How Often Do You Really Need to Shower?
LatestShowering is about three things: Hygiene, cultural
acceptance, and personal preference. But this doesn’t make any clearer how
often it’s necessary. I’m not a daily shower type. I like the relaxation of
showering, but I hate the squeaky clean feeling of super dry/tight skin,
heavily moisturized skin from moisturizing soap, and the super feathery clean
shampoo hair sensation. But my husband takes a hot soapy shower every single
day and thinks I’m weird. Am I? I decided to find out.
According to an AOL
poll from 2009, I’m not “most people.” They found that 65 percent
of people showered every day, with 21 percent showering every other day, 10
percent going it once a week, and 4 percent showering actually more than once a
day.
Far as I’m concerned, the day after a shower is the best day
on earth, day two is totally enjoyable, and day three is dire. That changed
when I got prego: There was a long stretch of time during pregnancy (third
trimester, holla), newborn care, and even through toddlerhood where I barely
got showers and barely cared. (Even now, my almost 4-year-old wants to do
everything mommy does, including taking showers, which has made me forgo them
yet again in the mornings in favor of time, sanity.)
Pediatricans tell you that you don’t need to bathe a baby
every day on account of how much it dries out their skin (But Google any thread
on how often you should bathe your baby, and you’ll see everything
from nightly to daily). Obviously, little babies aren’t sweating at the
rate of toddlers, full-bore children, or even teens, but does that mean if
you’re not getting super sweaty that you don’t really need to shower that much?
Everyone’s favorite hysterical relative, the Daily Mail, ran a piece in June of last
year suggesting that “cleansing reduction” is a new trend — a disturbing trend that happens to leave you with better hair and skin. This means bathing only once a
week to stop stripping the skin and hair of essential oils and good
bacteria. To sniff:
Disgusting as it might
sound, going for long periods without bathing is nothing new, according to
Lancaster University sociologist, Dr. Elizabeth Lancaster.
According to Lancaster,
daily showers are a relatively recent development and less than a century ago,
a weekly bath would have been considered perfectly adequate.
‘Now we think nothing of
showering once, twice or even three times a day, before and after work or going
out and after the gym,’ she said in an interview with the Times.
‘It has embedded itself in
our routine and become an essential, not an optional, thing to do.’
Meanwhile, dry shampoo sales are on
the rise, and full of celeb endorsements. (Kim
Kardashian only washes her hair every two days thanks to the stuff!) Also, quitting
shampoo — if you can withstand the process of your scalp returning to
normal oil production (on overdrive because
of over-shampooing) — has been a thing popping up online for a couple years now,
too that also promises more beautiful hair.
In another really interesting experiment, a family blogged
about taking water-only baths for six months and ditching
soap altogether, to surprising results — no body odor, reduced acne, and a
“significant reduction in groin smell.”