Escape Procedure #141
Here's the scenario:
You just finished your morning ablutions in the toilet of your hotel room. You wash up, dry your hands and turn the knob on the door. Nothing happens. You turn it again, in the opposite direction. Still nothing happens.
There is a gap in the door. Enough to see the door jamb. Enough to see it doesn't retract when you turn the knob.
Great.
You can't call for help. No one will hear. Not by phone either. You don't have yours with you. Nor is there one in the bathroom. Obviously this isn't some fancy five-star hotel that would bring wine up while you soak in the bathtub.
Can't wait for housekeeping to come in to clean up and find you banging your head on the bathroom door either. You'd latched and bolted the room door the night before. Nobody's coming in, not without a chainsaw. Or a sledgehammer.
So what do you do? Here's what.
1. Look for a long, thin, metal object.
First thing that came to mind was one of those ear-pick thingies. Or even a tweezer. I have those. It's in my grooming kit (yes, I do have one though, to be honest, I use it less than a respectable gay man ought to). That's the good news.
Bad news: the grooming kit's in my suitcase. Along with my Swiss Army knife - which would also be terribly useful right now. But the suitcase is not inside the toilet, where I'm currently stuck in. Of course.
Everything else metallic in the bathroom consists of taps, rails and hooks. All too big to fit into the gap between the door and the frame. Not that I could actually remove them with my bare hands anyway.
2. Look for a long, thin, any-kind-of-material object.
Well, forget about twisting up pieces of toilet paper la. Or using the plastic straw from one of the spray bottles containing my personal, personal care effects.
The toothbrush then. Hey, it's a good fit! But too good - it won't get behind the jamb and move it. Shit.
3. At this point, it's time to consider breaking the door knob off.
I could do that. Granted, I'm not a (very) violent person, nor have I been paying enough attention to Body Pump to twist the damn thing off with one pull. But I could manage it. Eventually. With lots of banging, thumping and kicking.
Sigh.
Can't I not resort to destruction of property? More importantly, can't I not resort to bruising my pretty hands?
4. Like, what other options do you have?
Hmm... I could wiggle something round the jamb and pull it open. Like a wire or a rope.
Or the drawstring on my shorts. With some help from my toothbrush.
Voilà ! Liberté!
The lesson learnt? Keep your head cool during times of crisis and one need not resort to petty violence to solve a problem.
That, and it pays to bring your grooming kit with you into the bathroom.
Verily, vanity prevails over violence.
You just finished your morning ablutions in the toilet of your hotel room. You wash up, dry your hands and turn the knob on the door. Nothing happens. You turn it again, in the opposite direction. Still nothing happens.
There is a gap in the door. Enough to see the door jamb. Enough to see it doesn't retract when you turn the knob.
Great.
You can't call for help. No one will hear. Not by phone either. You don't have yours with you. Nor is there one in the bathroom. Obviously this isn't some fancy five-star hotel that would bring wine up while you soak in the bathtub.
Can't wait for housekeeping to come in to clean up and find you banging your head on the bathroom door either. You'd latched and bolted the room door the night before. Nobody's coming in, not without a chainsaw. Or a sledgehammer.
So what do you do? Here's what.
1. Look for a long, thin, metal object.
First thing that came to mind was one of those ear-pick thingies. Or even a tweezer. I have those. It's in my grooming kit (yes, I do have one though, to be honest, I use it less than a respectable gay man ought to). That's the good news.
Bad news: the grooming kit's in my suitcase. Along with my Swiss Army knife - which would also be terribly useful right now. But the suitcase is not inside the toilet, where I'm currently stuck in. Of course.
Everything else metallic in the bathroom consists of taps, rails and hooks. All too big to fit into the gap between the door and the frame. Not that I could actually remove them with my bare hands anyway.
2. Look for a long, thin, any-kind-of-material object.
Well, forget about twisting up pieces of toilet paper la. Or using the plastic straw from one of the spray bottles containing my personal, personal care effects.
The toothbrush then. Hey, it's a good fit! But too good - it won't get behind the jamb and move it. Shit.
3. At this point, it's time to consider breaking the door knob off.
I could do that. Granted, I'm not a (very) violent person, nor have I been paying enough attention to Body Pump to twist the damn thing off with one pull. But I could manage it. Eventually. With lots of banging, thumping and kicking.
Sigh.
Can't I not resort to destruction of property? More importantly, can't I not resort to bruising my pretty hands?
4. Like, what other options do you have?
Hmm... I could wiggle something round the jamb and pull it open. Like a wire or a rope.
Or the drawstring on my shorts. With some help from my toothbrush.
Voilà ! Liberté!
The lesson learnt? Keep your head cool during times of crisis and one need not resort to petty violence to solve a problem.
That, and it pays to bring your grooming kit with you into the bathroom.
Verily, vanity prevails over violence.