Peel & Eat Kleenex: I Double Dog Dare You!

I’ve been buying Kleenex Anti-Viral tissues for my classroom lately. I have no data on whether they make a difference, but given how well diseases travel through schools, I figured it couldn’t hurt. For the record, the active ingredients in Kleenex Anti-Viral tissues are citric acid and sodium lauryl sulfate.

Today, one of my students got out one of the tissues and told a classmate, “I’ve heard that these taste like lemon.” He separated the plies from each other, and put the one with the blue dots all over it into his mouth. The acid was evidently a lot stronger than he was expecting, because he made the most amazing “OhMyGod this is DISGUSTING!” face, with vocals to match.

This is something you just don’t do in front of your classmates, because it makes them wonder, “How bad can it be?” About half the class utterly failed to resist the urge to go up to the tissue box, peel and eat a tissue, and make similar faces and noises.

Then one of them got the bright idea to have a contest to see which of them could hold one of these tissues on his/her tongue the longest. (As Dave Barry often says, “I am not making this up.”) I am very sorry that I didn’t have a digital camera anywhere accessible, but the lineup was priceless. Six or seven students were lined up like contestants on a game show, each with their tongue hanging out with a tissue stuck to it, and a screwed-up, twisted, mangled, puckered-but-determined facial expression that screamed, “I CAN’T STAND THIS but I’m NOT going to be the first one to quit!”

By the end of the period, my entire abdomen was aching from laughing. And then, in the way that kids often do as they’re leaving a classroom, they mentioned the event to their friends coming into my next class. And the entire scenario repeated itself the next period, right through the game-show contest. By the time the two classes were finished, about half a box of Kleenex had been eaten!

My tissue box now has a note written on it in black Sharpie, that says, “Do not peel & eat these tissues!” Yes, I realize that giving a command in the negative is practically an invitation. I’m evil that way.

About Mr. Bigler

Physics teacher at Lynn English High School in Lynn, MA. Proud father of two daughters. Violist & morris dancer.
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