Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think saying yes allow common decency. We have 2 half bathrooms that are more than acceptable for guests to use. I would maybe switch out the hand towel afterwards. I would not want them to go upstairs to the bedroom level.
I don't get the germaphobe part. Do you think they are going to smear poop all over the place? Have you never used a shared restroom?
Fecal matter spray can spread disease and viruses.
And seriously, you’re ok with sitting on the seat after a strangers ass has been there? You hover in public, that’s the difference.
You don’t hover in public Omg. You sit same as at home. Use a disposable seat cover if you’re really worried. It’s just SKIN!!! It’s just your butt! This is why public toilet seats always have pee on them.
Anonymous wrote:While I might feel uncomfortable with the idea of them using the bathroom, I would assume they are more uncomfortable with feeling the need to ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks to those of you who did not put me down. It has happened more than once so I wanted to be prepared. The previous time was when we moved into this house and one of the movers had obvious diarrhea.
See this is why I wouldn’t allow it in my house. They prob left diarrhea stains all over the bathroom. And that’s contagious!
Anonymous wrote:I personally think it is rude of a home delivery person to ask you if they can use your restroom.
It is unprofessional & it is not fair to put you in an uncomfortable position.
Anonymous wrote:I personally think it is rude of a home delivery person to ask you if they can use your restroom.
It is unprofessional & it is not fair to put you in an uncomfortable position.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had furniture delivered yesterday and one of the delivery people asked to use our bathroom. I said yes, but really don’t like it. Is there a polite way to refuse? I need some tips. They were in and out of our house in ten minutes and public restrooms are five minutes away. I will admit that I was a germophobe before Covid and that it is even worse now.
How very Ivanka and Jared of you not to want to allow them to use the toilet. OMFG.
It was made public by someone in Obamas camp that those agents really made a mess of the toilets. It wasn’t just a random thing that they decided.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had furniture delivered yesterday and one of the delivery people asked to use our bathroom. I said yes, but really don’t like it. Is there a polite way to refuse? I need some tips. They were in and out of our house in ten minutes and public restrooms are five minutes away. I will admit that I was a germophobe before Covid and that it is even worse now.
How very Ivanka and Jared of you not to want to allow them to use the toilet. OMFG.
Anonymous wrote:I personally think it is rude of a home delivery person to ask you if they can use your restroom.
It is unprofessional & it is not fair to put you in an uncomfortable position.
yes, soiling themselves is so much better.Anonymous wrote:I personally think it is rude of a home delivery person to ask you if they can use your restroom.
It is unprofessional & it is not fair to put you in an uncomfortable position.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had furniture delivered yesterday and one of the delivery people asked to use our bathroom. I said yes, but really don’t like it. Is there a polite way to refuse? I need some tips. They were in and out of our house in ten minutes and public restrooms are five minutes away. I will admit that I was a germophobe before Covid and that it is even worse now.
I think it would be awful of you to refuse to let them use your bathroom since they were already in your house. It's different if the delivery is something that comes no further than your door--then you can say you are not comfortable lettting someone you don't know in (Amazon, FedEx, DoorDash, etc). But if you let them in, you should allow that. You'd be surprised how often I've heard from plumbers, Verizon techs, etc that people refuse or never offer them a coffee or water. It takes me 2 minutes to get someone a nice coffee (Nespresso machine) or a cold bottle of water, and they often have no time at all to stop for things like that because of the way their schedules are tracked.
Anonymous wrote:We had furniture delivered yesterday and one of the delivery people asked to use our bathroom. I said yes, but really don’t like it. Is there a polite way to refuse? I need some tips. They were in and out of our house in ten minutes and public restrooms are five minutes away. I will admit that I was a germophobe before Covid and that it is even worse now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be worried about safety (rape, etc.) more than COVID -- sorry to be blunt, but I would not want a male stranger inside my house. Surface transmission of COVID is really, really unlikely. Clorox the seat off if you're that worried.
And to be clear, I'd let them use the powder room, but would be uncomfortable because of a lifetime of being socialized not to let men in my home when husband isn't home
Maybe the problem is the lifetime of socialization and not the man who had a poop emergency.