I have strong feelings about women’s restrooms, too, as we all know; so many thoughts about so many women’s bathroom issues. I’m in agreement with this essay. Stick with it, you’ll see. You might want a tissue.
A Trans Girl Approached Me in the Ladiesโ Bathroom and It Bothered Me. Hereโs Why. by Natalie S. Ohio
Why the girlsโ bathroom is a sacred space for women and how we must seek to keep it that way. Read on Substack
Ugh, no hand soap. Again.
If thereโs one thing living in Spain will teach you, itโs that hand washing isnโt priority nรบmero uno in public spaces.
Luckily, as someone who grew up here, this is no surprise to me. As Gang Starr once said, โIโm not new to this, Iโm true to this.โ
In other words, I carry soap sheets wherever I go.
As I was washing my hands in the shopping mall bathroom last week, the door cracked open and a head peeked around.
Big brown eyes appeared from under a blunt-cut fringe. A smattering of adolescent acne decorated soft, rounded cheeks and a set of metallic braces twinkled between glossy pink lips.
Either retro makeup is back in style or rubbing my hands together had sent me ricocheting back to the mid-80sโฆ
We regarded each other for a moment.
โยฟPuedo pasar?โ May I come in?
Her delicate, childlike voice softly penetrated the silence of the empty bathroom.
โSรญ, claro.โ Of course.
I smiled and gestured to the vacant stalls and the rows of mirrored sinks behind me.
I wondered if she mistakenly believed from the outside that this was a single-person bathroom. Or maybe she thought I was a cleaner. It wouldnโt be the first time a Spaniard had seen my complexion and automatically assumed I was the help.
I was otherwise a little perplexed as to why she would ask.
She hesitated slightly as she stepped around the door.
โBueno, es queโฆ soy trans.โ
Well, itโs just thatโฆ Iโm trans.
What Iโm about to say may sound strange to some, but here goes:
The ladiesโ bathroom plays a surprisingly significant role in girlhood.
Iโm not talking about the one at Grandmaโs house with its peach-coloured wall tiles, nor the ones in fancy restaurants where you go to check your appearance on a date.
Iโm talking about the public toilets that double as makeshift community hubs for womenโโโgrubby little social sinkholes you find in nightclubs, bars, and airports that offer a brief moment of tranquillity as the commotion fades behind the closing door.
Restrooms with precarious toilet seats, broken flushes, and โlove urself babe ur perfectโ scribbled in eyeliner on the inside of the stall.

Iโm willing to bet that anybody who has used a public ladiesโ room has had at least one memorably positive encounter with someone theyโve met inside.
Whatโs so special about it? I hear you cry. Men have bathrooms too and nobody bats an eyelid. If anything, the less said about those, the better.
On a functional level, nothing at all.
In fact, the ladiesโ very often sucks in comparison to the menโs. A victim of long queues, scarce toilet paper, and the most unflattering lighting known to man.
However, weโre not talking about serviceability. If we were, we wouldnโt have a leg to stand on.
What Iโm referencing is much deeper than that. Much more visceral.
I once undid a drunken strangerโs bodysuit in a nightclub bathroom so she could relieve herself before going back out to tear up the dancefloor. If youโve any idea what a bodysuit is and where its fastening is located, youโll understand why thatโs a tall order.
Iโve witnessed countless girls take their drinks inside and leave them unattended by the sink without any concerns over getting roofied.
Thereโs nearly always someone giving an empowering pep talk to a broken-hearted friend who needs a boost of confidence.
Blister plasters, boob tape, and tampons are handed out like Wertherโs Originals at a Womenโs Institute meeting. Pleasant conversation dapples the air. Strangers become new best friends.
Outfits are readjusted, hair is coiffed, perfume is shared, and doors with faulty locks are guarded to prevent accidental walk-ins. Those who are desperate are permitted to jump the line.
Itโs where the power of sorority is comfortably displayed.
The girlsโ bathroom is one of the few places where female vulnerability isnโt preyed upon.
Conversely, itโs often bolstered and allowed to exist without any need for justification.
Sure, itโs where you go when nature calls. But it also acts as a cocoon-like environmentโโโsomewhere you can retreat to when you want to feelโฆ safe.
Nat, why are you waxing lyrical about the loo?
Well, because this recent encounter brought about a bracing realisation for meโโโa conventional woman with an uncomplicated identity who fits comfortably within the margins of the archetype.
I realised that the person peeking her head around the door wasnโt merely asking for permission to enter the room.
She was asking for permission to belong.
She was giving me the power to accept or reject her appeal to exist freely in a space thatโfor people like meโis a place of comfort, and for people like her, is commonly associated with hostility and consternation.
The alignment of my biological sex and gender identity affords me the confidence to take up space in social settings where others, with less streamlined identities, may feel reluctant.
Of course, uncertainty is a perfectly natural phenomenon in adolescenceโโโkids are constantly trying to make sense of themselves and explore how and where they best fit in a world governed by grown-ups. And this kid, who looked to be some 14 or 15 years old, is no different.
However, this situation was unique because it didnโt focus on the implicit social hierarchy that comes with a significant age gap.
Instead, our respective positions on the spectrum of womanhood forced us to weigh up the otherโs existence.
It was as though she believed that within a shared space her identity would encroach on mine; so announcing that she was trans and verbally acknowledging our differences would help me to legitimise her humanity some.
She asked me if she could come in because there may have been a chance that I wouldnโt have wanted her to.
And that is devastating to me.
โBueno, hija, ยฟquรฉ mรกs da? Pasa, pasa.โ So what, kiddo? Come on in.
I headed over to the hand dryer.
โAy, muchas gracias!โ
She smiled sweetly and walked past me in her fishnet tights and patent Dr. Martens.
Transphobia is not an alien concept in countries that operate under organised religion or have a traditional set of social values, such as Spain.
Voxโa prominent far-right political partyโhas been consistently vocal about its disdain towards transgender people and its desire to prevent their access to base-level human rights. Transgender people are persecuted by conservative political parties and their followers all across the nation.
Adults berating other adults is one thing, but what happens when this toxic, nefarious behaviour falls upon the shoulders of children?
Children are sacred
โLos niรฑos son sagradosโ (children are sacred) is a phrase you see and hear typically in response to the mistreatment of children in any form.
Children are revered in Hispanic culture, so why was this particular child so acutely aware of the controversy surrounding her identity? Shouldnโt the innocence we try so hard to preserve in children include transgender children too?
Shouldnโt she be able to exist as comfortably as her peers do?
Had I voiced an issue with her coming into the bathroom, there is no doubt in my mind that she wouldโve turned away and left. And thatโs what bothered the hell out of me. It upset me that she felt the need to even mention it.
Because who am I? Iโm not important. I have no authority over public spaces or gender identity whatsoever.
I donโt care what people do in the privacy of a bathroom stall. I donโt stop to intimidate them or pass judgement.
Iโm just a stranger washing her hands at the sink. But luckily for this girl, Iโm a kind stranger. Someone whose cup of compassion and understanding runneth over.
The fact that she felt the need to ask stirred up feelings of pity and rage in equal measure.
It disgusts me that this harmless individual possibly has and probably will suffer at the hands of narrow-minded losers who mind other peopleโs business more than their own.
As if growing up isnโt already fraught with insecurity and a heightened awareness of your differences from others. Being a teenager in todayโs world is like wandering into the seventh circle of hell with gasoline shorts on.
Sure, the world is a big, scary place. But the girlsโ bathroom is something else entirely, and it should stay that way.
I felt a wave of protectiveness wash over me as I thought about how she must feel on a regular basis. Physically, she was long-limbed and lofty, yet she seemed so small and defenceless.
A kid.
Just figuring herself out, one day at a time.
When she came into the sink area, she told me she liked my outfitโโโI told her that I have my own clothing line and was wearing one of my newest designs. I offered her a soap sheet and asked her about her makeupโโโher parents had bought her an eyeshadow palette for her birthday recently. Iโve never been any good with eyeshadow. She doesnโt go a day without it.
So there we were.
Just two gals chopping it up in the girlsโ bathroom, enjoying pleasant conversation with someone weโll probably recall warmly once or twice before returning to the monotony of our everyday affairs.
I suppose that these are the situations we need more of. Just witnessing humans being humans and doing human things.
So often bigots behave as though those theyโre prejudiced towards are a subhuman entity that needs to be exterminated to restore a sense of harmony and order to the world.
In reality, weโre all just people. Trying to get by and get on with things before we shuffle off this mortal coil once our number is up.
Coexisting peacefully really isnโt as complicated as itโs made out to be. Being kind to others is far from difficult.
Weโre all different, and thatโs fineโโโit doesnโt need to be fire and brimstone and bloodbaths and battalions.
So when you meet someone different from you, just share the soap.
Donโt work yourself into a lather over it. (snip)

