I will begin my blog posting today with a clipping from The Sun magazine. That's an unusual magazine - just in case you haven't heard of it - and I subscribe. The Sun is worth checking out, in my opinion. Click the link and see what you think.
Now, here's an excerpt from that clipping I mentioned, from the edition of The Sun dated October 2025 (emphasis added):
Readers Write - Graffiti
AT THE GROUP OF SLEEPAWAY CAMPS I worked for in Vermont, the outhouses were called “kybos”— one of those camp-lore terms whose origin is shrouded in mystery. My job entailed going from camp to camp, and as one of the few people there over the age of forty, I was picky about which kybos I’d use. My favorite, cantilevered off the side of a hill and accessible via a short wooden bridge, was at a camp for boys ages nine to fourteen—a demographic known for its poop jokes. But the users of this kybo decorated its walls with haiku:
This is Haikubo
the art of writing haikus
while on the kybo
Haikus are easy
but they don’t always make sense.
Refrigerator.
And, in response to the poem above:
“Haiku” when plural
is still “haiku.” It is
a Japanese word.Because the camps had a strict no-screens policy, I couldn’t distract myself with my phone while on the toilet. When I used Haikubo, I didn’t miss it at all.
Celia Barbour
Garrison, New York
"Readers Write" is a section featured in each monthly edition of The Sun. A "topic" for each upcoming issue is announced - a couple of months in advance - and readers send in their response, focused on the topic for the month. Selections from the readers are then published in the magazine. I enjoyed the submission above, submitted in response to the prompt for that month, "Graffiti," but it left a question in my mind: What does "KYBO" actually stand for? Why was "KYBO" chosen as the name for "outhouse." What "camp-lore" resulted in KYBO = Primative Outdoor Toilet?
I got an answer - but I had to wait a few issues. The January 2026 edition of The Sun had a letter in its "Correspondence" section that said that the term "KYBO" stood for "Keeping Your Bowels Open."
Now, that phrase, the key to the use of "KYBO" as a shorthand for "Outhouse," provides some helpful advice. I have been given that advice before, actually, sometimes in a "medical" context, though this advice has never been conveyed by way of the "KYBO" abbreviation.
For whatever reason, learning the meaning of "KYBO" made me think of another four-letter abbreviation which also carries some good advice. Here's my suggestion for all of us:
KYMO - "Keep Your Mind Open"
Thanks to The Sun, I am now providing you with a shorthand way to convey some very pertinent personal and political advice!


















