Miss Manners: Office bathroom door becomes the source of long-running debate

Dear Miss Manners: I work in a business where the door to the men's room is the traditional type of door you would find in a residence. In other words, it has a doorknob that you turn to gain entry, as opposed to a door that you push to enter and that automatically closes.
I have a long-running debate with a co-worker who always completely closes the door after using the room. When I see that the door is closed, I assume the restroom is occupied, and therefore suspend my business until I see that the door has been left ajar.
At some point, I am forced to knock on the door. I am hesitant to do this, because if someone is in there, I have just interrupted their privacy.
I have talked with my co-worker until I'm blue in the face, but he will not change his behavior. His argument is that seeing a toilet from the hallway is unsightly and therefore his action is helping project a cleaner and more aesthetically pleasing public area.
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I don't disagree with his logic, but would it hurt to leave the door mostly closed and send the signal that the room is unoccupied? He has agreed to abide by your opinion on this matter.
You neglect to mention whether you will also abide by Miss Manners’ decision. She asks only because you are both right, and you are both wrong.
Office decorum accepts on faith that the toilet facilities are fully equipped without requiring — or wanting — visual confirmation. Perhaps your door is well behaved enough to remain slightly open without also revealing what lies beyond. In this case, a half-open-door policy is acceptable.
A closed-door policy is also allowed — if those on the other side understand it and do not, as you fear, jump when they hear the inevitable knock.
A third solution would be a reversible sign on the door like the ones that warn other members of the household whether the dishes in the dishwasher are dirty or clean. This would not be acceptable at home, where it is easier to know who is where.
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How much of the office will need to be consulted to agree upon a solution will depend on your office culture — and how much actual work there is keeping people busy. Miss Manners’ only preference is that, if you agree on a reversible sign, you choose one whose message is businesslike.
Dear Miss Manners: I attended a late-afternoon lecture, in a stuffy room, on a topic that wasn't as interesting as I had hoped. Unfortunately, I nodded off once or twice.
I didn't know what to do: stay and risk nodding off again, or leave and risk catching everyone's attention and disrupting the speaker? I really didn't want to do either, but it was a really boring lecture.
Unfair as it may seem, visibly sleeping through a lecture is rude. Your choice is therefore to excuse yourself or to learn how to sleep without getting caught.
New Miss Manners columns are posted Monday through Saturday on washingtonpost.com/advice. You can send questions to Miss Manners at her website, missmanners.com. You can also follow her @RealMissManners.
2021, by Judith Martin
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