Thermal
August Member
I get that. Fear of the unknown and its threat potential is very real.I'm pretty sure most women (especially those who have previously been victims of male sexual predators) are, and have always been, uneasy about entering any enclosed area in which they will need to partially or fully undress, making them especially vulnerable, if it contains strange males who are bigger and stronger than they are. I don't think it's so much "Puritanical throwback" as basic animal instinct.
For a guy, though, the threat potential is lower than in most places, yet I still have the overpowering feeling of wrongness and intrusion. Looking hard at it, I feel like it's mostly because I've been told all my life that this is the girls room, and that is the boys room, and it's very very wrong to cross over. It's pounded in more so than reasoned.
But as an adult, the crossing over became fairly common (women in the men's room, from my perspective), and unisex facilities were no big deal in practice. Thinking about it more, though, maybe the women were more uncomfortable and inconvenienced than it appeared, and were putting on a neutral face (considering the company) when they really strongly would have preferred the privacy?
Eta: I think where I end up is that I feel like we *should* be fine with sharing a restroom by now, being 21st century rational people without unnecessary hangups and all that. That we are maybe not collectively quite there yet is just a practical reality.
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