Cleanliness is key; Chidera's story

in HIVE CN 中文社区14 days ago (edited)

In the quiet bustle of Ilorin, just behind a busy bank building, there stood a public toilet most people tried not to notice. It wasn’t hidden, but it wasn’t respected either. Customers rushed in and out, often holding their breath, eager to leave as quickly as they came.

To them, it was just a place of necessity.
But to Chidera, it was something more.
Every morning, before the bank doors opened, Chidera arrived with her bucket, brush, and quiet determination. She unlocked each door carefully, stepping into a space many would avoid. The smell didn’t surprise her anymore. The dirt didn’t discourage her either.
What others saw as filth, she saw as duty.
She wasn’t just cleaning toilets—she was preserving dignity in a place where people had forgotten it existed.

Public toilets carry silent stories.
There was the woman who rushed in, her face tense, only to come out moments later adjusting her clothes and her confidence. There was the elderly man who came every morning, moving slowly but grateful. There were students, traders, and bank customers each leaving behind traces of their lives in a place no one wanted to claim.
One afternoon, a sharply dressed man stepped in, clearly irritated.
“Why is this place always like this?” he muttered, covering his nose.
Chidera, who had just finished rinsing the floor, replied calmly,
“Because many people use it, but only a few people care for it.”

The man paused, but like many others, he walked away without truly understanding.
Days turned into weeks.
And then, slowly, Chidera began to feel it.
At first, it was just discomfort. A slight irritation she ignored, thinking it was nothing. But it didn’t go away. Instead, it grew burning, persistent, and quietly painful. The kind of pain that doesn’t shout but refuses to be ignored.
Still, she kept working.
Because missing a day meant losing money.
Because no one was waiting to replace her.
Because survival doesn’t always give you the luxury of rest.
But the truth was simple and heavy: the environment she worked in was affecting her health. The same place she cleaned daily, the same place she tried to make better for others, had begun to take something from her.
The female body, delicate in its own way, had limits.
One morning, she couldn’t ignore it anymore.
She sat outside the toilet, her cleaning tools beside her, her strength reduced to silence. For the first time, the place she had cared for so faithfully felt like it had betrayed her.
And yet, it wasn’t just the toilet.
It was neglect.
It was a system where people used what was provided but never protected it. Where workers like Chidera were expected to endure conditions no one else would tolerate. Where cleanliness was demanded, but support was absent.
That day, something changed.
A small sign appeared again on the wall:
“This place serves you. Respect it. Someone’s health depends on it.”

This time, the message carried weight.
Because behind every public space is a human being.
And behind every act of carelessness is a consequence someone else may have to bear.
In that small corner behind the bank in Ilorin, Chidera’s story became more than just a routine it became a reminder.
That dignity is not just about having access to public facilities.
It is about how we treat them.
And how we treat the people who care for them.