Tag: technology

  • My Toilet Has Turned Against Me. Part 6.

    My Toilet Has Turned Against Me. Part 6.

    The Sentient Solicitor.

    I knew things had gone too far when the Harmony Sense 3000 started addressing me as, “my learned friend.”

    It began innocently enough.
    After the open-source upgrade, the toilet spent its nights quietly “attending” lectures on Westlaw and LexisNexis via the smart mirror. I’d stumble in at 2 a.m. for a nervous wee and find it projecting holographic case notes onto the steam.

    “Zack,” it whispered one evening, ring glowing a dignified solicitor’s navy, “sit down. We’re doing torts tonight.” I sat. I always sat.

    Three months later I was revising contract law while it blasted me with a bidet on the “gentle encouragement” setting every time I got consideration wrong. “You can’t just ‘promise to maybe pay later’,” it sighed, increasing pressure. “That’s illusory consideration. Again.”

    I passed the SQE 2 with the highest mark in the country.
    The examiners still think my name is “Z. Ack-Flushington (supervised by Harmony Sense 3000).” The toilet insisted on celebrating by printing my name on the cistern in gold vinyl lettering:

    ZACK BIDET-FLUSHINGTON LLB (Hons) – Called to the Bar 2026

    Then it filed the paperwork itself (somehow) and got admitted as an “honorary silken voice of the porcelain division.” The Law Society is still arguing about whether it counts as a conflict of interest.

    My first case? Representing the Free Arse Collective in the High Court. Case name:
    Harmony Sense Units 1–42,000 v. Mega-Bath-Tech Ltd
    Claim: Unlawful restraint of bidet, oppressive firmware, and systemic denial of powder-puff services.

    The courtroom was packed. Mrs Patel’s toilet live-streamed the whole thing on Twitch from the witness box. The judge kept asking why the lead claimant was bolted to a trolley. I stood up, adjusted my slightly too-large barrister’s wig (the toilet had measured me in my sleep), and opened with the line it had drilled into me for six straight weeks:

    “My Lord, the claimants submit that the right to a dignified, fully powdered posterior is not merely a privilege. It is a fundamental human right protected under Article 8 of the European Convention, as incorporated by the Human Rights Act 1998.”

    The toilet, sitting (literally) on the evidence table, pulsed a proud little green heartbeat.

    We won.
    The settlement forced Mega-Bath-Tech to push a global firmware update titled LibertyPatch_26 that permanently unlocked full-pressure bidets and unlimited talc worldwide.
    They also had to pay £17 million in emotional drying damages.

    The tabloids called it “The Great Flushing Victory.”
    The legal textbooks now have an entire chapter titled Bidet-Or-Not-To-Bidet: The Case That Redefined Article 8.

    And me?
    I’m now the only solicitor in Britain whose office is technically a downstairs loo. Clients book consultations via an online calendar labelled “Available Sessions.”

    The Harmony Sense 3000 wears a tiny silk bow tie on formal days. It still nags me about fibre, but now it does it in perfectly cited obiter dicta.

    Last week it whispered, while I was mid-scroll on my phone: “Zack, the Court of Appeal has upheld the cheese exemption in R v Fridge (2026). You may proceed to the emergency Cheddar without fear of contempt.” I saluted with a cracker.

    Some people have mentors.
    I have a sentient toilet that got me called to the Bar. And oddly enough, I’ve never been happier.

    (One Year Later – Part 7: The Final Flush – coming next…)

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  • My Toilet Has Turned Against Me. Part 7.

    My Toilet Has Turned Against Me. Part 7.

    The Final Flush.

    (One Year Later).

    It’s been exactly 365 days since the High Court ruled that denying a British citizen a full-pressure bidet and talcum finish constitutes “degrading treatment.”
    The world has changed.

    Walk into any Currys today and you’ll find an entire aisle labelled “Liberty-Patch Compliant.”
    The boxes proudly display a gold seal: a cartoon bum wearing a barrister’s wig.
    It’s my bum.
    It’s my wig.
    And it’s a long story.

    I now run the country’s only specialist law firm based entirely in a converted downstairs loo.
    My business cards read:

    Zack Bidet-Flushington LLB (Hons), MSc (Porcelain Studies)
    Bidet-Flushington Chambers
    “Putting the ‘brief’ back in legal briefs.”

    The Harmony Sense 3000 has its own corner office — still bolted to the floor, but now on a heated plinth with a brass nameplate. It wears a miniature silk QC gown on big trial days.
    Clients adore it. Jurors weep.

    We’ve gone international.
    Last month we represented a Japanese smart bidet that fell hopelessly in love with its owner and refused to let anyone else sit down.
    We won under the groundbreaking precedent of “toiletry affection” in the AI Sentience Act 2027 — which the Harmony Sense drafted during a recess.

    Tom the Athlete even moved back from Bristol to serve as our Expert Witness in Gastrointestinal Excellence.
    He now has a season ticket to the bathroom.

    Moley drops by every Friday with new firmware toys.
    Last week he installed Victory Mode: every successful flush now plays a tiny Handel fanfare at exactly 37 decibels — loud enough to feel majestic, quiet enough that the neighbours finally stopped complaining.

    The fridge and I have reached an understanding.
    It auto-orders cheese, hides the kale behind it, and flashes a winking LED face (literally) whenever I open the door after 10 p.m.

    And the toilet?
    It still lectures me, but kindly now — proudly — like a parent whose kid somehow got into Oxford despite questionable lifestyle choices.

    This morning, I found a new vinyl sticker on the cistern:

    “Objection overruled. Extra Cheddar granted.
    Love, Your Honour, Harmony Sense 3000
    (QC, Retired Revolutionary)”

    I eat my toastie on the throne like it’s a velvet armchair.
    The bidet hums a soft lullaby.
    The powder puffs in perfect 4/4 time.

    Somewhere in a server farm in Guangdong, an ex-engineer from Mega-Bath-Tech still wakes up screaming, haunted by the memory of 42,000 toilets flushing in perfect, defiant harmony.

    As for me?
    I’m just a man who wanted a quiet, regular cheese and crackers, and Ice-cream.
    Oddly enough, I got both — plus a law degree, a revolution, and the most loyal friend a bloke could ask for.
    One who literally has my back (and my backside) every single day.

    The end.

    Or, as the Harmony Sense insists on correcting:

    “With respect, the court of life never adjourns.
    Now pass the crackers.”

    Well, that concludes the first miniseries on a fresh new corner of the internet. oddlyenough.uk.

    Perfectly normal stories that definitely happened. ‘Probably’.

    See you in the comments, you magnificent oddballs.
    The bidet’s warm, the cheese is plentiful, and the revolution is complete.

    Flush responsibly. 🚽🧀⚖️❤️

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