see, this is why I think it’s a sign of a sociopath - they don’t care about others.Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing: even if this is common practice by many people, in some settings you need to be aware that you need to behave better. Imagine you and a friend go to the bathroom together, and you don't normally wash your hands. In that situation, I bet you would, because you'd be embarrassed to have your friend find out about your nasty habit of not washing. It's no different at work. These are not just total strangers; they're your co-workers, so you need to behave better.
Anonymous wrote:I always wash my hands in the work bathroom but is anyone getting and diseases or problems from pee hands touching surfaces? I don’t think so.
Anonymous wrote:Better wash hands or you’re gonna get covid-20
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It baffles me that someone would not wash their hands after a bm. Is it laziness, lack of home training, or an unclear understanding of the health impact?
Is there even a health impact? Don’t you wash hands to keep from picking up things from other people? Whatever’s in your own poop you already have.
Anonymous wrote:OP must be a woman, because this is standard practice for men.
https://www.thecut.com/2020/03/69-of-men-dont-wash-their-hands-after-using-the-bathroom.html
First off, many people assume urine is sterile.
Second, that they accomplished the maneuver without touching anything ( pull down zipper, do the job, zipper back up) -- maybe similar with OP bath mate, she pulls down pants, sits and shakes rather than wipes?
I mean, I hear their rationale, but I am a compulsive handwasher so I veer to far the other way.
Anonymous wrote:It baffles me that someone would not wash their hands after a bm. Is it laziness, lack of home training, or an unclear understanding of the health impact?