 One of the main issues that vulnerable groups encounter when it comes to toilets is the access to basic sanitation but also safely managed sanitation, right? Like for example, a homeless woman has to walk between 15 to 30 minutes a day to access to reach a toilet facility then they have to pay between 20 and 25% of their daily income to actually enter the facility and once they have entered the facility they are at risk of suffering public shaming or even violence. I think that for most of us it's really hard to imagine life without a toilet. I think we take it for granted, right? Because we grew up with it, because we have it there every day, anywhere we go almost there's a toilet that we can access and if not it doesn't represent an economic burden to us, well to many of us, to access the facility but imagine that one day you wake up and you realize you cannot access a toilet and the closest toilet is 15 minutes away from where you are and then the next one is maybe 30 minutes away and it's not even close to your work or the place where you have to be so you have to start planning your whole day around the fact that you have to go to the toilet at a certain point in the day so I think it's it's worth reflecting on especially I mean not just today but every day that you are lucky or we are lucky to have a toilet.