Sat 29 Mar 2008
Public restrooms can be a scary place. All too often I find myself in offensive, rude, or just plain disgusting situations in a public restroom, and most of those are in office buildings with co-workers. You expect a certain degree of nastiness when you’re in a highway rest area or at an airport, but right down the hall in your own office? It’s time for the Edict of Public Restroom Etiquette to be pronounced.
- Never, under any circumstances, should you be on the cell phone while dropping a deuce. What you do at home is your business, but don’t force strangers to listen to not only your flatulence, but your obnoxious and self-absorbed phone conversation as well. If you MUST communicate with this other person and it cannot wait the five minutes to do your business, learn to use text messages. This is much more polite to those around you.
- If you are going to attempt the courtesy flush, perform it properly. Example of improper courtesy flushing: continuously flushing throughout your errand - this wastes significant amounts of water and is very irritating.
- Do not grunt at extreme decibel levels. You’re not bench-pressing 300 lbs., you’re performing a natural function which should come fairly easily; and if it doesn’t, the rest of us don’t need to know about it.
- Urinals must be flushed. They aren’t magical auto-draining pee pipes.
- Urinals were created for men to be lazy. This means you can complete your task without dropping your pants, so do us all a favor and keep them up at your waist. If you require pants-around-your-ankles status to relieve yourself, go in a stall.
- Nose-picking products are not to be placed on the walls of the room or the stalls. If you are in a stall then there is a paper product at your fingertips which can alleviate you of this variable-consistency mucous mound. If you’re at a urinal, wait until you’ve finished up and use a paper towel or some TP from a stall. It’s time to be an adult and take responsibility for your actions, don’t just leave your filthy olfactory mess anywhere you please.
- Utilize the multi-flush, if necessary. More than likely you have, at least once in your life, produced something so vast that there is no way the poor porcelain prince can handle it coupled with wads of TP. Flush intermittently to avoid clogging our little friend. Remember, if you block it up no one else can use it after you and it leaves a lingering nasty odor in addition to the vomitous surprise one gets when they unsuspectingly walk into a stall with a clogged bowl.
- Wash your hands. This is not negotiable, but can be attained through varying degrees of thoroughness. If you are in numero uno mode, a courtesy rinse would be nice if you don’t have the time / motivation / hygiene-sense to go through the soap plus water thing. Dropping the kids off at the pool ALWAYS mandates soap + water. Not everyone who has to touch the door handle wants to touch bacteria from your private parts.
- If there is the opportunity to leave an empty stall between yourself and another stall occupant, do it. No one likes to be crowded.
- Should any part of what you are trying to get rid of not make it into the proper receptacle, make a reasonable attempt to clean up after yourself. Most of the time the restroom will not be cleaned until the evening, and therefore everyone else will have to deal with whatever you couldn’t hit the target with all day long.
- Never sing. Especially not 80’s pop songs.
- Do not talk to strangers while they are performing their duty. They probably wouldn’t talk to you on the street, let alone next to them in a bathroom where one’s clothing and pride are compromised.
- Don’t leave reading material for future occupants. While this may seem like an altruistic gesture in your mind, it is in reality disgusting. Your hands weren’t touching only that newspaper, you know…
All amendments to this Edict must be passed by a 2/3 majority of the Public Restroom Etiquette Council, comprised of: me. I acknowledge that this list is geared toward Men’s rooms. I do not go in Ladies’ rooms, so ladies, please feel free to amend the list with those offenses that apply to your water closet.
Image used in this post
Public bathroom courtesy of Flickr user Irojas2cr
Popularity: 27% [?]
9 Responses to “ Edict of Public Restroom Etiquette ”
Comments:
Leave a Reply
Trackbacks & Pingbacks:
-
Pingback from Bathroom Antics » Babeled
May 5th, 2008 at 9:42 pm[...] while back, Jason Morgan babeled on about restroom etiquette and the human response. It was an objective look at the unspoken do’s and don’ts of [...]
March 29th, 2008 at 11:33 am
I have a great distrust of waterless urinals.
March 29th, 2008 at 8:31 pm
All very good points. Unfortunately I have been witness to most of them. There is no reason why people can’t follow these simple rules. At my place of work I have witnessed a guy pull down his pants at a urinal without hesitation, I have had a person try to engage in conversation with me while I was pissing, I have seen a stall covered with poop, and I have seen a toilet on display down an aisle that a person took a dump in. Talk about crude.
March 30th, 2008 at 9:53 am
Its hilarious when kids violate edict #5 and damn scary when adults (or the elederly!) violate #5.
I don’t see whats so wrong with violating edict #3. In some cultures taking a trip to the stall is the male equivalent of giving birth. Both at times require loud screams and grunts.
March 30th, 2008 at 11:29 am
I’m not saying you have to be silent, but you can’t tell me that you’ve never been in a situation where someone is making ridiculous noises.
March 30th, 2008 at 11:31 am
Loud screams and grunts are totally unnecessary. And it is most certainly not the “male equivalent of giving birth,” last time I checked women go #2 without a birth-like impact to their lives.
March 30th, 2008 at 11:38 am
Andrew, if the end result of your defecation yields child sized results then heaven help us and your bowels.
March 30th, 2008 at 11:59 am
Haha, oh man, what a conversation…
April 2nd, 2008 at 2:10 pm
In the Netherlands, they make you pay to use the facilities. What’s up with that?