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By
Steven Soifer, M.S.W., Ph.D.
President
International Paruresis Association (IPA, Inc).
PO Box 65111
Baltimore, MD 21209
1-800-247-3864
ssoifer@ssw.umaryland.edu
How modern man (and woman) deal with the problem of human
elimination has shown much variation across time, civilizations,
and religions. The only reason it would even appear to be an issue
is because we are social beings, and are concerned about how and
what others think of us. Living in groups, the individual, to some
degree, must conform to group norms in order to maintain his or
her position within it.1
Moreover, the affluence of a society will shape the kinds of facilities
that eventually develop. Initially, one would expect some collective
facility, then perhaps several smaller facilities for subgroups
or families, and finally individual toilet facilities in private
dwellings. A key factor would also be the availability of water
for disposal purposes.2
Early in the human species evolution, bathrooms were clearly unnecessary,
since we wandered about without any permanent settlements, and used
the outdoors and earth to relieve ourselves and cover our excrement
such as fields, rivers, and perhaps rock piles. Once we set
some roots, however, and built dwellings, the need for facilities
for the disposal of waste excrement was necessary. Consequently,
primitive toilet facilities were created, first outside of any dwelling
units, and then eventually moved indoors. Of course, just moving
these early toilet facilities indoors wasnt enough, since
the odors could become overwhelming with time. So various methods
were developed to deal with the situation. 3
Several early human civilizations had remarkably sophisticated
methods for dealing with human excrement. In 3000 B.C.E., Mesopotamia,
the palace of Sargon I, king of Sumeria, had six primitive toilets
in it. Also at this time, the Harapans of the Indus Valley had indoor
toilets in private residences that fed into underground drains flowing
into cesspools. Finally, the Minoan civilization, dating back to
2000 B.C.E., built the splendid Palace of Knossos, consisting of
over 1400 rooms, had flush toilets by virtue of a sophisticated
rainwater pipe system under the influence of gravity.4
It appears that the Egyptians had sit toilets, and seemed to use
sand to cover excrement in the chamber below.5
The Romans, drawing on the Etruscans who had built the largest
sewer of ancient times, created an elaborate drainage network
for human waste. Wealthy Romans could afford to hook up their homes
to this sewer system, while the less well to do had to rely on public
bathrooms, which were a vast improvement over anything built before.
In fact, by the fourth century C.E., over 140 public facilities
were available.6
What did these public bathrooms look like? In some Tunisian ruins,
the facilities had seats cut into marble ledges on three of four
sides, with no dividers separating the seats. Water underneath carried
the excrement away.7 One paid
to use these toilets, and much socializing, politics, and business
(and perhaps intrigue) was done here.8
Rome also pioneered the mens public urinal, which was referred
to as the pissoir or Vespasienne. Either
simply out in the open or with a minimal degree of privacy, these
devices collected the urine for the use as dye, which was sold by
Emperor Vespasian to fatten his coffers.9
They were also a means to try and prevent the commoner from simply
pissing in the stairwells of buildings.10
Yet, the plebeians(?), and probably most people at night, resorted
to the chamber pot. Simple and effective, those filled with urine
would be emptied in the morning by tossing it out the bedroom window
onto the street below, a tradition that carried into the Middle
Ages.11
As incredible as it may seem, almost a thousand years passed between
the fall of the Roman Empire and the restoration of public (and
to a large degree, private) toilet facilities in Europe, though
Constantinople continued the Roman tradition of public sewage disposal.12
The Middle Ages, and the Crusades, raised renewed interest in toilet
accommodations and public sanitation, as Crusaders came back and
reported what they saw in the Arab world. Also during this period,
castles were being constructed with garderobes, essentially
privies with a couple of seats projecting off the side, with excrement
falling into the moat below or down the sides of the castle into
collectors below. Public toilets of any sort were few and far between.13
However, there is evidence that in 1214 C.E., Europe saw the beginning
of the construction of manned public facilities in certain areas.14
The sixteenth century proved to be a major turning point for personal
and public toilet development. In France in 1519, the Normandy government
required toilets in every home. In India, the Mughal King Jehangir
constructed public toilet facilities for over 100 people in the
city of Alwar.15 Clearly, however,
these were the exceptions, not the rule. As a study in contrasts,
while the Indian palace had flush toilets made of marble, there
wasnt even running water in London during the 1700s. Most
commoners, especially in Europe, relied on outdoor pit toilets and
chamber pots; visits to the toilet were also a family affair,
with enough seats for everyone!16
This brings us to a very important point. The whole idea of privacy
in using the toilet is a very modern concept, with its origins in
the 1800s.17 It is important
to remember that the notion of personal privacy has
evolved over the last couple of hundred years, and is directly tied
to both economic prosperity and religious notions. As one observer
has aptly stated: One obviously has to have the conditions
that permit modesty before a society can make modesty into an operable
virtue.18 What might
seem incredible to us moderns today are pre-Enlightenment
(and certainly pre-Victorian!) attitudes toward elimination. Quotes
Kira: Kings, princes and even generals treated it [defecation
and perhaps urination] as a throne at which audiences could be granted.
Lord Portland, when Ambassador to the Court of Louis XIV, was deemed
highly honored to be so received, and it was from this throne that
Louis announced ex cathedra his coming marriage to Mme. De
Maintenon.19
Several trends also seemed to be at play to change these old norms.
On the one hand, it appears that rudeness and abuses certainly occurred
in situations in which more than one person was in the privy, especially
when there was no separation by gender.20
Also, with the Industrial Revolution and massive increases in urban
populations, something had to be done to improve sanitation standards.
The year 1596 C.E. was a watershed; the Englishman J.D. Harrington
invented the water closet, or WC.21
Of course, this was merely an improvement on an ancient design (the
Palace of Knossos), the key difference being that the WC had moving
parts. The WC, or toilet as it is referred to in the United States,
was placed in a small room somewhere in the home. While decent people
initially shunned its introduction, today it would be hard to imagine
living without it, some saying it marks mans final ascent
to civilization.22 Believe
it or not, it took a full 200 years before the WC became popular
during the late 1700s. In the 1850s, Thomas Crapper, another Englishman,
had the distinction of developing the toilet design that is still
used today.23
The French led the way in other areas. In 1739 C.E., a Parisian
restaurant, for the first time, provided separate facilities for
the different sexes at a dance. Moreover, in 1824 C.E., the first
public toilet facilities appeared in the French capital (?). England,
in 1878 C.E., was the first to implement sanitation laws.24
There also appears to have been a tradition in which street vendors
would, for a small fee, provide you with a cloak and bucket so that
you could relieve yourself in public with a modicum of privacy.
This also probably protected against thievery. There is documentation
to show this occurred in Scotland in the 1700s, but still was occurring
in places like Eastern Europe and part of Asia as late as the early
twentieth century.25
Prior to the twentieth century, only the well to do had WC or flush
toilets. The other classes had to make due with outdoor privies
or earth closets (wooden seat and pail below) in a small
room or in furniture, often referred to as a potty chair.
Elaborate effort went into disguising these devices.26
The middle classes, especially in the cities, began to have toilets
installed in their homes en masse beginning in the late 1800s and
early 1900s. Functionality, not design, was the hallmark of the
day. 27 Its important
to realize that another factor preventing mass installation of toilets,
either personal or public ones, was the lack of sewage treatment,
which only occurred for the first time in world history in 1889
C.E.28 Prior to this, despite
the fact that the Romans had developed an underground sewage system
many centuries ago, most sewage was disposed of in open gutters
lining city streets!
We will now follow the private and public trends in bathroom evolution
and design in the last century or so. Since our concern is mostly
how these trends have impacted the development of Paruresis, we
will focus more on the latter. However, the former is also important
to understand the evolving attitudes concerning bathroom behavior
and norms.
Regarding the private bathroom in the home, Kira writes: The
three-fixture, five-by-seven foot bathroom, which is still the norm
in the United States, dates approximately from the building boom
of the early 1920s, when, for the first time, virtually all new
residential construction, at least in urban areas, was required
by law to include at the minimum a private bath for each dwelling
unit.29
Amazingly, this remained the norm for about 40 years. It wasnt
until another housing construction boom in the 1960s that more than
one bathroom per household became institutionalized. It wasnt
until the 1970s that people in the United States began treating
the home bathroom as more than an essential, leading to larger bathrooms
being built and more and more elaborate design ornamentation.30
As we have seen, the history of public toilets is pretty scanty.
In some parts of the world, people still do their business wherever
they are, whenever they want to. The two key factors influencing
it have been public health concerns and the rise of large cities.
Kira defines these structures as one that is provided in the
interest of public convenience, sanitation, and health in a communal
location by, or on behalf of, a communal agency for use by anyone
with need.31
Why do people even need public facilities in the first
place? One reason, of course, is not having access to a private
bathroom (which in the case of todays homeless population,
is not uncommon at all). Another would be if one is not at home,
that is, you are caught short either at work, socializing
out, or traveling. These two circumstances have affected the design
of public toilets to accommodate people in these situations.32
Once again, Paris led the way with the reintroduction of mens
public urinals in the 1840s, the first since Roman Emperor Vespasians
time! Many, like in Roman times, were wide open; only some offered
at least some privacy. The French also pioneered fully enclosed
kiosks for women beginning in the 1860s. In the 1880s, water
closets began to appear, which could be used by either gender. Also
at this time, the streets of Paris boasted les Water-Closets
ambulants, which were horse drawn carriages with several
toilet compartments that cruised the main thoroughfares.33
Historically, nothing seems to have stimulated the growth of public
restroom facilities as much as the startling successful Crystal
Palace Exhibition in England in 1851. Because of the vast number
of people going to this event, the public restrooms not only had
to be constructed on an unprecedented scale, but they had to meet
the expectations of attendees and the public in general. About 800,000
people paid to visit the restrooms. Along with this, rail
travel to the event and similar ones elsewhere provided the impetus
to build public restrooms to accommodate passengers in the terminals,
marking the real advent of such facilities.34
Met with initial skepticism, by the end of the nineteenth century,
public restrooms were an accepted fact in the large cities of Europe
and the United States. Initially clean and friendly, they have tended
to deteriorate over the years. As commercial and retail businesses
developed in the twentieth century, and building codes required
them to have bathrooms for their customers, municipalities no longer
felt required to provide them. Moreover, as new forms of transportation
developed, such as the subway, car, and airplane, new forms of public
(and private) restroom facilities were required. Finally, the growth
of the state and federal park system, as well as the popularity
of camping, raised issues of restroom design for the so-called wilderness.35
Let us look more carefully at three specific examples, all related
to the mass production and consumption of the automobile. First,
with the rise of the car as the favored means of transportation,
there was a corresponding increase in the number of gas stations
across the country. No longer able to simply get by with outdoor
privies in the back, they needed to provide toilets for men and
women. Moreover, in order to compete adequately with their rivals,
clean restrooms became a must, especially since many
motorists stopping at filling stations did so at least as much to
make a pit stop as they did to buy gasoline.36
Secondly, as the federal interstate system developed, so did the
need for public facilities along the highways. New York State pioneered
the way here in 1968, setting up comfort stations on
their interstate roads.37 Other
states followed suit.
Finally, all of this travel by car helped the hotel and motel industry,
too. What we accept as normal today only started in the early 1900s,
when one hotel entrepreneur in New York State began advertising
A Room and a Bath for a Dollar and a Half. The first
to provide a full 5-by 7-foot bathroom, this standard continues
today for both hotels and private homes.38
In thinking about the above history, it is important to understand
current attitudes toward territoriality and privacy.
While many, if not most of us, have positive or at least neutral
feelings toward the bathrooms in our apartment or houses, when it
comes to public restrooms, many of us have negative feelings towards
them. This often has to do with their layout and/or how well they
are or are not maintained. Says Kira:
Most of our feelings about the body, sex, elimination,
privacy, and cleanliness are magnified in this context of publicness,
for the fact of publicness, with its inevitable territorial violations
and lost of privacy, increases our apprehensions.39
It is possible that we project this negativity onto what we find
in public facilities, including the urinals, toilets, and perhaps
even the strangers in there. If we fear the stranger, and suspect
that our personal space may be violated, then the situation will
not be conducive to our doing our business there, whether it is
urination or defecation. And, even if we are neutral about our own
bodily eliminations, we are certainly less so about others, especially
if we see what is essentially supposed to be private or unseen.40
The well-known sociologist Erving Goffman speaks of territories
of the self, which relates to what is perceived to be mine,
in this case, in relation to personal space. If we have to create
a temporary space that we perceive as ours in what is essentially
a public facility, and this space becomes violated in some way,
then we are likely to have a psychological reaction to it. 41
In some cases, we would argue, this reaction is Paruresis.
Two key ideas here are privacy-from and privacy-for.
The former arises most often in public facilities. We dont
want to be around others doing their business. So it becomes essential
to protect ourselves from them. Again, Goffman is helpful here;
he speaks of civil inattention as a way to create such
protection. Says Kira:
This device of scrupulously observed avoidance behavior
is widely employed in many cultures and situations and demands that
we avoid observing other peoples behavior and in particular
. . . that we avoid making eye contact.42
Thus, in a public restroom, etiquette requires that men not make
eye contact and certainly do not look at each others private
parts. Also, spacing at urinals becomes an issue; for example, if
there are three next to each other, and someone is at one end, the
next person will go to the other end. Only if there isnt a
free urinal would someone go next to someone else. Otherwise, it
may raise suspicions. Several exceptions exist to this general rule,
in particular school and the military; institutions that attempt
to enforce conformity by getting rid of privacy.43
Privacy-for is one of the guiding principles of home
bathroom design. When extended to the public facilities design concerns,
the following become important: a discreet location; discreet
identification; the use of visual barriers or compartments; [and]
the use of masking sounds, most commonly piped in music. Interestingly,
there is much variation in this regard from culture to culture,
especially in the area of visual protection. For example, European
water closets are completely enclosed, affording maximum privacy
to their temporary guests. In the United States, the standard design
for stalls is sides and a door that start one foot above the floor
and extend only 5 feet in total height. 44
While Europeans, in general, detest U.S. public restroom designs,
many people from the U.S. traveling abroad, especially paruretics,
are delighted with European standards and consider them more civilized.
While social convention dictates that most people will generally
ignore others in public restrooms, this is not very comforting to
paruretics. Many simply avoid going in public at all costs. Women
who do so can get into physical trouble; holding their urine was
the cause of bladder infections for over half of the women in several
studies. For the other gender, Kira notes:
Lack of privacy, or more particularly, lack of privacy
to the degree demanded by any given individual, can have unfortunate
consequences. The most serious . . . is usually its inhibiting effect
on elimination function, most often male urination. . . . Although
it may strike some as surprising that this is still a problem .
. . the advice columns of the newspapers carry letters asking about
these problems with great regularity.45
As if all of what we have discussed so far wasnt enough,
there are other factors that affect peoples attitudes toward
urination and defecation. For some, there may be a conscious or
unconscious association of these activities, primarily urination,
with sex, since the same organ, at least visibly, serves the same
function. Moreover, there may be deep-seated moral taboos
about keeping our genitals covered and not touching them in public,
both of which are violated in public restroom situations. Finally,
it seems that both men and women generally experience discomfort
in making noise while eliminating, especially if others are around
to hear them.46
There appears to be huge differences between cultures in elimination
positions, especially regarding urination. What we found most startling
is that the respective urination positions for men and women that
we take for granted in modern society appear to at least historically
been reversed! For example, Herodotus claimed that in Egypt, women
stand erect to make water, the men stoop. In Ireland, the
men discharge their urine sitting; the women standing. Among
Muslims, at least historically, both genders squat to defecate
and urinate. And European women, until quite recently, would
often stand up to urinate, as their clothing almost dictated that
position, and they could do so quite discreetly. Finally, many women
today, because of the lack of cleanliness in public facilities,
will not sit on the toilet seat to urinate, and instead either hover
or stand up. Lest anyone think that men, at least in Western society,
feel comfortable sitting down to urinate, all we have to do is recall
that when President Lyndon Johnson heard that someone in his Administration
was dovish on the Vietnam war, he reputedly said: Hell, he
has to squat to piss!47
We can now better understand how certain issues come together for
paruretics. As Kira comments:
Since the entire sex-elimination amalgam is something
we tend to think of as dirty and something to be somewhat
ashamed of, we also tend to want to hide and disguise our involvement
with it; in other words, we seek privacy for it . . . [and] we resort
to all sorts of stratagems to avoid anyones knowing where
we are or what we are about.48
The desire for modesty and some degree of privacy seem normal when
it comes to something as private as personal elimination. While
Kira feels that this desire, if taken to the extreme (that is, wanting
complete privacy) can create a problem in that people may not be
able to eliminate without these cues,49
from our point of view what is viewed as normal or not normal is
far from clear. For example, Kira states that many have difficulty
providing urine samples in a doctors office without sufficient
privacy.50
At least one urologist has told us that at least one third of his
patients cannot provide one on demand. So, what is wrong in such
a situation? Clearly, insufficient privacy. Furthermore, even Kira
says that one survey indicates that more than half will stop either
temporarily or for the duration their elimination activities if
someone else is in too close proximity either at home or in a public
restroom.51
The need for privacy, then, seems to be important to many men
and women when it comes to elimination functions. At least three
levels of privacy can be discerned: (1) privacy of being heard
but not seen, (2) privacy of not being seen or heard, and (3) privacy
of not being, seen, heard, or sensed in other words, other
people should not even be aware of ones whereabouts or action.
It is probably fair to say, however, that these categories generally
represent degrees of tolerable privacy rather than degrees of desired
privacy, in the sense that, given a choice, most people would, for
these purposes, tend to pick maximum privacy. The degree of tolerable
privacy varies enormously, depending on the activity and the particular
individual (emphasis ours).52
It would seem that those who are most negative or apprehensive
about disgusting things like elimination would have
the most difficulty with others around, and thereby require the
most privacy for it.53 While
this may be a psychological fact for some, it seems that several
other factors, both social and environmental, come into play too.
Interestingly, the home bathroom is the only off-bounds
space in most homes, and thus the only place people can have total
privacy for whatever needs (positive or negative) they have. The
privacy afforded by the bathroom at home serves another function:
reducing our shame and embarrassment while engaged in a private
activity. While this may be a current cultural norm
(recall that even in the recent past, privacy for anything, including
elimination, was virtually non-existent), it is almost universally
accepted today.54
The puritanical roots of our Anglo-Saxon culture may partially
explain our fastidiousness around not only privacy in the bathroom,
but gender specific public toilets.55
It seems that for a period of time in the liberal 1960s and early
1970s, several countries, such as England, France, Italy and Japan,
had no such compunctions, and unisex public facilities were commonplace.
This may still be somewhat true today, but our impression is that
many countries are moving toward the more conservative moral (and
political) standards of the United States.
Public restrooms in many places leave something to be desired.
Many, it seems, provide unbelievably minimal, cramped, and
filthy facilities. One survey of over 500 facilities in New
York City in the early 1970s showed that about 70 percent of them
had something wrong with them. And an American Automobile Association
(AAA) survey around the same time indicated that dirty rest
rooms came in second on the complaint list.56
How are public restrooms in various establishments, whether bars,
restaurants, train stations, interstate rest areas or airports,
designed and built? What governs the number of urinals and/or toilets
that are installed in these places?
It appears that various building codes — either state, county,
or city — guide the number of urinal and/or toilet fixtures
in any particular building. These codes, however, only minimally
address design issues, and usually only regulate things such as
spacing and height. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) also
governs the number of handicap accessible urinals and toilets that
must be installed.
When a particular establishment puts out bids to construction
firms for a contract, the primary concern at both ends governing
the design of restrooms will be how much it costs. Thus, on the
one hand, those paying to have public restrooms built will want
to minimize costs, and those bidding on a potential contract will
do likewise. Consequently, architects designing the plans will try
and recommend the least expensive alternatives that will meet minimum
code requirements.
Men, even those who arent paruretic, face several problems
when it comes to elimination in a public urinal. Least among these
are back splash; however, this is compounded when there are no dividers,
and men hug the urinal to afford some form of privacy.
Also, urinals are often spaced so close together that in a crowded
situation, one is virtually touching the next persons elbows.
Its estimated that at least another foot of space is needed
between urinals in many mens rooms. While Kira states from
the standpoint of privacy and of clearly defining the territory
of each urinal, it would be desirable if dividers were incorporated
between fixtures,57 we
would go much further than that. Categorically, we would state that
all urinals must have dividers between them, preferably floor
to ceiling ones that mostly or completely block out the sight of
the person standing next to you. Moreover, the low bowl urinals
should be discontinued.
For women, the problems are different. Since it appears that the
vast majority of women dont sit on the toilet
seat anyway (fully 96 percent in a 1970s British survey), it would
seem that a redesign of womens toilets is in order. The basic
concern is getting venereal disease, which can happen. There are
several innovative designs that would allow women to be in the more
comfortable semi-sitting or hovering position.58
One solution we would propose for both mens and womens
public restrooms, particularly for paruretics, is having at least
several fully enclosed water closets installed in every public
facility, as is the custom in most European countries. This would
afford almost complete privacy for the user, and go a long way toward
helping paruretics overcome their avoidance of public restrooms.
As previously discussed, the worst offender when it comes to the
lack of privacy for elimination arguably is the prison system. All
individuality is stripped away, and open toilets are the norm. Moreover,
humiliating random drug tests with someone watching you pee into
a cup is commonplace.
1 Kira, A. The Bathroom.
New York: Viking, 1976, pp. 5-6.
2 Kira, op. cit., pp. 6-7.
3 Pathak, B. History of Toilets,
presented at the International Symposium on Public Toilets, Hong
Kong, May 25-27, 1995. On-line at http: //www.sulabhtoiletmuseum.org/pg02.htm
(9/11/1999), p. 1.
4 Horan, J. L. The Porcelain
God: A Social History of the Toilet. Secaucus: Citadel Press,
1997, p. 35.
5 Newman, E. Going
Abroad. St. Paul: Marlor Press, 1997, p. 90.
6 Horan, op. cit., pp. 11 -
13.
7 Newman, op. cit, p.90.
8 Horan, op. cit,
p. 13.
9 Kira, op. cit., pp. 194-195.
10 Horan, op. cit.,
p. 16.
11 Ibid, pp. 14-15.
12 Newman, op.
cit., p. 90.
13 Ibid, p. 91.
14 Pathak, op.
cit., p. 1.
15 Ibid, p. 5.
16 Newman, op.
cit., p. 91.
17 Ibid.
18 Kira, op. cit.,
p. 6.
19 Ibid.
20 Ibid, p. 7.
21 Pathak, op.
cit., p. 1.
22 Horan, op. cit.,
p. 204.
23 Newman, op.
cit., p. 92.
24 Pathak, op.
cit., pp. 2, 5.
25 Kira, op. cit.,
p. 194.
26 Newman, op.
cit., p. 92-93.
27 Kira, op. cit.,
p. 8.
28 Pathak, op.
cit., p. 2.
29 Kira, op. cit.,
p. 8.
30 Ibid.
31 Ibid, p. 193
- 194
32 Ibid.
33 Ibid, p. 195.
34 Ibid.
35 Ibid, p. 196.
36 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
38 Ibid, p. 198.
39 Ibid, p. 200.
40
41 Ibid, p. 201.
42 Ibid, pp. 201-202.
43 Ibid, pp. 202-204.
44 Ibid, p. 204-205.
Interestingly, there is an internet urinal game in which people
can guess where to go given one of several different scenarios.
Most are intuitive; some are not!
45 Ibid, p. 205.
46 Ibid, pp. 206-207.
47 Ibid, pp. 105-106.
48 Ibid, pp. 104-105.
49 Ibid, p. 107.
50 Ibid, p. 107.
51 Ibid.
52 Ibid, p. 110.
53 Ibid, p. 165.
54 Ibid, p. 164.
55 Ibid, p. 168.
56 Ibid, p. 203.
One can see how strongly this runs by observing peoples behavior
around single stall locked bathrooms: virtually no one will use
an opposite gender toilet even if it is empty and there is a line
for your own gendered one.
57 Ibid, pp. 212-214.
58 Ibid, p. 230.
59 Ibid, p. 232-237.
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