The different washlets vary in what features they offer, but as a minimum you can generally expect a heated seat and a few spray options, with control settings for strength of the spray, direction (do you need your front or backside cleaned?), and temperature of the water (don't worry, it's not sourced from the toilet bowl). Is there a reason we do not have these in every hospital and nursing home in America? Is there a nurses' union? A post-partum-moms-against-spray-bottles union? We should lobby for these, America.
On some models, you will find the controls on a small handle, much like the remote control for your TV, mounted beside the seat. On pricier seats, however, there are detachable control panels that can be mounted on the wall.
Yes, that is $760. Not for the toilet. Just the seat. |
Flush sound generator |
There is more to the amazing Japanese bathroom stall than just fancy toilet technology. I may have mentioned this already, but raising babies/toddlers in Japan is just the best. The bathroom stalls in Japan -- whether at a restaurant, gas station, or department store- are the cleanest bathrooms I've ever seen anywhere in the world. They are with a doubt all cleaner than my kitchen floor -- possibly cleaner than my kitchen counter. They also have toddler seats. Not the nasty ones like in America, but cute, clean ones that Avery begs to sit in. And a fold-down, extra-clean platform that you can stand on if you need to change clothes/take off your shoes and don't want to stand on the (pristine) floor. There is also sanitizing spray on the walls, so you can wipe down anything from the toilet seat to the toddler chair to the door handle or possibly your toddler herself if you feel the need. If that's not enough, most places that have frequent child-sized visitors also have toddler-sized toilet seats nested into the lid that fold down over the regular seat. How awesome is that? Some places even offer bathroom slippers (usually off-brand Crocs) so you don't have to wear your own shoes into the (again, pristine) bathroom. Just make sure you nevereverevereverevereverevereverEVER wear them outside of the bathroom.
AND the toilet paper is cute, abundant, and never tissue-paper thin. If there were an international award for best bathroom experience, Japan wins.
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