM noses are rarefied enough to smell the dreaded “outside” smell.
OMG, I forgot about that. Thanks for the memory.
I’m no germaphobe, and I always make coffee in the hotel room, regardless of the type of coffee and maker. I also let our cats walk on the countertops and I scrub my sink only with soap and water, never any bleach. But I can also attest that the “outdoor smell” discussed on DCUM is real, and it’s not the fresh smell of a lovely spring or crisp fall day. It’s chemicals and sulfur, has nothing to do with sweat, and it only happens on certain days depending on wind direction and humidity and pollution levels. I do have an acute sense of smell. My husband, who doesn’t, can almost never smell it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
Pee outdoors? They don’t even like to *go* outdoors because of the terrible “outside” smell. I think it’s a bit like the princess and the pea; only DCUM noses are rarefied enough to smell the dreaded “outside” smell.
OMG, I forgot about that. Thanks for the memory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
Pee outdoors? They don’t even like to *go* outdoors because of the terrible “outside” smell. I think it’s a bit like the princess and the pea; only DCUM noses are rarefied enough to smell the dreaded “outside” smell.
OMG, I forgot about that. Thanks for the memory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are so precious. I sometimes imagine the DCUM plane crash landing on a deserted island, and the vast majority of you dying in the first 24 hours because you refuse to pee outdoors.
- Another frequent hotel guest who always makes coffee in the room and somehow has survived.
Pee outdoors? They don’t even like to *go* outdoors because of the terrible “outside” smell. I think it’s a bit like the princess and the pea; only DCUM noses are rarefied enough to smell the dreaded “outside” smell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm a microbiologist. The water is boiled or comes close to boiling point in those coffee makers. That kills off most bacteria and mold. If the concern is bleach or toxic agents in the rinsing process the hotel uses, rinse it out again and check that it's empty before pouring clean water in it. You can also rinse out the mugs.
I rarely stay in super expensive hotels. The hotels where I stay always have disposable water and coffee cups and they are wrapped in plastic. But I'm also not a germaphobe. If I do stay in a hotel that has a restaurant on site, how are their coffee mugs cleaner than the mugs that would be in my hotel room? Do they hand wash the room mugs and put the restaurant mugs into their dishwasher? I trust that the utensils, drinkware and plates are clean when I eat in a restaurant. So I would trust the ones in the hotel room as well.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see the harm in the K-Cup type, where they drip directly into the cup you’ll be drinking out of.
Am I missing something?
Anonymous wrote:
I'm a microbiologist. The water is boiled or comes close to boiling point in those coffee makers. That kills off most bacteria and mold. If the concern is bleach or toxic agents in the rinsing process the hotel uses, rinse it out again and check that it's empty before pouring clean water in it. You can also rinse out the mugs.