After I shit the bed with my dad in it in Hong Kong*, my bowels were never quite right and got progressively worse. My calamitous movements became legend. At one friend’s house, there was a sign in the bathroom. PEOPLE WHO CAN’T TAKE DUMPS HERE: CHRIS.
My guts were so rank, I remember my GOOD poops more than my bad ones. In 1996, I took a poop in a French youth hostel that I still think about like a lost love. That poop was transcendent. People who poop like that all the time… They have no idea how lucky they are.
Things came to a head, so to speak, when I went to university. (Hi, @UBishops!) I lived in a dorm, Mackinnon, that had two big bathrooms for, like, 40 kids. They were co-ed. Absolute nightmare. But my first day, I somehow got in and out without anyone else seeing me.
Unfortunately, the stench got out, too, and I’m not joking: It was like a fire drill. Dozens of kids ended up retching on the grass outside the building. I was like, OH GOD WHO SHIT along with everyone else. Meanwhile, all I could think was: Where am I going to poo for a year?
At 24, I was finally diagnosed with Crohn’s. Anyone with a bowel disorder will tell you: They have a secret network of secluded, relatively unused toilets they’ve scouted out all over town. Sort of like the Floo Network in Harry Potter, except it’s places where they shit.
At Bishop’s, I became the manager of the radio station mostly so that I’d have a key to the Student Union Building, which was locked at night. I’d creep over there and take these magnificent midnight dumps. That toilet became sacred to me. It allowed me to graduate.
Next, I went to the University of Toronto. I lived in a wonderful residence called Massey College. It’s a beautiful building, only 60 students. You wear gowns to dinner. But once again, I had to share a toilet. At least this time, it would be with only one other student.
First day, I look at the name on the other door: V. Nemoianu. I wait in my room, like a deer hunter in a blind, until I’m certain that V. Nemoianu has not yet arrived. I creep out into the hallway, dart into the bathroom, unleash terror, race back out, and shut my door. Victory.
Except. About ten seconds after I shut my door, I hear V. Nemoianu open his. And I hear him walk down the hall to the toilet. And I hear him go into the toilet. And I hear him scream like Homer Simpson. I can close my eyes and still hear his high-pitched wail. Like a banshee.
And I swear to you, this is what happened next: I saw V. Nemoianu march across the Quad, go into the Registrar’s office, and demand to change rooms. I sat in my window and watched V. Nemoianu PACK UP AND MOVE rather than risk a second encounter with my colon.
By the time a nice boy named Glenn moved in, I had found my Floo Network. A fab toilet in the basement of Sidney Smith, the geography building. Another oddly private poo closet in Robarts, the library. Massey had a chapel with a loo. Friends thought I was surprisingly devout.
But I still had to see V. Nemoianu every fucking day, and feel this weird hot shame that my poo had compelled him to pack up and leave, like Tom Joad and the dust storm. “That’s the guy,” I could imagine him saying. “That’s the guy who took a shit so bad that it made me move.”
We didn’t talk to each other that entire year. Imagine, now: A residence with only 60 students, where you ate meals together. And we never really spoke. I couldn’t handle it. But the first day of our second year, I was sitting on a step outside, and V. Nemoianu sat next to me.
He extended his hand. “Hi,” he said. He went by Martin, it turned out. I can’t remember exactly how he worded it, but he said something weirdly formal like, “I decided this summer I would like for us to be friends.” And that was it. We hung out together all the time.
At some point, I apologized for my poop. Martin remembered that day like it was his Vietnam. Years later, I saw him and and his wife in Los Angeles, where he's a professor. We went out for Cuban food. I remember it well because the next day I had to interview George Clooney.**

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More from @EnswellJones

18 Dec 20
My parents didn’t have much at Christmas when they were kids. My mum remembers one year she got an orange, and it was a big deal. For our first few years in Canada, money was tight. Somehow, they still gave us ridiculous Christmases. I mean, Santa helped. But still.
My brother, my sister, and I would get up early, run downstairs, see our piles of presents, wake up my parents—who always seemed strangely tired to me—and then take turns opening gift after gift. I remember an Atari 2600. A GI Joe hovercraft. A Norco Spitfire BMX. Awesome.
Anyway, as we grew up, my parents took to hiding our gifts off-site, because my brother was a snoopy bastard. One year, they hid everything at our neighbours, the Browns. We lived in the country, so they were pretty far away. Christmas Eve, there was a massive ice storm.
Read 14 tweets
27 Nov 20
Charley, my 14-year-old son, is autistic. One of his peccadillos: He’s constantly asking people questions about themselves. Sometimes that’s fine. Sometimes that’s awkward, like when he asks a stranger, “Have you always been chubby?” or “Why are you missing your arm?”
There is zero malicious intent. He’s just curious, and he files away every answer. We have tried to curtail it, mostly because we worry about Charley asking the wrong person the wrong question. But autistic kids aren’t always open to modification. They are firm in their beliefs.
Charley loves a hot tub more than anything. There’s something about the bubbles. So one weekend when he was 10 or 11, we went to a hotel in Kingston that has a waterslide and a hot tub. It was winter and quiet and we retreated to the hot tub for a snuggle. Perfection.
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20 Nov 20
So one time, GOLF magazine asked me to play a round with Arturo Gatti and Micky Ward and write about it. If you don’t know those names, they were two tough-as-nails boxers who fought three hellacious fights against each other and somehow became golf buddies.
The night before, we all went out for dinner at an Italian restaurant. Arturo and Micky spent the meal laughing about the permanent damage they’d done to each other. Arturo started, lifting up his shirt to show off a lump in his midsection that Micky had somehow made in him.
Micky—he was played by Mark Wahlberg in The Fighter and has a terrific Boston accent—went next, talking about how Arturo had basically knocked his eye out and he couldn’t see anymore. Their friendship had literally started in the hospital. I was like, these two guys are insane.
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13 Nov 20
In Canada, or in Ontario at least, you have to wait a year after the birth of a child to get a vasectomy, in case you want to chop your balls off just because you hate your baby. Up here, a vasectomy is free, but reversing a vasectomy is not. So they want you to be of sound mind.
The day Sammy turned one, I celebrated by going to see Ottawa’s famed Dr. Weiss, he of the no-needle, no-scalpel vasectomy. “Weiss, as in slice,” he said by way of greeting. At the time—12 years ago—he’d done 25,000 vasectomies. I was in good if slightly chilly hands.
During our first appointment, I was given my “vasectomy kit.” It consisted of a jock strap, a plastic disposable razor that the Bic company discarded as “too basic,” a single valium, and a brochure that explained how I was to present myself at my next appointment—my surgery.
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1 Sep 20
Friends, I have decided that this week's story will be the last for a little while. Not forever—just for a bit. I have some big projects coming due, and I also need to avoid the Internet after Away comes out. I am a delicate creature.
But thank you sincerely for your kindness, for making me laugh, and for telling me your own stories. I can't always reply but I read them all.

Friday's story will be the 21st. This week I'll count down your favourite five, for the benefit of the late joiners.
Coming in at No. 5—and also the first quarantine story, from April 8: "Pete Simon Saves the Day."

Read 5 tweets
21 Aug 20
It’s 2006. Esquire had just named its Best Bar in America: Nye’s Polonaise Room (RIP) in Minneapolis. I was asked to spend three days at Nye’s, drinking from open till close, and write about my experience. I have had worse assignments. But I don’t like drinking alone.
I was posting on a message board at the time. Nearly everyone on there was anonymous, but as is my rash custom, I thought to hell with it. I posted an open invite: “Come to Nye’s and you’ll drink on Esquire’s dime.” I was a good employee in some ways, and in other ways I wasn’t.
A man named Joe took it upon himself to drive nearly 500 miles in his old Cobra from Missouri to Minneapolis. I did not know Joe at all. I told him I’d be the guy in the Hawaiian shirt. This was not a specific-enough description for Nye’s, but Joe finally found me at the bar.
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