Another day, another retail chain retreats from reality. The latest casualty of our age of perpetual panic? The humble fitting room. A teen fashion brand, name withheld lest I give them free publicity for their cowardice, has shuttered its changing spaces. UK retail experts wring their hands and mutter about ‘safety fears’. Safety fears. What a perfectly Victorian euphemism for a culture that has convinced itself every shadow conceals a predator.
Let us not mince words. This is not about safety. This is about the triumph of risk aversion over common sense, the same spirit that once gave us lead-painted toys and now gives us padded playgrounds. We have traded the possibility of a mishap for the certainty of inconvenience. And we call this progress.
History, as ever, offers perspective. The great department stores of the 19th century were temples of temptation, yes, but also of trust. A woman could try on a gown in a velvet-draped booth, attended by a salesgirl, secure in the knowledge that the establishment’s reputation was her safeguard. The fitting room was a covenant between buyer and seller. Today, that covenant is broken. We have replaced trust with surveillance, and now we are surprised that no one wants to undress under a camera’s gaze.
But the rot goes deeper. This is a symptom of intellectual decadence, the same decay that makes us fear words and books and ideas. We have decided that the greatest threat to a teenager is not a bad grade or a broken heart, but a fleeting moment of privacy. So we eliminate the privacy. We sanitise the experience. We strip the world of its textures and risks until it is as bland and safe as a hospital waiting room. Then we wonder why our children are anxious and miserable.
And what of national identity? The British high street, once the envy of the world, is now a graveyard of boarded-up shops and pop-up vape stores. We have outsourced our manufacturing, our confidence, and now our common sense. The fitting room closure is not a business decision; it is a white flag. We are surrendering to a culture that values safety over experience, liability over liberty. The Romans maintained discipline by throwing criminals to lions. We maintain discipline by closing changing rooms. Draw your own conclusions.
I can already hear the protests. ‘But what about the children? What about the statistics?’ To which I say: statistics are not a moral compass. They are a crutch for those afraid to make a judgment. Fear of the statistically improbable has become our national religion, and the high street is its sacrificial altar. If you want to keep your children safe, teach them to be wary of strangers, not of a curtained booth. If you want to protect your brand, sell better clothes, not fewer mirrors.
The teen fashion brand in question will no doubt spin this as a forward-thinking move. ‘We listen to our customers,’ they will say. ‘We prioritise well-being.’ Nonsense. You prioritise the cheapest solution to a problem you have invented. You are not leading; you are following the herd off a cliff.
In the Victorian era, we built crystal palaces and grand arcades. Now we tear down fitting rooms. What does that say about our age? It says we have become a people of small ambitions and smaller spirits. We have traded the possibility of a stolen glance for the certainty of a sterile transaction. And we call this progress.
I for one will mourn the fitting room. Not because I spent much time in it—I can barely tell a hem from a hemline—but because it symbolised a world where risk was acceptable, where trust was possible, where commerce was a human exchange rather than a liability-hedged algorithm. That world is dying. And we are the ones killing it, one ‘safety fear’ at a time.









