
Just hearing the name makes me cringe. I used to try and never use them, but in my old age it’s become inevitable. I have the bladder of a 3 year old. I guess I should admit that it’s a plus that they at least exist and are available to us, and it definitely could be much, much worse (think South East Asia).
Things I like: They offer girls bonding time, and boys gossip later time. Girls always go and talk the whole way through the event, which I still find kind of odd, but I guess it’s acceptable. Boys go in together, and then don’t talk at all until they exit, and then immediately start talking about whoever/whatever happened while they were in the bathroom. I think boys notice a bit too much (sound, sight, smell) while they’re in there.
They’re a great way to make friends when your stall is out of toilet paper (nothing like an under the partition hand off). But then you always want to take a little longer so you don’t have to face your generous new friend because that would just be crossing the line (here’s to hoping your shoes weren’t memorable).
Some bathrooms afford you the opportunity to use the Xlerator! If you’ve never had the privilege of using one, it’s the air blowing hand dryer that all air blowing hand dryers wish they could be. Your hands are dry in seconds, and it blows so hard that all the skin on your hand gets moved around in funny directions (it kind of makes you want to stick your face underneath it just to see how funny you’d look, like you were on a spaceship or that carnival ride where you get stuck to the walls). And it comes with a 5 year warranty (I looked it up). But really, it’s a joy to use the Xlerator and I’d probably tag it the most efficient public bathroom appliance ever (even better than the automatic flush, because we all know that’s far too inconsistent). If only movie theaters would realize their dire need for the appliance the world would be a better place. Or just put paper towels in the movie theater bathrooms. Because seriously, I didn’t pay 12 dollars to miss half my movie trying to dry my hands under the worlds softest hand dryer, it’s like a mean joke all movie theater owners teamed up and decided to play on the population at large.
Things I would change: They feel so dirty (even when they’re really clean). The thought of someone else’s butt touching anything is gross enough, but thinking about it touching yours is just crossing the line. Which means there are 3 options: Use a toilet seat cover, make your own toilet seat cover, or squat. Each has its own set of issues of course. Using a cover means trying to get it out of the container without ripping it in half, and then once you do, decided if it’s worth still trying to use or grabbing another one (and the whole time you’re thinking “If I stand facing the toilet like this much longer, people are going to start thinking I’m a dude”). And if you opt to make your own toilet seat covering using scraps of toilet paper, I’m relatively confident that you’re getting more germs on you than had you just left it be (though it does give some peace at mind), think about how close your hands are to the seat. And squatting is an art form to never be mastered.
I also hate how sometimes getting toilet paper is a one sided game where your opponent has every advantage, and you’re left crying foul play. Whoever designed the rolls in which the toilet paper goes on in public bathrooms is mean hearted. There is no reason it shouldn’t spin just as it does in your home, but instead it’s stationary, and you must tare small bits at a time to finally make a whole. Or they place it too far to grasp (like on the back of the door and out of reach) so that once you’ve finally reached a functioning position, it’s impossible to get to what you need.
It’s also awkward when you are witness to things that shouldn’t be happening in a public bathroom stall: People talking on their phones, is the call (or your need to use the bathroom) really that urgent? Also, anytime there is more than one person in a stall I don’t want to even think about it. Or when you see someone doing something just a little off for the grocery store bathroom, like changing pants or brushing their teeth?
What it makes me think/feel: Like I’ll never understand the culture of a public bathroom. What about being in a little cell makes you want to write your name and who you hate on the wall? Would you do that in a cubicle? And why can’t they just close us all the way in, my feet feel so awkward when you’re looking at them under the two foot gap from the floor to the stall’s door. But hey, I guess we should just be thankful that our public bathrooms have toilets in them. And it could always be worse, we could be cleaning them!











