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  • Since I WFH 95% of the time, and have installed life-changing washlet bidet this year, I absolutely try to avoid the solid waste process while away from home.

    But if I'm in the office and it can't be helped, there's a stall way back in the back of the restroom on my floor. It's out of the way, so no one can just casually walk up to it without you knowing or having reaction time. And the door closes completely with no side gaps as well.

  • Back at my old job (I haven't really worked in an office since, remote and all that) the newer building across the street had restrooms with stalls that closed all the way and went down to the floor, no gaps. And there were an absolute ton of stalls. (One of the issues I've had since gender transition is the continued need to use a stall but there are usually way less in the men's room, but the restrooms in that building had so many stalls, it was incredible.)

  • I work from home and we only have 1 bathroom so....

  • At school, but yeah I used to. That building is now closed. Basically nobody else was going there because they put the doors such that they would barely fit to open. So you'd have to squeeze in next to the toilet bowl to close the doors. But nobody would bother me there. Also since they open inwards, you could just stop anyone trying to open them.

  • They forced my company to come back to the office 4 days a week (I'm miserable, btw) but the company on the floor above us on the east side either moved, went out of business, or went full WFH, so I use their bathroom. Specifically the extra big handicap stall farthest away from the door. It's great, no one's ever up there. I would stay up there all day if I could.

  • I work from home and recently a client asked what the best part of working from home is. Without a second thought I told him it was shitting in my own toilet. It's honest to God the best part of working from home.

  • We used to have a separate floor for receiving visitors and giving presentations. The toilets there were a cut above the rest. Soft lighting, solid seats, and the thing I loved most of all: heated water coming from the sink faucets 🥰
    They were a joy to use, but after Covid they repurposed and remodeled the floor. Now the toilets are worse than on the other floors.
    Those heated faucets will always hold a special place in my heart :)

    • On a tangent, ...

      tldr: Hot water tends to majorly influence home/office energy use.

      tl: Since living with rooftop solar here, I have noticed just how much energy is often drawn because of warm water. As in, in this house, you can see very noticeable usage spikes in the solar app whenever someone showers or washes dishes. I've completely given up on washing my hands with warm water and have reduced the amount of water I shower with. We've also started using the electric kettle for heating water because it means you usually only heat up about as much water as you actually need and the kettle has a pretty uniform 2kW power draw (which helps make it work on solar).

      Obviously, there are different systems for heating water but one way or another, they tend to use a lot of energy and heat more water than necessary to higher temperatures than necessary. Unsurprisingly, other major energy wasters that most of us come into contact on a daily basis are also all about changing temperatures, namely home heating, AC and gas-powered motors (aka drivable heatings).

      • sigh
        Of course you're right that using heated water for washing your hands is a bit of a wasteful luxury. I just had some good memories of that bathroom.

    • We have a lobby for visitors. Naturally, it has the nicest bathrooms. I work night, when we never have visitors. It is definitely the ideal place to take a poop.

  • Yeah, there only single person bathrooms where I work and it depends on the action I plan to take. Peeing I'll do any of them, but pooping is reversed for the one in the corner, away from everything and everyone and it always has plenty of spray.

27 comments