The Tweaks Bathroom - a safe space for every body.

Welcome to the loo. The bathroom. The smallest room in the house - with the biggest message.

 

At Tweaks, we believe that  everyone deserves to feel safe, respected, and welcome - whether that's in a public toilet, or a tiny corner of the internet about health and wellbeing.

 

This page is here to say one simple thing: you're welcome here. Just as you are. Whether you're disabled, chronically ill, trans, non-binary, queer, large, small, neurodivergent or navigating a body the world wasn't built for - you belong. Whatever your ethnicity, beliefs or cultural heritage - you belong. You don't have to change who you are to be worthy of support, care, or dignity. Ever.

 

Why 'The Bathroom'? 

  • Because right now, something as basic as going to the loo is being politicised - especially for trans people.  
  • Because bathrooms should be about privacy, comfort and human dignity - not exclusion or fear.  
  • Because in health and wellbeing spaces, inclusion can't be an afterthought - it has to be built into the foundations.

 

 

This is your bathroom too.

Tweaks Values:

  • Every body is welcome. Health and wellbeing should include all identities, shapes, sizes and abilities.
  • Small steps matter. Tiny tweaks can build to lasting change - especially when life feels hard.
  • Kindness over judgement. We meet people where they are, not where someone says they should be.
  • We are all learning. We believe in listening to each other, learning together and doing better. Curiosity, compassion and willingness to grow are more important than being right.
  • Inclusion is a foundation, not a feature. We centre people often left out - trans, disabled, neurodivergent, chronically ill and more.
  • Joy counts too. Fun, rest, connection and pleasure are essential parts of wellbeing - not luxuries.

Better toilets for all:

To be honest - toilets could be better for everyone.  Privacy, safety and dignity is essential but shouldn't be connected to how a person identifies or whether they are disabled. We should all be able to access a loo that is appropriate to us and our needs.

Single person spaces rather than gendered multi-toilet spaces?

Floor to ceiling private cubicles? 

More wheelchair accessible toilets?

Hoists?

Loud music or white noise to disguise farts and splash downs? 

Push button fragrance? 

Shattaf spray? 

Japanese style super loos?

Grab rails? 

A sink in the cublicle? 

Any other ideas? 

What would your perfect toilet look like?

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