Complaints About Restrooms By Returnee Annoys Netizens

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From Sina:

Taking Care Of Baby Awkwardness: China’s Restrooms, Definitely Chinese Characteristics

Bringing my daughter back to the country, I wanted to see all my relatives and good friends, and dining with guests was unavoidable. That one day, I was invited to Tang Song Fu [a restaurant] to eat, a rather impressive restaurant, said to be very high grade/quality, but speaking of grade/quality, it should of course not just cover  the quality of the food, price, and especially the service. The service staff brought a child seat for my daughter, and although it was a little dirty on the surface, it was still passable having been wrapped with Tang style designs/logos. As long as it can be used, it was fine.  After everyone finished merrily eating, I happily followed the waitress’s directions carrying my daughter to the restroom to change the diaper, but upon entering, I almost could not believe it. Such a large restaurant, such a lavish dining area, but only 6-7 square meters for the restroom! If it is so small, I could predict that there would not be a diaper changing table, but it would be fine as long as the wash basin counter area is big enough. I did not even think of nitpicking, and having an area the size of a palm large enough to let me change my baby’s diaper would have been enough.  However, it could not fit a one-year-old child. So, I will just put down the toilet cover and change on thet toilet cover, but when I look, there simply were no toilets, all of them were squatting toilets. Truly with no more options left, I carried my daughter and simply turned back. My poor child, better go home and take care of it.

Second incident, also an outside dinner party, after drinking several cups of a type of oolong tea, I immediately went to the restroom.  Again squatting toilets, but they are no longer strange to me, but after finishing, toilet paper cannot be found. This memory, how could I have forgotten that Chinese domestic restrooms do not provide toilet paper! So like this, I pulled up my clothes and came out, awkward to who knows what degree, this feeling,  truly makes me want to collapse!

Third incident, again taking my daughter out to dinner, and during the feasting, my daughter’s diaper had already swollen up to the extreme. This restaurant was okay, there was a long communal basin counter top between the mens and womens’ restroom, so I found a clean area, spread the changing cloth that came with Nestle’s milk powder, and changed my daughter.  Pleased, I raised my head and looked at the mirror before me, my god, there was a uniform line of service staff behind me in the mirror, their eyes all unblinkingly staring at me and my daughter. I truly felt awkward to death there, wishing my eyes were sewn shut. Here [in China], do not think of having privacy,  everything is exposed to everyone.

Fourth incident, went to take photographs of my daughter. This was at the foreigner-friendly Isetan department store, right, and I was thinking, this time there will definitely be a baby changing table. In the department store’s eye-catching directory map, I also clearly saw a baby changing room, so I was even more 100% confident that I must go to where foreigners frequent before demanding everything to be in line with international standards. While leaving after finishing taking the pictures, I was overjoyed to go to the restroom.  But! The place was pretty big, and I simply could not find the changing table I wanted to find. With regards to domestic restrooms, I have truly had enough, there is nothing I can say. This time, I thoroughly fainted [was disappointed and gave up]!

I once saw an investigation about this, when foreigners come to China, upon returning, if you ask them what was their deepest impressionn, “China’s restrooms” definitely will be in the top five. Didn’t real estate tycoon Pan Shiyi say before, if China can move the mountain of this restroom problem, tens of millions of children would have taken a big step towards the civilized world?

It appears that China’s bathrooms are absolutely a problem, and not a small problem either. This is something that someone coming back from abroad most deeply understands.

Thinking of Chairman Mao’s instruction, it can basically give us the conclusion, there basically is no such thing as a small thing in this world, because if you look from another angle, the small thing is absolutely big enough.

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Comments from NetEase:

zhenzhen3522:

Lou zhu is too much a foreigner-worshipper. What is wrong with our China? You only seek your own convenience, but have damned China to this degree. I admit that our domestic service industry still has a very large room to improve in the humanization aspect, but you still cannot speak this extremely. If it is so comfortable outside of China, you should get out then. Even though our China is both dirty and messy, a thoroughly Chinese person would still not be this disgusted with it. There is a common saying that “a son does not think his mother ugly”, and you have even forgotten these ancient proverbs/sayings!!!

HANG9851:

Hehe, lou zhu since you are comparing high quality restrooms from abroad with the fake high quality restrooms within the country, it is unfair. Have you never seen those splendid restrooms in those large Shenzhen Guangzhou hotels and high quality restaurants, they are probably even more clean than your bedroom! And you talk about toilet paper! On this point alone, we can determine you are through and through a false Chinese person who thinks oneself is some high class person.

dowje:

Restrooms designed with squatting toilets is because our countrymen like to be clean, hygienic, and are afraid of contracting diseases. Lou zhu, have you never seen the 80s generation where all the public restrooms were seating toilets, causing all the ordinary common people to stand/squat on the toilets when they used them, causing many different people’s dissatisfaction? It was only after they changed to squatting toilets did this matter quiet down.

At any time, we can only look after the majority’s benefit/interests. Just because the lou zhu or some other people are not used to something, we cannot require the majority to cater to your point of view. I recommend the lou zhu first ask the restaurant about its restroom situation before going there and decide whether or not to go there to eat.

独孤求伴:

With housing prices so expensive and restrooms so small, lou zhu please just be a bit more tolerant/forgiving, okay? [and feel pity for normal Chinese]

空军后勤部:

Lou zhu is a stupid cunt, go back to your foreign country.

y先生:

When China becomes strong and powerful, tell the foreigners to change [to China's way]!

lcy2109:

China’s restrooms are indeed very embarrassing, and especially public areas and tourist locations should pay attention to improving as soon as possible.

yhw19661104:

Kao, just returned from abroad? I originally though you were a foreigner! What is there to be unused to? Is it heaven abroad?
Just after a few days and this foreigner fucker has forgotten who she is! Die abroad and do not come back then!!

yinliang232:

Making a big deal out of nothing, lou zhu, you…I welcome you to go to China’s poorer places and toughen yourself. Afterward, you will no longer complain about this or complain about that!

caimian:

She did not care about her tone or what words she used, but the problem she described is still the main issue. This is an issue of individual people’s hygiene habits and has nothing to do with quality or patriotism. Habits are completely able to be changed. For example, flushing after use is very simple, yet so many people simply do not do it. the 17th floor [17th comment, referring to above translated comment by "dowje"] said restrooms are designed for squatting because our countrymen like to be hygienic, that sitting is not hygenic, but this is still dependent on how each person uses [the toilet] and has nothing to do with whether it is squatting or sitting. If the people who use sitting toilets all know how to be hygienic, then no one would consider it dirty. If you are afraid of contracting disease, very simple, place down some toilet paper first before sitting down and it will be taken care of. Sitting restrooms still must be preserved, and we must also take care of those elderly or those people who are unaccustomed to squatting toilets. So, it is bad habits that need to be changed, and this has nothing to do with patriotism, or would you rather other people say Chinese are dirty? What is so difficult to accept about our own family members self-criticizing behind closed doors? [Chinese people self-criticizing China in Chinese in China]?

haqco:

Lou zhu, have you been to India before? I can guarantee you will be paralyze the moment you see India’s restrooms!

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Comments from Sina:

永远有多远:

I agree with your point! However, I do not agree with the tone of your voice!

往高层次上带人:

Why make a mountain of a mole hill, it is not as if you did not know from before you first left China.

SSfruit:

Everyone be a little more modest! China is this way, and at least in the recent 5 years there are still many places like this. Of course, there are also many places that can satisfy your demands. Therefore, think openly, and have a lenient heart. Look at your own country and think about what kind of efforts are needed to make her better rather than blindly complain.

prtsz.vip:

As with anything, a part cannot be taken as the whole. Not all restrooms abroad are very high class (I have been to many European and American countries), and I think most of our restrooms in China are not bad. If we want to compare, we should compare restrooms of the same level.  America’s poor areas also have the same kind of outhouses as China’s countryside. Abroad is also not heaven, low class people and matters are also plenty. I have seen many domestic no-star restaurants and many highway rest stop area restrooms that are all not bad. Moreover, restrooms are mainly a place for relieving waste, so as long as it is clean enough it will do. Such high demands is a waste, as China still has many impoverished children who have problems getting an education.

Lou zhu says there are differences between the domestic situation and developed countries, we admit, but your tone of voice sounds like you hold a grudge against your homeland, criticizing domestic restrooms so harshly as if they were nothing. Maybe you had bad luck or something, and happened to use a restroom that just ran out of toilet paper. However, of the restaurants restrooms I have been to, a situation of not having toilet paper is rare.

Of course, we are a developing China, and the good aspects of developed countries we must actively learn from. The aspects we must learn from are many, but at present I do not think the restroom problem is as you say a “big problem.”

dk9226:

I want to say that I do not need these, even if it is a bit dirty, a bit inferior. If we have the money, it would be better to take it and go support poverty-stricken areas.
Do not use that foreign standard on China, China is not a developed country, and money needs to be spent where it is needed, so being able to squat is good enough, how can you have that many demands?
The various problems of restroom design in my perspective are simply not worth mentioning. All I ask for is that it be a little clean and hygienic and it will be fine. There are many more areas that need to be improved.

Also for those above commenter who say others cannot reach the grapes so call them sour, do you guys have brains? According to China’s economic level, is it necessary to construct restrooms as good as America’s? True, we should learn from where others are advanced, but it does not mean any advanced area should be learned, everything needs to be divided based upon priority/importance, and obviously restrooms are not considered important, unless the restrooms have somehow affected your healthy just by being small?
From my perspective, restroom upkeep already needs a large amount of expenses, it is not necessary to construct your restroom to be even more luxurious than the homes of ordinary common people in poverty-stricken areas just for your convenience.

原色:

Where are you from in China? China indeed has some backward places! For example, many mountain areas! I am in Beijing and I have never encountered a restaurant like the one you described~~I too am a “sea turtle” [海归, hai3 gui1, a Chinese who has studied overseas and returned to China]! If you are taking China’s remote mountain areas and comparing it to foreign capital cities, there will obviously be very big differences! I recommend you go walk around China’s large cities! That should change your point of view!

耐心:

Before complaining, first think about what you yourself have done for your homeland.

Emma:

I have the same feeling. I personally prefer squatting toilets, generally do not sit on public toilets, and if I do sit, I will first place paper [disposable seat cover], to be more hygienic. What I most cannot adapt to is not having toilet paper in so many of China’s public restrooms, maybe to conserve. However, if you think about it, if every restroom provided toilet paper, people would not do anything else with them, and would also definitely conserve paper. Having a baby just makes it more inconvenient, poor parents!

飞鱼:

Our country still has many areas that are in urgent need of improvement. At the very least, we need to first help poor people receive medical attention and first help poor children go to school before we can satisfy your lofty demands for restrooms!

义皋:

Her demand is not one bit too high, what she says is very true.

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  1. i agree. china’s bathrooms are dirty. but then that is because we live in a world different from theirs. everyone is just used to whatever society we are from. Chinese people certainly thinks we are wasting paper when we print and photocopy them at leisures for school, company, etc. china’s population is big which accounts for the squatting bathroom phenonmenon. some of the bathrooms in new york city is similiar with those in china, simply because of a huge population.

  2. I like China’s loo it is easier to
    make poops, I HATE us toilets you
    can’t poop because if your not squatting
    the poops don’t come out, they go back
    in your butt and make you mad.

    I squat when I can’t make the poops
    come out of my butt and leave shoe
    marks on the seat and upset my brother.

    It isn’t just the toilets, its the
    people, I was born in the wrong country,
    GIVE ME THE DAMN MONEY and I will leave
    the US and go to China, Japan, India,
    Danmark, someplace else where I can be ME.

    The US expects me to be someone I cannot
    be, and I disapoint her every day by
    just being me, and I make America sad,
    I cannot please her, I can only please me.

    Give me the money and I hurt America no more.

  3. Toilet in China are indeed something to ponder upon. A relative of mine went to rural area in China and find that the restroom have no doors. There are cubicles, just no door. Mine you, my relative is a women. I personally been to Shanghai. I was carrying my backpack with me, and when I went into the cubicle of a restroom in one of the mall in Xintiandi, it;s just like the pictures above, very small, no water too…..

  4. I hate this attitude that you must “taste bitterness” to be patriotic. There is nothing wrong with constructively criticizing one’s own country. To be blindly controlled by old thinking and accepting all the stuff that is broken in today’s China is just to do what the Party want you to do: “shut up, consume, don’t complain.” China will advance when her people become as discriminating about their national culture as they are with pricey imported goods.

  5. Pls don’t forget that u came from China…I’m a Malaysian chinese but i’ll always remember of where my ancestor origin…n i’ve got a lot of Chinese friend from Xi’an…

  6. If u already holding a foreign passport…then u are too proud of yourself…althought what u said are true..but the way u said it …is totally not acceptable!

  7. That last picture…I came across a public toilet like that, and it wasn’t even in any remote area either. It was in Beijing (pre olympics.) It smelt terrible, that I could have handled if all the people squatting there hadn’t all turned their heads to stare at the next person to enter.

    They have nice toilets as well in the flashier resturants/hotels WITH toilet paper (though not all the time because people tend to steal the whole roll for some reason) but despite the flashiness of the toilets, the people who’d used them obviously weren’t very considerate, leaving toilet paper on the floor and crapping over the seats, and no matter where they always smelt. I’m Chinese BTW and there’ve been plenty of improvements in Chinese in recent years. But I have to agree. Chinese public toliets leave one of the biggest impressions above all else.

  8. I noticed that one of the Chinese people wrote,

    “Restrooms designed with squatting toilets is because our countrymen like to be clean, hygienic, and are afraid of contracting diseases”

    My reaction: You’ve got to be joking. Chinese people crap, piss, and spit everywhere and it seems like 90% of public restrooms in China don’t have soap.

    If Chinese people want to be clean and hygenic then why don’t they wash their hands with soap???

  9. Yeah I don’t really get the squat toilets… very unusual, but ask any physician and they’ll tell you that the squatting position relieves the bowels better than sitting in a chair like posture.

  10. I’ve been in semi-rural China for over two years now and I don’t mind the squat toilets.
    I can live with the gag-inducing smell(for a short time!)
    I carry tissue with me at all times.
    I try not to look in the bin at the shitty and bloody paper.Or at the smears of the same on the walls.
    But, why, oh why, can’t the Chinese put doors on toilets?
    I’m a teacher, and every school I go to I have to share my toilet experience with my students.
    The worst was a mosquito infested, hole in the ground.Trust me, mosquito bites on your bum aint fun!
    The oddest thing is finding a loo with a door wide open and thinking it’s free, only to find a tiny Chinese woman glaring at you when you try to enter.
    I guess with a population this large privacy is a luxury.

  11. squatter toilets are ok if clean. They should make them deeper so the pee does not fly everywhere. When mopped they need a disinfectant. I feel sorry for the ayis that clean them. Most of the time they have a dirty mop which they rinse out in the sink then wring out with their bare hands after mopping the squatters. Disgusting.
    They don’t understand the mop buckets with the place to squeeze the excess water out. I got some for the company where i work as the cleaner had sore hands. People just threw the tea in the bucket and used the bit that wrings the water out of the mop to catch the tea leaves…..

  12. Those squat toilets are so weird!
    Hey they make great squatting excersize though.

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