Mike's 
  Pith & Wind cont.
  ..It’s bad enough having stuff thrust upon me, but when I actively seek 
  to bring more of it into the house, I begin to wonder at my sanity. Afterall, 
  I’ve already got a whole lot more stuff than I can handle and only a tiny 
  house – something’s gotta go! My latest out-of-control fetish is 
  for buying CDs. There are so many ‘60s and ‘70s vintage records 
  out there I never owned in the first place and that I just have to have. It’s 
  got so crazy I’ve even bought a couple of bargain priced classics twice!
  However, one of my most enduring and embarrassing accumulated possessions is 
  a book. Along with CDs, I’ve got an excess of books, but this particular 
  book refuses to lose itself gracefully amongst my late wife’s dog-eared 
  crime novels. Even now I know I could locate it unerringly amongst all the dross. 
  What’s worse, this book has been burning a hole in my conscience since 
  I first arrived in Melbourne late in 1966. It’s not the subject matter, 
  or even the illustrations in the book. It’s the fact that it’s a 
  library book.
  The odd thing is that I wasn’t in any way an habitué of the Christchurch 
  Public Library. In fact, I’m pretty certain this trophy was a result of 
  my one and only foray into those hallowed precincts. I’ve been back to 
  Christchurch a number of times since, of course, and I may have even taken the 
  book back with me with the intention of anonymously returning it – but 
  I couldn’t, and I still can’t. 
  So, there it sits, mutely accusing me every time I enter the room. I’ll 
  eventually get round to writing a will, and one of the items that I’ll 
  gladly pass on to my son is ‘the book’. (You deal with it).
  Some of you might be wondering if I have too much time on my hands with the 
  recent series in Stop Press on public toilets. I confess that toilets are an 
  obsession of mine. Part of the suspension of disbelief in (Hollywood) movies 
  is that no-one goes to the toilet – unless there’s a dramatic/comic 
  point to be made. But the reality is that when you gotta go, you gotta go. For 
  instance, there are endless stories I could relate about Bill being caught short 
  in the most unlikely places – but I’ll leave those to Bill’s 
  memoirs. I’ll just take the opportunity to relate a tale about modern 
  toilets that defies tasteful pictorial backup (so to speak), and so won’t 
  appear in Stop Press. 
  I was recently called to account at the Chadstone Shopping Centre. A number 
  of the ‘rest rooms’ are pretty new, and I happened to lob in one 
  of those. I noted that the urinals were those self-flushing jobs, but it didn’t 
  occur to me the bowls were too.
  I was sitting there, minding my own business, when I suddenly felt my appendage 
  taking an inadvertent cold shower. The bloody thing had gratuitously flushed 
  on me and my bits! During my five minute or less occupation, this abject performance 
  was repeated no less than four times – my shocked appendage had nearly 
  retreated into oblivion by the fourth flush. If one needed reminding that machines 
  are cold, heartless bastards, this was the perfect demonstration.
  There are millions of toilets in the naked city. This has been but one of them.