Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Restroom Issues


Raven1981

Recommended Posts

Hello All:

 

Want to ask for any suggestions and help with the restrooms.  I know that this is a very touchy subject with how it has been in the news, but I have caught myself that when I am out in public as myself and I need to use the restroom, that it is a big delima on which one to use.  I am afraid to go into the mens room cause I look female but I am afraid to go into the womens room cause I feel that I dont pass enough and so I am confused as to which restroom do I use.  So I usually end up making sure that if I go out that I dont really have anything to drink and that I try to use the restroom at home, but when I am out and I need to go is when I am confused and end up trying to race home to use the restroom.

 

What is everyone's thoughts on this and how do you combat this?

 

Lots of Love

 

Amy

Link to comment

Hi Amy!

 

I wish I had a solution but I struggle with the same problem. There are various apps that have maps showing where businesses have gender-neutral bathrooms available, so maybe that could help? One is called Refuge Restrooms, I think. I know many Targets have one stand-alone family bathroom so if I'm anywhere near a Target I go in and use that. And I keep a mental map of all the places with single-occupant restrooms because they're less scary. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Its hard to gauge from here but go where you feel comfortable.  If you feel unsafe in the men's room, don't use it. 

 

Jani

Link to comment

I really think it’s another case of fear. And confidence. Once you have that confidence it’ll be nothing. As Jani said if you feel unsafe in the men’s room use the women’s. The first 100 times may be scary but it’ll go away. Right?! Right. ?

Link to comment

As ChickenLitte said, Target has family rooms, but their policy is that you can use whatever room you want, so if you want to use the restroom that matches your gender you have that right.

Link to comment
  • Admin

My experience has been that I receive less pushback from women, and that women have such a wide range of styles and body shapes already that we are saved by that factor alone.  If you can, go with another woman who is your passport.  Do be wary if a male is standing outside "guarding" it though, they have challenged cis women who did not fit the male's notion of femininity .  On the other side of that, I was chased away from men"s RRs long before I felt passable because I looked female to them.  WTH

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

A lot of smaller places have gender neutral male female restrooms and bigger places especially malls have family restrooms.  I'd look for those until you become more comfortable with using the women's room.

 

Willow

Link to comment

Amy... I am gaining understanding as I go. I am naturally AR ( A. Retentive), low testosterone, will knowingly and willingly ask a cop, busy doing his job, how to get to Wal-Mart across from the Target at the Target across from Wal-Mart with a Fluid French accent! I haven't insisted on pronouns yet.

 

Oddly, I am a social animal now. I tell anyone that will listen what I am doing with my life. 

 

Here is what I have found being myself, in the wild (public) dressed how I want. I am starting a new thread in a minute... 

 

You see Amy, I stumbled into Palm Springs, CA a week after Mother's Day in '17. I was not out in any way.

 

I got lucky and was formally introduced to an acquaintance I had met earlier became attached to me and visa versa which was a bit confusing as I was 'not' gay!. I did not like men or anyone for that matter. So falling for this guy was weird. He, however, recognized a soul instead of a goal. So he nursed me thru coming out and it was effortless. 

 

Within 6 weeks I was fully out and not happy with my wardrobe! In fact, it was flat disgusting to me I had completely shifted my train of thought from manspeak to womanspeak almost over night. We have an amazing relationship. It all comes down to no sex. Really!

 

Be forth! Becoming

Link to comment

Hello All:

 

Thank you for your good advise and I will try the advise given.  This is all very helpful.

 

Thank you all

 

Lots of Love

 

Amy

Link to comment
6 hours ago, Amy LeBlanc said:

Hello All:

 

Thank you for your good advise and I will try the advise given.  This is all very helpful.

 

Thank you all

 

Lots of Love

 

Amy

The thing is, Amy, just be yourself. One day you'll just walk In to the ladies room like you own it! Your self gratitude will be your reward. Go with it. 

 

Just remember...

 

You Are Beautiful! Own it!

 

Michelle

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Hey Amy,

  I think Jani had a really good suggestion about getting comfortable with the idea of using the women’s room, honestly I can’t wait until I can stop using the men’s room it is just always so gross!  I think that building your confidence will be key, and after using the women’s room for a little while you will most likely find it’s no big deal, and that women are nowhere near as ready to mess with another girl as men are. 

 I was out having fun this weekend with some friends, one of whom is FTM, and I swear nothing scares him, at least that’s what it would seem on the surface as I know he does worry a bit about this or that. I’m actually quite proud of him, as much as he down plays his own strength and bravery I find him quite the beacon of masculine fine points, the best of what makes a man a man!  He charged straight into the men’s room and took care of business like a pro, when I found myself standing around waiting for a stall having to tell one patron to feel free to use the urinal and take my turn in line since I’m just “shy“... HA!  Such polar opposite‘s, I’m standing around telling people I’m shy and he just goes in with everyone unnoticed, unbothered and unfettered with other peoples problems and hangups.  I often wish the rest of the men on this planet were so evolved,  we could use more men like that, they certainly would treat women better and leave the men’s room more tidy than this planets knuckle dragging typical male does now.  

 Hugs, 

Jackie

Link to comment

So many posters have said that women are less prone to bother you about this stuff, but that’s not true in my area at all (urban Utah). We have a polarized population of super-allies and aggressive conservatives with few moderates. So often I find that when there IS a problem it’s the women who are the fierce moral guardians, the first to loudly complain to management, call the cops, or berate you on the spot; while the men give dirty looks. Based on this I feel least safe in a busy women’s restroom.

 

My strategy is one that catches a lot of flak from my queer friends: I literally ask an employee which restroom I should use. That way, if anyone has a problem, I have the safety of having been given “permission.” What happens in practice is usually that the management has never considered the question and stammers something out that they’re making up as they go (hopefully promoting them to craft a concrete policy for the future) and I’m usually told to use whichever one I’m comfortable with. When I’m told to use the men’s, I don’t protest, because I did ask after all.

 

My friends think this is cowardly and gives away my own power, but I’m more concerned about my safety. People here have been known to be fined for “disorderly conduct” for using the “wrong” restroom so it’s important for me to know I’m in the right (even when I disagree).

Link to comment

That's a really interesting approach, Marbabar, and one that leaves me with very mixed feelings. I like it because it has a nice sense of politeness and respecting the wishes of the business owner and garnering support from them. But, I can definitely understand the flak from your friends. I think I would end up leaving any establishment that asked me to use the men's room, but then again your area is a bit different culturally than mine. 

This is another case of how there really are no rules and we just have to do what works for us!

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

Find a Starbucks!

 

I've been doing this long enough to where I don't even think about it now. I've been using the ladies room before this controversy, during the controversy, and after the controversy (including going in NC!). I've only had one incident in Nashville where a security guard followed me in and said "this is the woman's room" to which I replied "I know. I'm a woman." then I looked at her like she was an idiot.

Her reply as she left? "well you look different from behind." 

Link to comment
On 6/29/2018 at 9:32 AM, Marbabar said:

So many posters have said that women are less prone to bother you about this stuff, but that’s not true in my area at all (urban Utah). We have a polarized population of super-allies and aggressive conservatives with few moderates. So often I find that when there IS a problem it’s the women who are the fierce moral guardians, the first to loudly complain to management, call the cops, or berate you on the spot; while the men give dirty looks. Based on this I feel least safe in a busy women’s restroom.

 

My strategy is one that catches a lot of flak from my queer friends: I literally ask an employee which restroom I should use. That way, if anyone has a problem, I have the safety of having been given “permission.” What happens in practice is usually that the management has never considered the question and stammers something out that they’re making up as they go (hopefully promoting them to craft a concrete policy for the future) and I’m usually told to use whichever one I’m comfortable with. When I’m told to use the men’s, I don’t protest, because I did ask after all.

 

My friends think this is cowardly and gives away my own power, but I’m more concerned about my safety. People here have been known to be fined for “disorderly conduct” for using the “wrong” restroom so it’s important for me to know I’m in the right (even when I disagree).

Having been born and raised in Ogden I can get a good feel for what you say. That said, the State Government of Utah has some progressive links.

 

For $25, a self addressed, stamped envelope and a copy of my court order Weber County Vital Stats will send my *amended* birth cert with name and gender change applied!

Link to comment

Being a full blown longhaired hippie in Ogden in the late 60s was challenging so say the least. I can't even imagine coming out there. Frightening thought actually. Cudos to you, Marbabar! Nothing about coming out in Utah is cowardly. Quite the opposite in fact!

?*huge huggers*?

Link to comment

Kinda late to this but wanted to say as a FTM I'm currently  having the same difficulty. I don't consider myself to pass as male ordinarily (sometimes I do but not regularly). However, a few times now I've scared people in the women's and after the last time I'm really reluctant to go there again. I use gender neutral when I can but it's not always possible. 

 

Whoever thought pee-ing could be so damn complicated

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   3 Members, 0 Anonymous, 85 Guests (See full list)

    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • Stefi
    • Evelyn J
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      767.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,014
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Quillian
    Newest Member
    Quillian
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. l.demiurge
      l.demiurge
  • Posts

    • Abigail Genevieve
      Hi!   That was probably hard to write and then read and say, did I really write that?  Been there.   I'm glad you call it a journey.  It is.  One step at a time, and sometimes two steps forward, one back.    Abby
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, Violet! We glad you found us! No one here will judge you. Each of us is unique yet we all share some similarities. And many of us are in the relative early stages of self-discovery.   Take time to wander the sections of the forums. You’ll find lots of information and ideas.   Ask questions if you feel comfortable. You will find lots of people willing to share their experiences.   Is it possible for you to possibly work with a gender therapist? Many of us have found that to be extremely helpful in finding our identity and out true selves.   Just jump in. We don’t bite! We’ve all been in some version of where you are.
    • April Marie
      Literally. 
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Shameless plug for my "Taylor" story down in Stories You Write.  I am not Taylor and the experiences she goes through are not what has happened to me, but there is an emotional expression that I think is the best way to say some things that I don't know how to say otherwise.  I am not Bob, either.  But you might find out some things about me by reading it.  And I hope it is a good read and you enjoy it.  I am not done with it.  If you would like to comment on it, I would appreciate it.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Tuesday night.  They had a quick supper together at a fast food place.  Bob went off to teach karate and Taylor locked herself inside her apartment and worked on her hiring plan.   First the web site problem.  The two guys who ran it were self-taught and knew little.  It currently had three pages, the Home page, the About page and the Contact page,  She asked them to work with Karen in terms of redesigning it and she needed three designs to show Gibbs tomorrow.  The problem was three fold: the two guys and Karen.  Millville was a small town and all three were relatives of members of the Board.  Millville, Millvale. She was doing it.  People here called it either way, sometimes in the space of a few seconds.  She thought it was Millville.  All three had complained about the work, because the two boys regarded it as done and untouchable, even though they actually had not worked on it at all for months.  Like a number of people, they showed up and collected generous pay checks and did nothing.  She had looked at a number of websites and she had been told the company wanted one both internal and external customers could log into.  Her chief difficulty at the moment there was that there was very little content.  She decided to send the three complainers out tomorrow to take numerous pictures of the thirty acres  Or was it forty?  No one seemed to care. She cared, because she needed to get it right.  She debated outsourcing the website to a company, but first she needed something to outsource, and before then she needed to decide whether to keep these people.  She didn't need to mess with them.  So she decided to recommend they hire an experienced website developer with management skills. Would such a person come to Millville?  The schools were good, because the company had poured money into them, and the streets were well paved.  The company had bought all the abandoned houses and maintained them, hoping someday they would be filled again. Millville was crime-free.  People did not lock their doors. Neighborly. Very conservative, but in a good way.  Hard working, ethical, honest. Maybe the Chinese money was corrupting the town?  Not sure.  So she thought they would hire someone, even if it were a remote position.  She would rather have them here, but she would take what she would get.  That would move the website out of her hair. Secondly, she needed an effective presenter.  She could not do all these presentations herself.  She had natural talent but a lot could be passed on. She needed another Mary and another Brenda, or their understudies, effective hardworking people.   Bob. Was he okay with this?  He said she was Management.  Was that a problem?  And she was now earning a ridiculous salary, which she put down to company dysfunction more than anything she had done.  Was that a problem? She was not sure.  He was highly competitive and he had that male ego.  She did not.  A feeling of guilt rose.   Her therapist had brought up her feelings of guilt about not making Dad's expectations, never being the man Dad wanted her to be.  She never could, and this physical evidence backed that up.  What would the doctor say?  She thought about it, and that her therapist said she needed to find a sexual assault survivor's group more than a transgender group right now. Was there one here?  She thought about serving in a women's shelter.  There was one here, oddly enough connected to the church they had visited.  That F on her drivers' license would help.  She was waiting until after she talked to the doctor again to move on that stuff.   Was Bob really buying 160 acres near the old air strip on speculation?  Much of the land around Millville had been for sale for a long time.  That land was being offered at a dollar an acre, the owners having inherited it and now living out of state. Common knowledge.  They would take the first offer, and it had been for sale since the airstrip closed twenty years ago. Airstrip.  That would help.  Not tonight. Focus, girl, she told herself, and read over her notes to do so, which were making less sense the further down she went. It was eleven, and she gave up and went to bed.
    • violet r
      .my name is violet. I'm new here and thus is my first try at forums. I'm 45 and just recently having came to terms of who I really am. Thought a lot of self discovery since I stopped drinking. Drinking was my coping mechanism to hide a lot of thing. There were plenty of signs though the years. As I look back. That i hid inside. Now really sure what made all of this bubble to the surface at this time in my life.  Mabye it was waiting for me to be open minded and ready to accept that I am trans. I have a very unhealthy environment at home that is anti trans. I really don't know what else to say but hi. I hope everyone here will be accepting of me and me work through my journey of finding the real me. I know that since I accepted it I have been much happier than I can remember. Being to real me makes me happy. I hate having to hide this all the the time at home. I work retail management and have no idea if I could even stay in this business if I am to fully come out. Wow that was scary saying all that. It's a first for me
    • Ivy
      It is a lifesaver for a lot of us.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Thanks.  What I do as a man is what a woman would do if she were a man.  There is just something feminine about the way I act as a man.  It's not that being a woman is actually better, or something to aspire to, but it is just that I am one, while not being one.   If beating my head bloody to get rid off this stupid dysphoria would fix it I would find the nearest wall, but I know that if I did that, when I woke up, it would still be there.   If I did not have this struggle I would be someone else and I would be less of a person than I am.  They say an oak tree growing in an open field is far stronger than one in a forest.  The storms come and go and I stand.   This forum is the first time I have interacted with other people struggling with the same struggle and parallel struggles. It helps.
    • Ashley0616
      I'm sorry! :( Hopefully something better will come up
    • Ashley0616
      Thank you! Did great with the kids
    • Sally Stone
      That's me too, Mae.  I don't think it's me as much as it is the camera (that's my story anyway).  Cameras hate me.  I never met one that liked me.  I often wish I was photogenic; sadly, not so much.   However, you look terrific in that selfie! 
    • Sally Stone
      April, I'm so glad things went well when you came out to your spouse.  So often, things can go sideways.  It's a hurdle we all have to jump at some point.
    • violet r
      I totally understand what you just said. I can relate to this very well. I have a lot.of similar feelings.
    • KymmieL
      Well it is a no go for the new position. OH, well. nothing ventured nothing gained.   Kymmie
    • Davie
      Dickey Betts, the singer, songwriter, and guitarist of the Allman Brothers Band whose piercing solos, beloved songs and hell-raising spirit defined the band and Southern rock in general, died Thursday morning 04/18/2024 at the age of 80. Rest in peace...
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...