DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 476 KB)
Is A Person Required To Say Asher Yatzar Every Time If Using The Bathroom Excessively Due To An Illness

If a person has a medical condition and must use the bathroom often, would he have recite the Beracha of Asher Yatzar (the Beracha recited after performing one's bodily functions) each time he leaves the bathroom?

This question arises in situations, for example, where a patient requires a colonoscopy and is given a certain type of drink a day beforehand makes him go the bathroom often in order to clear his system. More commonly, this issue is relevant for anyone taking laxatives who visits the bathroom very frequently during that period.

One view, cited in the work Halachot Ketanot, maintains that one recites the Beracha only when his system is completely cleared out. Since the patient knows that he will soon need to use the bathroom again, he should not recite Asher Yatzar until after the completion of the entire process. However, both the Chid"a (Rav Chayim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1806) and Rav Chayim Palachi (Rabbi of Izmir, Turkey, 19th century) disagree. In their view, so long as a person does not feel the need to use the bathroom right after performing his bodily functions, he recites Asher Yatzar. Even if one knows that he will soon have to return to the bathroom, since at the moment he exited the bathroom he does not feel the need to perform his bodily functions, he recites the Beracha. Halacha indeed follows this position of the Chid"a and Rav Chayim Palachi.

Therefore, in the situations described above, one recites Asher Yatzar each time he leaves the bathroom, provided that at that moment he does not feel the need to use the bathroom again. If one leaves the bathroom and immediately feels that he must use it again, then he returns to the bathroom and recites the Beracha afterward, when he no longer feels any need to perform his bodily functions.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Who Performs the Pidyon Haben for a Firstborn Who Has Already Grown Up?
How Much Must One Give a Kohen for the Misva of Pidyon Haben?
Do Parents Recite a Beracha on the Occasion of the Birth of a Son?
Determining When to Perform a Pidyon Haben
Standing at a Wedding Ceremony, Berit Mila and Pidyon Ha'ben
The Sephardic Customs for Choosing a Name for a Newborn Baby
Which Mitzvah To Perform First When Multiple Mitzvot Are at Hand, including; Should A Pidyon HaBen Be Delayed Until After A Delayed Brit Milah
The Obligations and Exemptions from Eating At A Seuda of A Brit Milah
The Miracle of Birth Praised at a Brit Milah
The Complication Of Scheduling A Brit Milah For A Baby Born Via Cesarean Section Right Before Yom Kippur
Metzitza At The Brit Milah On Shabbat and The Issue of Lash
Should The Parents Name Their Newborn Boy If The Brit Milah Is Delayed Due To Sickness, and Counting 7 Full Days Until The Milah Once A Sick Baby Boy Is Healed
The Issue of Metzitza At A Brit Milah
Laws and Customs of Lag Ba’omer
Lag Ba'omer: Haircuts, Reciting She'hecheyanu, Weddings, and Listening to Music
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found