I’m the type of person that, often to my relationship
detriment, is constantly competing. I
compete as I’m driving, bargain shopping, selecting produce at the store, even
against my roommate for things as trivial as who leaves for work first in the
morning (a race I nearly always win but the times I don’t have been known to
ruin entire mornings as I sulk into my cubicle with a defeated travel coffee). Sometimes,
the competition comes in the form of races or time trials against myself– how quickly can I get from my desk to the
office bathroom? Can I take fewer steps
and also improve my time? Can I hold
my breath the entire way? The result of these challenges has often been
simply a very awkward looking girl in the back hallway from my office to the
restroom taking quick, elongated steps, pale from not breathing.
I decided it was time for a new sport, and to up the ante
even. What has seemed to take roots lately has been a “me against the office
complex” challenge centering on… the first-floor community bathroom, my mini
battlefield. Allow me to offer a sketch of the course of play. This is a fairly
standard six-stall community restroom. The first five stalls are standard size,
and the last is handicapped. We’ve got auto-flush toilets and no courtesy
music. Sinks are auto, and despite everything else being automatic, we have
paper towel hand dyers, no air dryers. It’s state government, so we’re not talking
frills. I think you can guess where this is going; the object is to get in and
out undetected. If you’re a guy, you might not get it. The
ladies know what I’m sayin’.
Each game commences with the pushing open of the heavy
bathroom door. It feels like a freshly dealt hand of poker upon each entrance.
Your fate of the game is hinged upon the contents. I’ve crafted a few solid
approaches to navigate any situation.
You enter at the same
time as another go-er (if it’s a coworker, disengage. This only applies to
a stranger). You both settle into your
respective stalls. There's always that awkward silent moment. The other might rattle with the tp, or shift their feet, perhaps even a long sigh. Your hope is that they get in, get out and leave you in
peace. However, there are times that they too want to be left in peace. It’s in
this instance that you’re forced to engage in a stall-down.
It all depends on the urgency of the situation, but in my
experience, you can almost never wait these people out. They are government
employees and I’ve found their threshold to return to their desks to be much
higher than mine. Leave and come back.
You enter to find a
squatter, and by the position of their feet, they’re not planning to vacate any
time soon. Depending upon the look of the shoes, you may or may not be able
to draw them out of their stall by sink activity and clicking of makeup to kill
time. Following etiquette (they arrived first), you must defer to them. Your
choice is either skilled auto-flushing, or to simply leave and come back.
You find the place
empty. You not only have your choice of stalls – a great position to be in
– and you also have first right of continuance. Act fast, since time is
limited. In an 11-story building, the bottom level restroom is rarely empty. I
almost always select the handicapped stall at the end, lovingly referred to by
others in my office as “the apartment.” If you’re able to get in and out without
disturbance, you’ve won.
I could keep going, but think perhaps I should save some matters to the imagination. Maybe
it’s a little late for that… oh well. Game on, suckers.
2 comments:
This takes things to a new level, even for you. However, I still think you've only scratched the hopefully-lysoled surface. For example -- the having a designated change of shoes used specifically for when you head to the bathroom. Two purposes: 1) Sanitary 2) It makes you anonymous to prying eyes who try to match that mystery bathroom goer with the shoes they saw under the stall. The key is to make it a pair of shoes that you would never be caught dead wearing. I choose red stilettos, even for the men's bathroom. Though, they allow me to use the women's restroom as well. Point is. They turn me into a ghost. Put that one under you pillow. The first tip is free.
Holy mole. This is good, even for you. But how do you propose getting to the bathroom in stilettos unseen? I couldn't very well hold my breath, work on using less steps annnnd wear unassuming footwear!
Or could I??? You're right about scratching the surface, bucko.
Thanks for the tip.
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