C2V has my answer spot-on. I chose to go down a route that, yes, involves that, because it's infinitely preferable to other work situations. I get to work alone!! ! The Aspie dream. I clean for carefully chosen private clients, families. It's no worse than cleaning one's own family bathroom. You get to know the family/client. The ones in their homes are not public toilets.
I'd rather do this than struggle to fit into someone elses company or corporate setting -- I failed horribly at ALL of those kinds of job. I could not handle it. The office politics. Backstabbing. Abusive bosses. The daily grind.
Trust me, doing something where you are left alone to just do the work and nothing else, is far more delightful, even if it does involve toilets, than dealing with the a-holes and bullying and pressures of the normal work situation.
As for status problems --- well yes that IS an issue. But only because society in general places a stigma on cleaning and manual labor, failing to realize that ALL kinds of people opt for this work.
The bolding that follows is mine:
C2V wrote:
It doesn't bother me. I'd far rather scrub toilets in peace and make everything nice and clean than deal with customers or patients in my face, schmooze with work colleagues and vie for social power and politics, be stressed out constantly about complicated and potentially indictable legal ramifications, engage pointedly in "teamwork" and have that count towards my job performance, or have my whole job depend on whether people like me.
I have had jobs that involve all of that. Give me a toilet brush any day.
Is this a status in society thing? That someone who cleans any kind of facility is the bottom of the proverbial ladder? What does that matter?