Had kitchen and two baths updated a year or so ago. Our bedroom and master bath are on the first floor with walk-in shower. The upstairs also has a full bath with regular sized bath tub. I had the upstairs bathroom sink faucet installed with a tall kitchen faucet with regular flow and spray flow. The upstairs bathroom is my private enema room, and I always fill up in the sink. Even my five quart bag fits nicely under the kitchen style faucet.
Most often in the kitchen sink because it has a high arching faucet, but sometimes I will use the tub faucet. The vanity faucets are too low to be practical.
In the bathroom sink using a half gallon milk container then about 8 steps to the bed. Hang on door, lay down, take, expel, repeat!
I mix my soapy solutions in a 1qt measuring cup in kitchen sink. Then take that to tub, run a small amount of warm water in bag to get air out, Then pour solution in bag and top off with warm water.
If I am doing shower enemas, then in the shower or the tub faucet. When doing regular enemas, I will fill at the bathroom sink. I don't go out of the bathroom to fill my bag- I like to stay close to where I am going to be doing the enemas because I want to start injecting before the water begins to go cold.
Once I have the temp right I fill the bag just a bit and add the soap and than I fill up the bathroom sink, this way I can siphon the bag really really full by draining a bit of the water into the sink from the bag and than lowering the bag to the floor. I have two bags and both get really really swollen. The smaller one holds a little under 3 quarts or so filled this way and is great for the first Enema in a series.The big one I am not even really sure how much fits in it when filled this way but I swear I would not be surprised if it was over 6 quarts. Its awesome knowing that it is not gonna run out until long after I have had enough. It is really fun when my girlfriend hooks up the inline pump and fills me really slowly trying to see how many pumps she can get in me.
I always fill the bag, in the sink, in the bathroom. For myself i use two caps of Dr. Bonners peppermint soap, for my 2 older kids, they get one cap full. My youngest is still on fleets. I like the flow of water into the bag to be slow to not introduce too much air in the bag - reducing cramps. Almost all of the enemas i give are in the bathroom knee chest position - mostly if not totally nude
I fill my bag at the bathroom sink, using a plastic cup, because the faucet is too low to completely fill the bag directly
I typically use a hand held shower massager in the shower stall or bathtub most of the time. It's just convenience since I take most of my enemas in the shower stall. If I am mixing something in, I may do it at the kitchen sink since it is easier to add ingredients and wash or toss the added containers right away. Subsequent fills are usually in the shower stall because that is where I usually expel and it's just more convenient after I wash myself off. The bathroom sink just isn't deep enough to fill the bag so I seldom use it unless it's half a bag.
I always hang my bag from the shower head. If I want a cold water enema, I just use the hand-held shower head to fill the bag. If I want it warm or iced, I use a 1 gallon ice cream bucket and fill it from the bathroom sink.hankb
I was all prepared to let everyone in on the “siphon” method where you lay your closed top bag on the floor and put the end of the hose in the sink and let the bag swell but I’ve been beaten to it a few times. lol
It depends. If I use the Gallon open top Klystra bag, I fill it in the tub. IF other bags I use the bathroom sink. If in a motel I use the tub.
We finally got a sink the 2-qt bags will fit under3-qt and 4-qt bags still don't really hang freely so I still use the faucet on the bathtub
It's not like I have a preference, I just fill it from where it's most convenient, which in my case happens to be the bathroom spout (sink doesn't allow me to hang the bag under the tap). Sometimes, especially if I'm using a recipe other than plain water, I'll make use of a 1 L measuring jug to fill the bag. I use the jug also by keeping a filled one beside me when I'm taking a large volume enema beyond the capacity of the bag, for a mid-enema refilling. This way I can avoid the inconvenience of having to interrupt the enema and get up to add more water.
From the bathroom tub faucet, and then I hang the bag by a chord off of the shower pipe, as you see in my avatar.
I fill in the laundry room which is conveniently located next to the bath room. I keep the salt soda and Dr B close at hand
I take my enema sessions in one of our guest bathrooms. Once I’ve collected all that I need - bucket, nozzle, tubing, soap and towels - I fill my bucket from the sink in the vanity. The bucket fits perfectly under the faucet.
I hang the Jugbag from the shower curtain rail, fill it with two, two quart pitcher fulls and then allow the water to displace the air in the tubing, nozzle and home brewed piston pump. That's a four quart enema like I have been taking them for many years.If I schedule more than one enema, I usually take a Colon Hydrotherapy session which takes an hour or more and fills are from the water main. During colonic sessions, the equivalent of countless enemas are injected and expelled through my "Toxigen B" machine. That procedure gives me a complete cleansing and leaves me feeling great! Try it! You'll like it!Jugbag or machine, my enemas are always good to the last drop!Stay healthy! An enema a day keeps the doctor away.
I use the shower head to fill the bag, then add whatever I plan to take with the enema--soap, salt, or soda. I could use the kitchen sink, but it's a fair distance. Bathroom is closer.
I fill mine in the tub faucet if I’m doing one on the floor in the bathroom. The shower head if I’m taking one in the shower and the downstairs washtub faucet if I’m going to do it down stairs. That’s normally we’re I do my enemas where I try to get my ass as high as I can get it for a really really deep fill. Normally I put my feet on the bathroom door frame and push my bottom half up