Why using 'accessible' washrooms leaves me full of embarrassment, light on dignity - Action News
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ManitobaFirst Person

Why using 'accessible' washrooms leaves me full of embarrassment, light on dignity

Going to the washroom is something that I cannot take for granted. Having a physical disability, wide doors and a little extra personal space should be given to the areas that are supposed to be wheelchair accessible, writes Alex Lytwyn.

Alex Lytwyn: '"Wheelchair accessible" is not just a couple of words that should be thrown around lightly'

A man with short brown hair and glasses sits in a wheelchair and looks into the camera.
Alex Lytwyn says using public washrooms comes with a personal price: 'I have to put all of my uneasiness on the back burner.' (Jaison Empson/CBC)

This First Person article is theexperience of Alex Lytwyn,who lives with cerebral palsyand is a disability advocate, writer and small business owner of Willpower Media.For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please seethis FAQ.

Going to the washroom is something that I cannot take for granted. There's a lot that goes into the process.

Because I have a physical disability, going out in public comes with a lot of different thoughts.

Wide doors and a little extra personal space should be given to the areas that are supposed to be wheelchair accessible.

While out and about, I have to use the washroom. After manoeuvring my way down to the washroom area, my helper and I reach the entrance and are faced with a moral dilemma: which washroom do we go into?

We both just deal with the fact that I have to go and that's that.- Alex Lytwyn

If there's a so-called 'family washroom,' everything is fine. But what if there's not?I am a male and the helper with me is a female, so what do I do?

After a lot of consideration, I decide to go into the women's washroom, to make my female helper feel somewhat at ease.

As I enter, the washroom is full and the womenare looking at me.Nobody really says anything, because they can see what the situation is.

After I sheepishly enter the stall, I have to put all of my uneasiness on the back burner. We both just deal with the fact that I have to go and that's that.

However, new problems appear.

There's a small opening where the power chair is supposed to go, but neither my helper nor me has enough room to feel comfortable.

Close-up of a family washroom sign.
Alex Lytwyn says family washrooms are more easily accessible and private. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

Next step to try to close the stall door. The size of my chair does not allow the door to be closed all the way.Just great!

So not only am I not in the proper washroom, I have even less privacy because the stall door is open.

With everything going on, I am not able to complete the task at hand. I am full of embarrassment (and a not quite empty bladder). We leave the washroom.

The people who design these washrooms need to realize that "wheelchair accessible" is not just a couple of words that should be thrown around lightly. They're words that should highlight and ensure a person's right to privacy and dignity.