OneLittleSpark
A Michaelmusophobia Sufferer (please don't hate me
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2006
- Messages
- 2,150
OK, I just need to have a little whinge to people who will understand. I've just come back from a trip to the World which was, as always, wonderful. Of course there were the idiots who walked straight in front of my chair, stopped on downhill slopes in front of me and glared at me for delaying their bus journey by all of two minutes because I needed the ramp / lift, but we expected all that. One thing I didn't expect were the problems at the restrooms.
On previous trips I've been able to park my chair up in a corner of the restroom and hobble into a normal stall. However this trip, the joints are worse and even that distance of walking would shorten the amount of time I could spend in the parks, so I decided to use the disabled stall. I was amazed at the number of people who thought that this nice big stall was built just for them! I think the only thing rarer than finding the stall unoccupied was finding another wheelchair user in it!
I am not for one minute trying to judge who is 'deserving' and who isn't, I understand that not everyone with a disability has a big sign stating this fact across their chest. I do not, however, think that all of those people would have problems using one of the other 20 unoccupied cubicles in that restroom, rather than the only one that I could use.
I think the 'finest' moment may have been when two women and their children walked straight into the disabled cubicle ahead of me (one of them even looked straight at me but didn't say anything) and made me wait for ten minutes while they changed their children out of their princess dresses. They then breezed straight passed me without any acknowledgment to the fact that I'd been waiting!
A lot of the time I could have used the companion restrooms, but didn't feel I had any more right to use them than the able-bodied people did to use the disabled stall.
I hope nobody takes offense at this post (other than, perhaps those ignorant people who use the disabled stall when they don't need to, but I doubt they're reading this); if you need to use the disabled stall and you're ahead of me, I will happily wait!
Sorry if this is garbled, I'm still laden with jet-lag, I just wanted to post this up today.
Thanks for listening!
On previous trips I've been able to park my chair up in a corner of the restroom and hobble into a normal stall. However this trip, the joints are worse and even that distance of walking would shorten the amount of time I could spend in the parks, so I decided to use the disabled stall. I was amazed at the number of people who thought that this nice big stall was built just for them! I think the only thing rarer than finding the stall unoccupied was finding another wheelchair user in it!
I am not for one minute trying to judge who is 'deserving' and who isn't, I understand that not everyone with a disability has a big sign stating this fact across their chest. I do not, however, think that all of those people would have problems using one of the other 20 unoccupied cubicles in that restroom, rather than the only one that I could use.
I think the 'finest' moment may have been when two women and their children walked straight into the disabled cubicle ahead of me (one of them even looked straight at me but didn't say anything) and made me wait for ten minutes while they changed their children out of their princess dresses. They then breezed straight passed me without any acknowledgment to the fact that I'd been waiting!

A lot of the time I could have used the companion restrooms, but didn't feel I had any more right to use them than the able-bodied people did to use the disabled stall.
I hope nobody takes offense at this post (other than, perhaps those ignorant people who use the disabled stall when they don't need to, but I doubt they're reading this); if you need to use the disabled stall and you're ahead of me, I will happily wait!
Sorry if this is garbled, I'm still laden with jet-lag, I just wanted to post this up today.
Thanks for listening!
