I will always choose the handicap stall because I like the space between myself and the next stall. It seems like the US bathroom system encourages games of battle shits and I’m not willing to play. I’ve only had one instance where I walked out and a person who actually needed it was waiting. I felt terrible, but it was only once out of hundreds. Does anyone else do this?

  • @floppy_kitty@lemmy.world
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    362 months ago

    This may be unpopular, but the stalls are handicap accessible, not reserved.

    I do try to be considerate. I keep time short and at work, where I am aware of where people who would have a greater need than I are located, then I go to the restroom they’re least likely to use.

  • @adarza@lemmy.ca
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    162 months ago

    if the other ones are nasty dirty. sure. or if it’s the only one available.

    but given a choice of equally-suitable poop receptacles, i’d choose the ‘regular’ one–especially if it sits lower than ada height

  • @bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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    142 months ago

    People taking away resources meant for people who actually need them just because they feel like it are assholes.

    • snooggums
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      222 months ago

      Ensuring there is a stall large enough for someone with disabilities is not the same thing as car spaces for the disabled. The larger bathroom stalls are not reserved.

      Not to mention that in a lot of bathrooms there is a single stall and the law ensures that one stall is large enough for anyone to use.

    • @UnpopularCrow@lemmy.worldOP
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      32 months ago

      Fair point. In my workplace, I’ve never seen it being used by someone who needed it. It is either taken by people who prefer it or when the other two stalls are filled up. Understand your point though.

  • snooggums
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    132 months ago

    Yes, for my own physical needs.

    The default stall is frequently so small that I tend to get my back twisted or smacking a knee on the bowel trying to navigate the inward opening door that almost hits the toilet in a stall barely wider than my shoulders. I’m not even a big person, extremely average. But normal stalls in the US are built like airplane seats.

    Work stalls are a little bigger than businesses so I use the regular ones there.

    So yes, if the normal stall is tiny I use the big one and that is generally the case. In all my decades I only held up someone who needed it once, but was in there because the other stalls were taken.

    • AmidFuror
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      122 months ago

      I’m trying to picture the contortions you have to go through to smack your knee on your bowel.

      • snooggums
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        32 months ago

        When the space is limited enough, I frequently have to be as close to the side as possible (yellow) for the door (purple) to swing shut (blue). Trying not to lean on the gross wall covered in pee splash means doing a little shuffle trying to turn so I can close the stupid door and bending a knee means it has to go somewhere. Since my back is towards the wall, that means knee goes forward.

        Being clumsy means sometimes I move a little too far and hello hard porcelain, here I come. It isn’t an issue if the stall isn’t so tiny that the door is almost hitting the toilet. But so many of them are that tiny.

  • @False@lemmy.world
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    102 months ago

    I usually go for the non-accessible one first, but if that one is occupied or dirty or something I readily use the handicap accessible one.

  • toomanypancakes
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    72 months ago

    My peeing experience is not tangibly improved by more leg room, there’s plenty in regular stalls.

  • Majorllama
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    72 months ago

    I only use the handicap stall if all the others are already occupied and I am literally about to shit myself. Otherwise I’ll just wait for a normal stall. I don’t wanna be the reason someone with a wheelchair couldn’t get a stall in time and shat themselves.

  • @BertramDitore@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    No, those stalls are reserved for people who actually need them. They’re not for your comfort or convenience, they’re a basic necessity for people who have very different daily lives than you.

    Even if all the other stalls are occupied, you should still pretend that the handicap stall is also occupied, even if it isn’t. There’s always the possibility that someone who needs it will arrive after you’ve gone in. You don’t park in handicap parking spaces, do you? Same deal, just one is based more on the honor system and basic human decency, and the other could get you a ticket.

    • @papalonian@lemmy.world
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      122 months ago

      Eh, I save the handicap stall for last, but if the rest are taken I’m 100% going to use it.

      The stall isn’t reserved for people with disabilities, it’s there for if they need it. Someone who uses a wheelchair needs the extra space, but if someone is waiting either way, their bladder isn’t automatically more important than mine.

      In the case of someone with a disability that requires them to have immediate access to a handicap stall, that is unfortunate, but I’d assume some sort of arrangement could be made with HR so that everyone knows that the handicap stall on x floor is off limits or something. But I feel that’s such a fringe case that we shouldn’t be expecting everyone to hold their pee over the possibility.

    • AmidFuror
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      42 months ago

      Do you often see parking lots where there is one regular spot and one handicapped spot? What if there is one toilet in the whole establishment which is also handicapped accessible? Not sure where you draw the line, but the analogy to parking is a poor one.

      • @sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        12 months ago

        Also because the parking resource is locked for a long time - potentially all day, where the bathroom stall should have much faster turnover.

  • @Limonene@lemmy.world
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    52 months ago

    I use it often, and have never walked out to someone waiting for it. If I did, I wouldn’t feel bad, because I take like 1 minute to poop.