Doors. I'm asking about doors. I'm actually saving my rant about the power company that was incredibly slow about getting it's poor customers back online after storms tore through my area downing limbs and knocking down wires. That rant can come later. I'll be plenty steamed enough on that issue to speak up about it later.
Meanwhile I just have to ask about doors. Bathroom stall doors specifically. And just why the heck the darned things almost invariably seem to be installed "wrong."
What do I mean by wrong? I mean the darned things are installed so they open "in-wards" about 90% (if not more) of the time and it just seems friggin' backwards (I would write a@$-backwards but I'm trying to stay clean here) to me.
Why? Because when you go in the stinkin' stall, and do your stinkin' business you enter the thing and then are forced to walk gingerly around the porcelain convenience to do a little dance that gets you enough room to close the door behind you.
Why in the world don't the idiots that install the things install them so they *open out-wards* and so that you can enter and leave the stalls without being cramped into the space?
I could insert a horribly racist joke here about it being because the people that install the things and build the restrooms in many cases haven't the familiarity with indoor plumbing that the people in this country have, but that would be generalizing in a very bad (and apparently racist) way, and honestly I suspect that the things are installed just as they are drawn on the blueprints by somebody somewhere sitting in a little planners office, or architect office.
Can someone not make sure that in the future the doors are installed so they make sense please?!