Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a guy, I find using public toilets to pee ok but not for pooping. Most cubicles are small, dirty and smelly. It was the same during school, although they were usually clean. Holding it in all day wasn’t very practical, so I started taking nullo tablets and wearing black pants. It’s also important to wear good underwear.
If you don’t like using public toilets, it’s an alternative.
What does this even mean?
They poop in their pants and then walk around thinking it’s fine because they are wearing black pants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP has not traveled the world much. Actually, anywhere. There is a reason why it was called “American Standard” - there WERE no standards in Europe -it was always a cheaply constructed make-do operation. And more than half the world has Turkish squat toilets which apparently has never even seen
Just because it’s worse in other places doesn’t make it okay the way it is in the US. There is no reason for having awful stalls with see through spaces, especially in a workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite "but why" cultural toilet thing is the poop shelf in Dutch toilets, so you can inspect your poop before flushing. As a result Dutch toilets tend to have skidmarks.
Wait, what??? How disgusting!
You can't flush toilet paper in Taiwan.
You have to put it in the trashcan.
This is actually much easier on the entire solid waste system and a better way to do things.
Why not do it here?
Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP has not traveled the world much. Actually, anywhere. There is a reason why it was called “American Standard” - there WERE no standards in Europe -it was always a cheaply constructed make-do operation. And more than half the world has Turkish squat toilets which apparently has never even seen
Anonymous wrote:Poop at home, not in a public bathroom and certainly not at work!!
Anonymous wrote:Clearly you need to travel more. Spend some time in India, and you will be grateful for US public bathrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite "but why" cultural toilet thing is the poop shelf in Dutch toilets, so you can inspect your poop before flushing. As a result Dutch toilets tend to have skidmarks.
Wait, what??? How disgusting!
You can't flush toilet paper in Taiwan.
You have to put it in the trashcan.
This is actually much easier on the entire solid waste system and a better way to do things.
Why not do it here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite "but why" cultural toilet thing is the poop shelf in Dutch toilets, so you can inspect your poop before flushing. As a result Dutch toilets tend to have skidmarks.
Wait, what??? How disgusting!
You can't flush toilet paper in Taiwan.
You have to put it in the trashcan.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know what Europe you all went to but the best bathrooms ever are in Portugal. Full bathroom stalls or rather rooms that are in a row of three in a diagonal and it was spotless and it had a sink in the stall. It was at a little outdoor mall so not a fancy area either. Belgium had beautiful restrooms and in London, we were in fancy areas but the toilets were clean, spacious, free and we never experienced any toilet anxiety. The worst place ever was Mexico. No toilet seats and you had to pay 2 pesos for a grimy toilet.