If you’re among
the vast majority who on checking into a new hotel must first check out the
bathroom, that is, standing precisely as far as it allows you to stand and
tip-toe to super stretch your arm so it can lightly touch the ‘shower panel’
and gently tap visible and invisible buttons, knobs, bulges and bumps all the
time fearing the onslaught of a sudden scalding hot or melted icicle deluge,
you will understand her predicament.
The uniformed attendant’s antennae caught her on sight. This past-middle age
woman entering the washroom at BIAL (Bengaluru International Airport Ltd.)
wearing a traditional ghagra, choli, her head covered with an odhini. ‘Sit on
the seat,’ the attendant hollered from the other end, above heads crowding the
limited space. The woman said she only needed to pee. ‘SIT on the seat!’ the
attendant was firm. In her anxiety, the woman left the door ajar. She lifted
her voluminous skirt, faced the seat, and wondered, then she turned, her back
to the seat, and wondered, finally, totally at sea about how to do it ‘sitting
on it’, she left without relieving herself. Pee in your pants all!
Are the Eastern
style squat toilets that the whole country used not so long ago suddenly so
uncool that they cannot be installed in a couple of cubicles at public ‘conveniences’?
Is it better to allow a major part of the population such humiliation, distress
and watch them make puddles on the roadsides? We’re modernizing, opening up - people still walk up on escalators going down,
women in sarees frolic in swimming pools, international pizza chains serve peet-ja
do pyaza nicely ‘hand-eled’ by their local staff. So even though many a with-it
women think it is a crap idea, some mirror polished malls in the city have
graphical illustrations inside the facilities on how a commode should be used
by women. And then, when we’ve got them all to learn how to sit on it to pee,
we will begin the next lesson of how women must not sit-sit on a public toilet
seat.
The NY Times
tells us that apparently, the Right to Pee movement in Mumbai has activists demanding
“that the local government stop charging women to urinate, build more toilets,
keep them clean, provide sanitary napkins and a trash can, and hire female
attendants.”
In case, you
didn’t know already, a large population don’t have toilets in their homes and
they use the great Indian outdoors or public toilets on a regular, that is,
daily basis.
This movement seems
like such a dream, really. I go back to BIAL because it is such a
bladder-bursting distance away from town. It showcases its features ‘runways, taxiways, apron, , fuel farm, airport fire
service, aircraft maintenance facilities, access roads, car parking...’ Where’s
Number 1? I’m asking, da. I need to pee. Where’s the washroom?
Restroom...toilet, bathroom...? Mujhe bathroom karna hai! swalpa guide maadi, dhanyawaadagalu,...
I pour out all my Kannada.
Once you find the
place, you’re confronted with the Rs 2/- and Re 1/- trade. The latter for the
short business. But now who will time you? How can they be sure that you have
not deceived them? Shit happens. So don’t mess, just pay up Rs 2 and do
whatever. The loo-mafia ‘manning’ the place ensures that you don’t do it anyway
- there is no running water, soap, toilet paper and
they keep the better part of the loo cordoned off so they don’t have to
maintain it. This happens at the country’s top international airport.
When you’ve got
to go, you’ve got to go! So one needs to know how to ask for the small room. That was my single-pronged objective in
learning Kannada.
Every
day we were promised that we’d be taught everyday, useful phases. What can be
more ‘everyday’ or ‘useful’ than taking a leak, tell me? From namma, nannu we
jumped straight to ‘I have appendicitis problem’. Ondu, yerudu, mooru,... I
could manage the figures with my fingers but how to tell with gestures,
expression or mime that I needed to go?
I waited each day for them to tell me just this, how to ask in Kannada,
where the bathroom is. But they discussed, ‘Today the water pressure in the tap
is low’. I waited for other pressures. Then one day we almost came to it, ‘How
much distance to go - Yestu doora hoghabheku?’ But their destination wasn’t the
pit stop. On the twenty ninth day, while discussing root words – snan, dayamadi,
namaskara, swalpa... I could hold it no longer and burst out ‘shauchalaya!’ Whatta
relief!