I'm usually in drab with pantyhose and a girdle underneath. I go into the men's and use a stall. I end up pulling everything down, sitting, and when finished, putting it all back into place...
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I'm usually in drab with pantyhose and a girdle underneath. I go into the men's and use a stall. I end up pulling everything down, sitting, and when finished, putting it all back into place...
I was in a small Minnesota town 25-30 miles from where I live in Wisconsin. I was in drab with my Nephew and we went into one of those refurbished old river town buildings with antique businesses and six dollar hamburger joints. I had to use the restroom while he did conducted some business and I was surprised to find that this old building or "mini-mall" had a unisex restroom and it even said so on the sign.I mean,I realize that the Wisconsin-Minnesota- Michigan U.P. region is kinda progressive in some small ways,but it is the midwest and people can be very set in their ways.I've used women's restrooms once in awhile years ago.Often they have a tendency to be cleaner than guy's restrooms.I stopped doing that a long time ago when I found out that in some places you could get busted as a sex offender for that.Maybe a unisex restroom is an advantage.You're at least guaranteed that you can go to the restroom which can sometimes be a very precarious proposition depending on where you are at a certain time and if it's single, men's or women's restrooms and whether or not your en femme or in drab. Later,Samantha
I think what really counts is the single-person washroom. Longer wait but I think the privacy compensates. I do use the women's in my travels but I can see the move towards unisex in the future.
Here's a new article in Tucson, Arizona's paper saying that the University of Arizona will be the first in colleges to offer this "friendly" bathroom for "gender neutral" people...
Don't know if I like that title.
Here's the link:
http://www.azstarnet.com/metro/156250.php