Bloggers note: C'est vrai ... Les Américains sont trop antiseptique. ;)
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Daily showering is expensive, polluting and unnecessary. The old-school weekly bath or shower – with a brief daily sink-wash – is healthier for the environment, and for us
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Daily showering is expensive, polluting and unnecessary. The old-school weekly bath or shower – with a brief daily sink-wash – is healthier for the environment, and for us
‘The daily bath or shower is
terrible for the environment and our bank balances’. Photograph: Marko
Drobnjakovic/AP
Donnachadh
McCarthy
Tuesday 8 March 2016
18.22 GMT
When I
was a kid, bathtime was a once-a-week affair. We weren’t an unhygienic family –
this is just how most of us lived in the 1960s, and I do not remember any
horrific body odours resulting from it. By the time I was an adult, I was
showering every day. With hindsight, I should have stuck to the old ways.
The
average 10-minute shower uses 60 litres of water. A power shower uses three
times that and a bath about 80 litres. So a family of four each having a daily
10-minute power shower (I know that is a very conservative estimate for some
teenagers) will consume a staggering 0.25m litres of water every year. The annual average cost
for electricity for four 10-minute showers per day would be up to about £400,
or £1,200 if a power shower is involved. Even worse, the power-shower family
would be emitting a staggering 3.5 tonnes of CO2. As we can afford only one
tonne of carbon emissions per person – for everything from food to transport –
if we are to keep global temperatures below the critical 2C
threshold, this would consume nearly all of the family’s carbon
budget.
The daily bath or shower, then, is terrible for the environment and our bank balances. That’s one reason I have reverted to a weekly shower, with a daily sink-wash that includes my underarms and privates. But there are health consequences too. I first became aware of these when I was a touring ballet dancer and met a friend whose skin had been severely damaged by excessive use of soap products. He was condemned to treat himself with medical creams for the rest of his life. According to dermatologist Joshua Zeichner, parents should stop bathing babies and toddlers daily because early exposure to dirt and bacteria may help make skin less sensitive, even preventing conditions like eczema in the long run. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends three times a week or less as toddlers’ skin is more sensitive; and as the elderly have drier skin, they should not be frequently washing all of their bodies with soap.
It is
clear my daily shower habit resulted from falsely imposed cultural norms
Doctors say
that overuse of soap removes the skin’s natural protective oils and good
bacteria. This can exacerbate or cause complaints such as dermatitis. The
longer one stays in the shower, the more of the skin’s oils are removed. The
only real beneficiaries of over-frequent baths and showers are the companies
that make and market soaps and shampoos.
It is
clear my daily shower habit resulted from falsely imposed cultural norms,
rather than any legitimate health benefits. We do need to wash our hands
frequently, for obvious hygiene reasons. But our skin has its own natural
cleansing mechanism and it is generally only our armpits, feet and privates
that produce any odours if unwashed.
There is
a similar story with frequent shampooing. When I visited the Yanomami
in the heart of the Amazon in 1992, I noticed that they had lovely shiny,
healthy hair, despite not using any shampoo or soap at all. Frequent
shampooing, it turns out, removes the hair’s natural protective oils, damaging
and drying out the hair and scalp, in turn creating a lucrative market for
so-called hair “conditioners” and “anti-dandruff” shampoos. I gave up
shampooing after I came back from the Yanomami and now simply wash my hair with
water. I never again suffered from dandruff or dry hair.
Of
course, if you are being intimate with somebody, whether it is your partner or
a doctor who is examining you, it is nicer for both of you if you are fresh and
clean. But that can just involve a quick sink-wash.
So let’s
ignore the advertising bullies and revert to the traditional weekly shower or
bath, plus a daily sink-wash. Apart from anything else, think how much time
we’ll save.
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