The following was imported from another site. Have you had any of these or other experiences like them?
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I was born in the mid 40s and grew up in what I now realize was the tail end of the Golden Age of Enemas. Here's what I mean:
When I was a girl, I got an enema every Saturday, whether I needed one or not. So did my brothers and sisters. So did my cousins and schoolmates. It was a normal thing for a kid in those days.
I also got plenty of other enemas. Any sickness that kept you from going to school meant getting an enema and probably a series of them until "returns were clear" as the saying went. You didn't even have to be that sick. A fever or just about any symptom of anything would get you an enema.
Every Sears, Wards, Pennys and Spiegel catalogue had at least a third of a page devoted to a wide range of enema and douche syringes. Sears had them in the "sickroom supplies" section, but you could find "enema syringes" and "douche syringes" in the regular index. It was not unusual to see three or more fountain syringes and combination syringes for sale plus multiple bulb enema and bulb douche syringes. You could buy two or three types of folding travel syringes. You could get fountain syringes with a built-in higginson bulb in the hose.
Many fountain syringes came with four pipes: infant and adult rectal, and two vaginal pipes. On some sets, the second vaginal pipe was as long and thick as the pipe on a bulb douche.
New types of syringes were constantly being invented. Right after plastic tube squeeze type ketchup dispensers were invented, somebody screwed a douche nozzle on it, slid a shield over the pipe and it was in one of the major catalogues. Ironically, they put the shield on upside down.
We'd get little catalogues in the mail, something like Lillian Vernon today. Most of them had at least one douche syringe inside, sometimes a new design.
And that was the tail end of the Golden Age! Find some Sears and other mainstream catalogues from the tweens, twenties, thirties and forties! You'll find full pages devoted to enema equipment. I've seen JBL bags in those catalogues and also hose and nozzle /stand combinations that would covert a hot water bottle into a JBL syringe. Three quart syringes are normal and four quart bags aren't uncommon.
And then read about the Victorian era and my god, those kids' bowels never had a chance to dry! If you could afford a nanny you expected her to keep your children's bowels open and they probably hardly ever got a chance to poop normally.
Bring back the Golden Age!