Mon 4 Dec 2006
This past Friday night I was out on Franklin Street having some drinks with friends, including our good friend Nate, who works in the same lab as J.
J wasn’t feeling well last week, and so stayed in on Friday, and I, therefore, got to hear a few things about my husband. For instance, Nate told me, that lab members had recently engaged in an interesting conversation about netti pots and their usefulness in draining the sinuses.
I’d heard of these netti pots before - on TV, and amongst hippie types - and I immediately got nervous. Really nervous.
Was my husband in on this conversation? Nate replied that he was, and that, naturally, he’d been totally into the idea. The idea of pouring warm water into one nostril and having it come out the other. It’s hard to explain why, but I just knew he would find this a fascinating principle.
So it was really no wonder - not that it diminished my disgust - when I returned home that evening and found this cute, yellow teapot, given to me by a charming, older potter who lives out in Chatham County, in our bathroom. I’d done a story on the guy for the newspaper last year.
“Hey,” I asked J, waking him up. “What’s up with the teapot in the bathroom.”
“It’s a netti pot,” he informed me. Since it was late, and he was sick, I decided not to get into it that night - to explan that, actually, it wasn’t a netti pot. It was a gift from an artist that I actually used to make tea. And when you use something like that to clean out your nostrils, it becomes less appealing for use making hot drinks. That you put in your mouth.
Instead, we talked about it the next day. J gave me full disclosure on the complexities of the netti pot, which was actually a teapot, and not only a teapot but my favorite teapot. He told me how when “you first do it, you sort of feel like you’re going to gag,” and how after you use it, “you blow your nose and tons, just tons, of snot comes out.”
I’m sick now, having caught what everyone else seems to have, even though I thought maybe I’d remain untouched by the winter cold this year, but amazingly, the netti (tea) pot isn’t yet appealing enough for me to use. Despite, as J informed me, the instant sinus clarity it allegedly provides. I’m all for natural remedies, really, but I prefer vitamins, honestly, and hot toddies. Things that go in and don’t come right back out. Things that don’t involve kitchenware.
December 4th, 2006 at 4:47 pm
Tell J to buy hit own teapot, fill it with water, veinegar, honey and lemon juice, and make an aluminum foil nozzle to his nose. Same effect.
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December 5th, 2006 at 1:40 pm
If I should ever come to your house for tea, I’ll be sure to bring my own tea pot.
December 5th, 2006 at 3:10 pm
the picture on that site is AMAZING! i am buying one immediately.
December 5th, 2006 at 6:12 pm
Tell Justin to go out and buy “SinuCleanse” at the drug store and leave your yellow tea pot out of it! It comes complete with a little plastic pot specifically made for the purpose of cleansing the sinuses–it’s even dishwasher safe, so it can be sterilized and used by other family members! You just mix warm water with the little packet of saline solution and you are good to go.
I have used this, and I have to admit it’s a little freaky the first time. But, it does really work and is better than filling your body with more antibiotics. Something I try to stay away from after finding out I’m allergic to penicillin! Just have A LOT of tissues on hand before you start!!!
December 5th, 2006 at 6:14 pm
Oh, and don’t forget to position your head DIRECTLY over the sink before you start pouring!!!
Yeah I know…GROSS!!!
August 31st, 2008 at 9:04 pm
Hi!,