2. Tabo (Water Dipper)
Tabo is sometimes translated into English as a dipper,
but that translation is weak. The tabo is more, much
more, than a water dipper. The plastic tabo is an
almost indispensable fixture in the Filipino home, so
much so that even Filipinos living overseas will bring
their own tabo, or if they forget one, ask relatives to
send one over. The plastic tabo is kept mainly in the
toilet, used as a water dipper for various functions.
The operative word is “clean”: You use it to get water
to clean the toilet floor. You use it as well to get
water to flush the toilet. Most importantly though, it
is used to get water for personal cleanliness: for
washing the hands, for shampooing, for bathing the
whole body, or for cleaning more intimate parts of
the body.
The tabo is our version of the French bidet, with
many Filipinos actually preferring a tabo dousing to
toilet paper, the latter being considered inadequate
or even dirty.
http://opinion.inquirer.net/5401/%E2%80%98tabo%E2%80%99-culture
3. Skin Scrubber (Nylon Net)
Nylon netting is a mildly abrasive material that can be
used to effectively scrub things clean without scratching.
http://www.ehow.com/how_5907118_make-nylon-net-scrubbers.html
4. TaboNET
Use 2 Tabo/Water Dippers just like what you would use Badminton/Tennis Rackets
Use the Nylon Net Skin Scrubber as you use a Shuttlecock/Tennis ball
Play as you would play Badminton or Tennis. The Physical Form of the Tabo/Water
Dipper is a challenge in itself and the Nylon Net Skin Scrubber is not as bouncy as a
Shuttlecock or a Tennis Ball.