It went on to tell how public restrooms are the epitome of the disease-harboring perils
in life. Fortunately, there is practical advice on how to avoid subjecting myself to the
germs waiting there to infect me, advice such as, "Use the first stall as it tends to be
bypassed and used less," therefore, it has fewer germs hanging around waiting for hapless
victims.
Secondly, studies by bathroom spies found that most people do not wash their hands. Of
those that do, most do not use soap or do not wash long enough to rid their hands of germs
picked up from door locks, faucets, and door knobs. I must be sure to wash, wash, wash and
not to touch anything on the way out except with a paper towel or the bathroom spies will
report me.
I should not shake hands with anyone or touch handrails on escalators or stairs. I should
not press elevator buttons expect with my elbow. Few people will be impressed by my politeness
when I refuse to shake hands, so it is necessary to make up some sort of lie, such as, "I have
a cold and I'm trying to avoid spreading germs." If I fall down the escalator and break a leg
trying to avoid touching the handrail, remember the positive side, at least I won't have the flu.
Another prime place to catch disease germs is from grocery store shopping carts. Not only do
many unwashed hands touch the handles of these carts, people put their children in them, children
who wipe snotty noses ands and then touch the same handle that is used to push the cart. I am not
exactly certain how to push a cart without touching the handle or how select produce without
touching it with the same hands I use to push the cart, but this is the ideal.
Even the air is polluted with germs. People who sneeze without covering their nose spray
germs into the air to be breathed in by other people who then catch their cold. In fact, anyone
within three feet of a person with a virus will most likely be breathing their germs, especially
in spaces with poor ventilation or where people are in close contact. I am trying to hold my
breath as much as possible, but am starting to feel like a germ freak.
I wonder exactly how we are supposed to protect ourselves from all these germs penetrating
every aspect of life? My entire world is an infectious disease waiting to create an illness.
It is enough to make a person into a germ-a-phobic who spends half the day in the bathroom
washing hands.
I've been paranoid about germs every since I saw that magazine. But, my
throat still felt a little scratchy this morning and I am afraid that I might sneeze before I
have time to grab a tissue. How can that be when I've been opening doors with my elbow and wiping
everything in site with disinfecting wipes?
I really don't know how I could possibly have caught a virus -- unless the person who read the
doctor's office magazine before me sneezed on it or didn't wash their hands.