I would agree that makes more sense. People tend to convenience. I guess maybe if you are some super bathroom shy person you’d think the stall furthest from people was most used maybe? But the logic still doesn’t hold up since if we say whatever stall is the one people think is “most used” is the one to use since less people actually use it... the base assumption there is that people spend this great time and effort on stall strategy as opposed to using whatever open stall is there and cleanest.
Or maybe I’m just weird- but I look and make sure the stall isn’t gross, the door and walls are there and not all broken, and usually- if there is toilet paper. I don’t care how many people use a stall. I’d rather have a stall 1,000 people used today but was kept clean, than a stall 3 people used but has pee and poo everywhere and no toilet paper and a busted lock...
My wife has learned from and concert and bars bathrooms the furthest stall in the row may not be used and some people may not realize it's empty. Gotta scoop by the long line if no one comes out of the stall for a while
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