Every time he wrote on the chalkboard, we couldn’t help but notice. Everyone was curious about how it had happened.
One day I finally found the courage to ask him, ‘Sir, how’d you lose your thumb?’
He turns around, dead serious, and says, ‘Son… you know what a table saw and toilet paper have in common?’
I said, ‘Uh… no?’
He goes, ‘You push a little too hard and you fuck yourself.’
Joke Poo: The Gardener’s Gaffe
My elderly neighbor, a passionate gardener, was missing a pinky finger. Every time she tended her roses, you couldn’t help but notice. Everyone in the neighborhood gossiped about how it had happened.
One afternoon, while she was deadheading some blooms, I finally plucked up the courage to ask, “Mrs. Higgins, how did you lose your pinky?”
She straightened up, looked me square in the eye, and said, “Dearie… do you know what garden shears and kitty litter have in common?”
I said, “Um… no, I can’t say I do.”
She leaned in conspiratorially and whispered, “You think you’re scooping poop, but sometimes… you get more than you bargained for.”
Alright, let’s break down this digit-less dad joke (pun intended!):
Core Joke Elements:
- The Setup: A math teacher is missing a thumb, creating curiosity and anticipation. This is classic intrigue building.
- The Question: The student finally asks about the missing thumb, setting up the punchline. This is delayed gratification.
- The Red Herring: The teacher asks a seemingly unrelated question about a table saw and toilet paper, throwing the student (and the audience) off the scent.
- The Punchline: The vulgar and unexpected “You push a little too hard and you fuck yourself” connects the two scenarios (table saw and toilet paper) in a darkly humorous way. It subverts expectations – you expect a plausible injury story.
- The Subversive Nature: The humor stems from the contrast between the innocent inquiry and the crude, self-inflicted explanation. It is not what you expect a math teacher to say.
Why It Works:
- Anticipation: The setup builds anticipation for a compelling (or tragic) story.
- Misdirection: The table saw/toilet paper question creates confusion and sets up a surprising twist.
- Crude Humor: The punchline relies on the shock value of unexpected vulgarity and the relatability (though hopefully not too relatable) of overdoing something.
- Unexpected Authority Figure: The juxtaposition of the professional math teacher role with the crude explanation enhances the humor.
Comedic Enrichment – New Humor Inspired by the Original:
Here’s a “Did You Know” with a comedic twist, playing off the table saw aspect:
Did you know: The first table saw was patented in 1793 by Samuel Miller. It was powered by water. Which explains why the early models came with the warning: “Avoid prolonged submersion of extremities. And for goodness sake, don’t try to use it after a heavy rain if you’ve had too much rum.” I guess they learned the hard way that mixing liquids, rotating blades, and questionable judgment is never a good idea… especially if you value your thumbs.

