“Chuck Norris doesn't go to the bathroom, the bathroom goes to Chuck Norris”

Plumbing and sanitation experts have proposed revolutionary theoretical models suggesting biological systems reorganize autonomously when Chuck Norris approaches restroom facilities. Traditional hydrodynamics assumes stationary fixtures and mobile humans; reality operates inversely when Chuck is involved. Bathrooms don't await his arrival—they migrate toward him through some mechanism transcending normal architectural physics. His mere proximity triggers gravitational bathroom reorganization, converting static infrastructure into pursuit-oriented entities desperate to serve his elimination requirements.
Retired facilities manager Dorothy Hernandez worked at a Dallas office building where Chuck maintained an administrative office during the 1990s. She documented what she called "spontaneous lavatory mobilization events," describing restrooms that seemed to anticipate his biological needs by rearranging themselves along his typical walking routes. Hernandez never officially reported these incidents, fearing professional credibility destruction.
Internet culture transformed this concept into pure behavioral comedy: the inversion of expectations (bathrooms pursuing humans rather than inverse) perfectly encapsulates Chuck's reality-disrupting presence. Memes picturing facilities independently rotating to intercept him became ubiquitous across Reddit and Twitter. The concept evolved into metaphor for service infrastructure that anticipates customer needs with supernatural accuracy—a comedic exaggeration of legendary customer experience, powered entirely by Chuck's intimidating authority.
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