The Big Go
š The scene: There are two types of people in this world: those who admit to structuring their day around bathroom logistics, and liars.
Letās talk about itāthe unspoken calculus behind every meeting, commute, shopping trip and coffee refill: When can I go? Where will I go? Will I be alone? And the most crucial question of all: Will there be noise-covering ambient music or will I be forced to layer in a strategically-timed cough?
Weāve normalized Slack statuses for everything from ādeep workā to āpicking up sourdough starter,ā but no one dares write: āBRB, praying for an empty stall” or “BRB, coffee kicked in.”
And oh, the stall dilemma. Nothing says ādesigned by someone who hates humansā like the American public restroom: inch-wide gaps, mystery fluids, and those paper-thin hiney hiders that neither hide your hiney nor your shame. Meanwhile, Europe? They give you walls. A door that touches the floor. A full-blown room where your dignity can stay intact while your intestines panic in peace
But here in the U.S.? You’re a pair of shoes, a nervous shuffle, and the deafening sound of your own betrayal echoing in porcelain.
š½ Remote Work: The Great Equalizer (and Unclencher)
Letās be honest: the single best part of working from home isnāt your dog, or ditching your commute, or attending meetings in pajama bottoms.
Itās the bathroom autonomy.
No stall roulette. No awkward eye contact as you both pretend you’re not waiting for the same toilet. No wondering if your boss recognizes your shoes under the divider. Just you, your private porcelain throne, and the sweet, sweet silence of dignity.
Remote work gave us freedomāfrom geography, from dress codes, from microwave fish in the shared kitchen. But most importantly? It gave us back our bodily privacy. And weāre not going back.
Remember the early days of WFH, when no one scheduled meetings between 12:00 and 1:00 because we all collectively respected ālunch + bowel movement buffer timeā? It was an unspoken golden age. Glorious. Human. Brief.
Of course, now we’ve collapsed back into back-to-back Zooms, and the panic has simply migrated. You’re muted, camera off, speed-walking to the bathroom like itās a high-stakes pit stop. You return three minutes later, breathless, trying to act like you were just grabbing a water/sweater/charger etc. But your mic is hot, and someone definitely heard a flush. š
š§» Back-to-Back Zooms and the Bio Break Ballet
Somewhere around Month 8 of remote work, we collectively forgot how to take a breakābut our bladders (colon) did not. Suddenly every hour of the day is triple-booked, and you find yourself jumping from client call to team sync to āquick 15?ā without even time to blink, let alone pee (ok poop.) š©
There is no phrase more vulnerableāmore humanāthan āI just need to step away for a quick bio break.ā Itās the corporate version of whispering āI have a body and it has needs.ā And somehow, saying it out loud in a meeting with leadership feels more taboo than accidentally screen-sharing your therapy notes.
Letās normalize it. Letās embrace it. You take your bio break, Brenda.
Because we might live in a world of metrics, mute buttons, and branded virtual backgroundsābut behind every calendar block is a human being doing their best not to explode before the all-hands.
So next time you feel that flush of anxiety, rememberāyouāre not alone. Youāre just human. And your body isnāt broken. Itās just on a schedule no calendar app can quite accommodate.
Now go. Literally. šš§»āØ
š„ O Rating: š½š½š½ 3 O’s Docked points for public stall trauma and emotionally misleading hiney hiders. Regained a point for the healing power of a home toilet and the freedom to go in peace.
š Vibe O’ the Day: Holding it together⦠barely.
Part caution, part catharsis, all-too-human. š½š¤š§»
š§ Confused by the Oās? Check out the full O Rating Scale ā
