Words on the Bathroom Wall

BathroomWalls
Image credit: Photo by
Malingering on Flickr
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The women's restroom in the basement of the Student Union was everything I dreamed college would be. The first time I used it, taking a tour of campus before my freshman year, I fell in love. At a glance, there wasn't much to love: the stalls were the same old industrial models whose circular metal locks never work properly, the walls were painted a drab institutional beige, the tiled floors were damp and grimy and there was graffiti everywhere.

But what graffiti! I walked in expecting to see the usual assortment of curse words and slurs and "Tina hearts Ted," but instead I found snippets of poetry and beautiful line drawings and questions like: "What does it mean to believe in God?" or "Is war ever justifiable?" And not just questions, but responses: dialogs and conversations in ballpoint and pencil and Sharpie that covered the walls and doors. I saw a place of silent communion for women in their quests for who they were and why they were here. About once a year, when every inch of space was jammed with thoughts, the maintenance staff would slap on a fresh coat of paint and we'd have a blank slate to restart the conversation.

One day, a group of friends and I were chatting and laughing over coffee, when I excused myself to use the restroom. I sat and read the walls and was filled with gratitude for my friends upstairs and for the opportunity to share in this strange underground community even when I was away from them. The walls felt like an extended group of friends, like familiar old books I loved to read over and over, like pen pals I'd never met. So, I grabbed a pen out of my purse and wrote, "I love coming here to commune with my friends, these walls." Then I went upstairs and asked if the men's room was as much fun. I heard that it very much wasn't.

A week or so later, I found myself back in the same stall. Only now someone had responded. "That's so pathetic. You like hanging out in a bathroom? Go get some real friends." I felt like I'd been slapped. I had written one sentence, an expression of my gratitude for something interesting to read and for the intelligent women at this college who gave it to me, and received a rebuke. My sentence and that comment ended up sparking an interesting discussion: about what people got out of the bathroom walls, what they got from real life friendships and what could be inferred from a single sentence. But I never joined in.

Honestly, the conversation had lost its joy for me.  My only interest now was in defending myself and setting right this slander, but I knew it sounded unbelievable to say, "I'm not really a friendless loser!" And, after all, maybe I was pathetic. No matter how many friends I had or what we did together, I often felt alone. Whatever I was outside, inside I was still the new kid in grade school, the unpopular kid in junior high, the (too) smart kid in high school. Did people like me or politely tolerate me? Was I loved? Was I lovable? Based on a single sentence on the bathroom wall, a stranger had created her own version of the truth: that I was a friendless loser who lurked in bathroom stalls looking for companionship.  And my own truth about myself, my world, my reality was so fragile, that her reality threatened mine.

A few weeks ago an acquaintance made a judgment about what he imagined must have been my circumstances growing up and (showing years of spiritual progress mixed with a very bad day), I snapped back at him that he was quite wrong. After all, I knew who I was and what my life had been.  I wasn't any longer the girl whose reality was threatened by words on a bathroom wall. In the intervening years, I had married, had children, discovered my husband was an addict, nearly lost my marriage and my mind, and done a lot of work to learn to trust in my own truth.  I decided to stop letting people push my reality around and start standing up for it.  I was going to get him to admit that he'd been mistaken, that he didn't really know me.  Instead, we skirmished with no real resolution.  To my great anger and frustration, he would not admit that he was wrong.

Then it hit me that nothing had really changed.  My truth was as fragile and as threatened as it had been years ago; I was just handling it differently.  I was clinging to an image of myself, thinking that either I was right or someone else was, feeling I needed to determine the objective truth of my being and then defend it.  And at that moment, my reality shifted in that beautiful way it does, and I saw that there is no objective truth to me.  He wasn't wrong, but neither was I.  The woman writing on the bathroom wall wasn't right, but neither was I.  My life and the graffiti I leave behind, however I intend it, takes on its own shape to others.  What's important is that I know and live my gratitude and my joy and my truth, and that I accept that others have theirs, even when it differs from my own.

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10 Comments

  1. R says:

    This whole story resonates deeply with me. Sometimes, I can remember that my truth is mine, and that, like my sponsor always says "what other people think about me is none of my business." As always, thanks for sharing, MPJ.

  2. mama mara says:

    You MUST write a book. I mean it.

    As I read this post, it occurred to me that I learned my first real recovery slogan early in life: "Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me." I give way too much power to other people's judgments, and I either try to prove my worth or fall into a pit of "I suck". How words affect me really is up to me.

  3. GentlePath says:

    "I wasn’t any longer the girl whose reality was threatened by words on a bathroom wall."

    What a really neat thing to have a bathroom like that. This little vignette touched me on so many different levels. I want to belong to a group that writes poems on the bathroom wall instead of sexual insults. So far, the local 12-step clubhouse is the closest thing to that I've found over a lifetime of searching. And I want to be able to speak my truth even when I'm not surrounded by others who share that truth. I want to know and be strong so that my reality isn't threatened by words on a bathroom wall. But the truth (the real truth) is that my reality is often threatened and I deliberately surround myself with people who share most of my beliefs. And sometimes I wonder if that's because my beliefs are wrong.

  4. Alane says:

    This struck a very deep chord in me. I've been realizing myself how very fragile my truths are, and how defensive I get about those truths. There are things that I'm sure of, or that I'm not sure of, and those don't feel fragile. I can debate some topics without caring what the outcome is...who wins, who doesn't, whether there is a "winner". Then there are those things, and they are usually about "who I am" that I can be either defensive about, or too willing to let others define for me. I too am learning that it doesn't have to be either.

  5. Cat says:

    Its very much all about perspective I think.

  6. Jade says:

    I like the way you tie today's lessons to yesterday's circumstances. In *my* reality that is true growth, and I love the way you express it, MPJ.

  7. This is beautiful. Sort of along the lines of "live and let live," but, I think, on a different level. Your truth is very wise indeed. A glorious beginning to a new day - thank you for this.

  8. Margaux says:

    No, you aren't "right" and the woman who rebuked you on the bathroom wall wasn't "wrong," but it is sad to me that she couldn't see beauty where you could. People who aren't in touch with their spirits are jealous of people who are in touch with their own. And there's absolutely no point in trying to make someone else "see" a world that's only visible to those who have the magic glasses.

  9. Sunny says:

    I love bathroom graffiti - one of the bathrooms on my campus had a list of guys to watch out for, warning them against date rapists, big partiers, etc. I thought it was nice of women to warn other women.

    http://www.amazon.ca/Bathroom-Graffiti-Mark-Ferem/dp/0977282740/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234465903&sr=8-2

  10. Thank you. Your story embodies many truths from which we all can learn.

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