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You can't make this stuff up
You can't make this stuff up
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Long lines for women's restrooms are the result of a history that favors mens bodies If youre a woman, chances are youve a) spent time fidgeting in a long line waiting to use a public toilet, b) delayed a bodily function because you dont want to or havent the time to waste standing in line to use a public toilet, c) considered sneaking into a mens roomillegal in some places, or d) cursed loudly because of all of the above. Faced with a long restroom line that spiraled up and around a circular stairwell at a recent museum visit, I opted not to wait. Why do we put up with this? This isnt a minor pet peeve, but a serious question. Despite years of potty parity laws, women are still forced to stand in lines at malls, schools, stadiums, concerts, fair grounds, theme parks, and other crowded public spaces. This is frustrating, uncomfortable, and, in some circumstances, humiliating. Its also a form of discrimination, as it disproportionately affects women. Let me count the ways. Women need to use bathrooms more often and for longer periods of time because: we sit to urinate (urinals effectively double the space in mens rooms), we menstruate, we are responsible for reproducing the species (which makes us pee more), we continue to have greater responsibility for children (who have to use bathrooms with us), and we breastfeed (frequently in grotty bathroom stalls). Additionally, women tend to wear more binding and cumbersome clothes, whereas mens clothing provides significantly speedier access. But in a classic example of the difference between surface equality and genuine equity, many public restrooms continue to be facilities that are equal in physical space, while favoring mens bodies, experiences, and needs. Legislation to address the design and provision of public restrooms in new construction often requires more space for womens rooms. But that has hardly made a dent in many of our oldest and most used public spaces. This is especially true in powerful institutions, such as schools and government complexes, where old buildings, and their gendered legacies, dominate. In the United States, for example, women in the House of Representatives didnt get a bathroom near the Speakers Lobby until 2011. Prior to that, the nearest womens room was so far away that the time it took women to get to the bathroom and back exceeded session break times. The nearby mens room, meanwhile, had a fireplace, a shoeshine stand, and televised floor proceedings. Additionally, old building codes required more space for men, as womens roles were restricted almost entirely to the private sphere. That reality has often confused the is with the ought. As scholar Judith Plaskow noted in a paper on toilets and social justice, Not only does the absence of womens bathrooms signify the exclusion of women from certain professions and halls of power, but it also has functioned as an explicit argument against hiring women or admitting them into previously all-male organizations. She cites examples, including Yale Medical School and Harvard Law School, both of which claimed that a lack of public facilities made it impossible for women to be admitted as students. Schools like the Virginia Military Institute used this excuse as recently as 1996. When spaces are changed so that everyone experiences equal waiting time, backlash has been quick. In 2004, for example, new rules resulted in men waiting in line to use the bathrooms at Soldier Field in Chicago. They complained until five womens rooms were converted to mens. The result was that, once again, womens wait times doubled. No protests have yielded a commensurate response to reduce them. That women are socialized to quietly deal with physical discomfort, pain, and a casual disregard for their bodily needs is overlooked in the statements, No one is making them wait, or Why dont they demand changes? Last year, when writer Jessica Valenti made the sensible argument that tampons should be free in public bathrooms, the way toilet paper is, it resulted in a misogynistic hate-fest. In the meantime, the male-centeredness of our restroom standards can also be seen in the constant stream (no pun intended) of products cheerily encouraging women to expand their excreting options, by peeing, for example, like a man. On the other hand, attempts to encourage men to emulate women in equal measure, sitting to urinate, are seen as degrading assaults on masculinity. This growing trend, a more sanitary and less expensive option in public restrooms (because less cleaning is required), horrifies many people. It matters that 83% of registered architects and an eerily similar percentage of legislators in the U.S. are the very people least likely to have to wait in lines. As urban planner Salma Samar Damluji put it during a 2013 discussion about why womens input is so important to designing public space, effective urban planning is not a luxury, its a basic need. In the United States, laws are rapidly changing, largely due to effective LGTBQ advocacy and a generational sea change in how gender is understood. Organic solutions, particularly at high schools and colleges, include combinations of male/female facilities alongside gender-neutral ones. Single-stall designs that can be used by everyone, such as airplane bathrooms and family/handicapped facilities are the most space and time efficient, and least discriminatory. They are also philosophically palatable to a broad spectrum, as they represent not so much a contested segregations or de-gendering of restroom spaces, as much as a rethinking of privacy and the uses of public space. Women arent standing in lines because we bond over toilet paper pattern or because were narcissistic and vain. Were standing in line because our bodies, like those of trans and queer people, have been historically shamed, ignored, and deemed unworthy of care and acknowledgement. We shouldnt have to wait or postpone having these needs fairly met in public space. |
Feminism's Final Frontier: Bathroom Sexism
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