My mother loves to remind me that about the age of four, I made a somewhat formal announcement that I was going to be a plumber when I grew up. I suppose I reasoned that my small stature would make me a handy size to fit into whatever nooks and crannies plumbing entails.
Being a fickle child, my plumbing aspirations quickly made way for dreams of being something else altogether, and 28 years on, my daily grind involves neither overalls nor plungers.
I do, however, spend a great deal of time talking about toilets.
It’s hardly surprising, really. It is a truth universally acknowledged that all us wheelchair-users really care about is keeping able-bodied people out of our car spaces and our dunnies. Dare to park your derriere in the larger cubicle and we’ll make you rue the day, right?
(Who is and isn’t allowed to use disabled toilets is an age-old and frankly boring question. People who don’t look disabled need to use accessible toilets for all kinds of reasons. A friend of mine is diabetic and needs extra room to inject insulin, and constantly has to explain that to people who abuse her for using disabled toilets. Another friend with a stoma uses them for similar reasons. It’d be nice if we all calmed down about that particular issue. Shit’s complex. Literally.)
Nonetheless, our reputation for getting stroppy over toilets isn’t entirely unwarranted. As a wheelchair user I am utterly obsessed with toilets and all my friends know it. A simple invitation to the pub is consistently followed by, “Do you know if they have an accessible toilet?”
Thankfully most of my mates are a pretty considerate bunch and they try to think about access on my behalf as often as they can. For my part, I’m pretty flexible. With enough notice I can restrict my fluid intake in the hours before going out, or resign myself to peeing with the cubicle door open and my chair parked as an ineffective privacy screen in the ladies. That might seem like a sarcastic exaggeration, but I regularly do both of those things.
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As a wheelchair user my view is that people with special needs should have priority. Unfortunately though very few establishments have a sufficient number of toilets per customer ratio therefore disabled toilets being only for people with special needs is an ideology, not a reality. This being the case I support aqua.kitty's comment: "If there's a line out the door I don't care what toilet you use -just hurry up and get the damn line shorter", this is often the case in busy eateries.
See - I don't mind when able bodied people use the disabled toilets that are inside the women's toilets. If there's a line out the door I don't care what toilet you use -just hurry up and get the damn line shorter. But the people I see that walk up to the individual disabled toilets in the toilet corridor, have a sneaky look around and then walk in really bug me. I heard one woman say she was going in there cause "they get cleaned more". I'm what you consider 'able bodied' but due to my disabilities if I'm in a super enclosed space, I will fall and injure myself. One time I tripped backwards trying to open the door and landed IN the toilet. So - it's definitely safer for me to use the disabled toilets, even with judgement.