This is a ramble, as Sally's LJ entries often are.
Yesterday I was bimbling about the internet, and I came across this massive piece of TMI about personal hygiene. In this entry there is an extended discussion on whether it is unhygienic to go to the toilet at 'one's time of the month' without changing one's tampon (because urine may get on the tampon string', and it then deviates at one point into whether it's icky to wear a bra more than once without washing it.
I'm not particularly going to get into the hygiene debate, but one thing that did occur to me was how terribly spoiled most western people have become in the last fifty years. We have this notion of what is acceptable personal hygiene which is entirely based on:
I'm not saying this is bad. At the end of the day, I wash my hair every couple of days, wear deodorant etc. I do buy into this too, but it is odd realising how much we've created this world in which that is the norm, when I don't think it has been for most of human history. I also wonder to what extent it is as important as we think it is.
The human race has survived wearing the same clothes for more than a day without washing them. It doesn't actually increase our chances of dying from dysentry and I'm fairly sure that no one has ever found themselves less capable of functioning if they do wear the same pants for two days running. I'm also pondering how this exaggerated notion of what basic cleanliness is has tied into the horrible determination to keep consuming, rather like a swarm of locusts, that seems to have befallen our society. We want more energy, more food that we really need, more resources than are reasonable. We are running through fossil fuels at a rate of knots because we really need to keep the endless gadgets and electricity running and running. And why?
Apparently because it's really gross to wear the same bra two days running.
Oh, in other news, I managed to break my glasses last night. As I am currently without contact lenses, due to my last set of soft lenses doing something horrible to my eyes and nearly killing me, this means I'm rather blind at the moment. I'm heading up to the optician's in a bit in the hope that they can provide me with something that I can wear which will get me into college, but otherwise I may be slightly screwed.
So, if I'm not about hugely or if I seem strangely detached from the world when you do see me, it may be blindness.
Yesterday I was bimbling about the internet, and I came across this massive piece of TMI about personal hygiene. In this entry there is an extended discussion on whether it is unhygienic to go to the toilet at 'one's time of the month' without changing one's tampon (because urine may get on the tampon string', and it then deviates at one point into whether it's icky to wear a bra more than once without washing it.
I'm not particularly going to get into the hygiene debate, but one thing that did occur to me was how terribly spoiled most western people have become in the last fifty years. We have this notion of what is acceptable personal hygiene which is entirely based on:
1) lots of labour saving devices being available to us. I am entirely sure that the 'it's gross to wear a bra two days running' crowd would not be saying that if they had a big tub of water in the kitchen and a scrubbing board.
2) an assumption that it's normal to have a lot of disposable sanitary products which are cheap and can be just thrown away. Again - this whole tampon thing is based on the assumption that tampons are easy to buy, and you'll be changing them over a flushable toilet, I'd guess.
3) the environment not having fallen over just yet. As far as I'm aware, nappies, tampons etc are really quite bad for the environment and I'm sure upping your usage of them beyond the standard 'one per X hours' isn't going to be any better.
4) access to a lot of chemicals such as aerosol cans, which let us maintain this level of finickiness about sweat, for example. We douse ourselves in chemicals daily in order to maintain these artificial collections of scents and sterility and call that 'clean'.
I'm not saying this is bad. At the end of the day, I wash my hair every couple of days, wear deodorant etc. I do buy into this too, but it is odd realising how much we've created this world in which that is the norm, when I don't think it has been for most of human history. I also wonder to what extent it is as important as we think it is.
The human race has survived wearing the same clothes for more than a day without washing them. It doesn't actually increase our chances of dying from dysentry and I'm fairly sure that no one has ever found themselves less capable of functioning if they do wear the same pants for two days running. I'm also pondering how this exaggerated notion of what basic cleanliness is has tied into the horrible determination to keep consuming, rather like a swarm of locusts, that seems to have befallen our society. We want more energy, more food that we really need, more resources than are reasonable. We are running through fossil fuels at a rate of knots because we really need to keep the endless gadgets and electricity running and running. And why?
Apparently because it's really gross to wear the same bra two days running.
Oh, in other news, I managed to break my glasses last night. As I am currently without contact lenses, due to my last set of soft lenses doing something horrible to my eyes and nearly killing me, this means I'm rather blind at the moment. I'm heading up to the optician's in a bit in the hope that they can provide me with something that I can wear which will get me into college, but otherwise I may be slightly screwed.
So, if I'm not about hugely or if I seem strangely detached from the world when you do see me, it may be blindness.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 08:27 am (UTC)To be honest, I largely ignore current notions of cleanliness. I only have a proper bath and wash my hair once a week (though I do a fairly thorough wash at the sink every day), and I wear the same bra two days running.
And I hope my friends would tell me if the stench became intolerable...
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 08:45 am (UTC)I spent £76 on bras last month - one black, one white, one sports bra - since at 34G/34FF, there's no way in hell I'm getting on an exercise machine without one. Of course, regular exercise will no doubt change my bra size again...
Not changing socks & knickers on a daily basis, on the other hand, IS skanky. Feet get sweaty - and other bits, well, nuf said really...
(Oh, and I'm wincing at the tampon thing - they get changed when they require it, and if you've got a mental squick about that, use smaller ones so they *are* ready to change more often! Remove them prematurely all the time and you're asking for extreme soreness & probably increasing your likelyhood of thrush or something)
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 09:07 am (UTC)The rest of my attire entirely depends on a) what state they are in, b) how they smell, and c) how sweaty I got whilst wearing them the day before.
I change Tshirts far more often than I change trousers.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 09:48 am (UTC)That said, to my mind, being clean is about being comfortable, both for yourself and within a social environment. Our upbringing is such that we are told to equate dirty with bad and thus we wont' feel comfortable when we are unclean.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 09:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 10:12 am (UTC)I tend to wash my hair every day or two on the outside, but that's because my hair gets greasy really quickly; it tends to look rather bad by day two and leaving it for three days is just gross for me.
Personally, I hardly ever bother with deodorant, unless it's very hot and muggy weather. Even then, I don't use a lot of it, as natural and fresh sweat tends to smell a lot better than most stuff you get out of a can. What smells bad is stale sweat which just reeks. If you're whiffing of eau de stale sweatyness, you really do need to take a bath/shower.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 10:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 10:51 am (UTC)Which is why she was being mocked. Some people are crazy.
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Date: 2007-10-04 10:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:06 am (UTC)I'm probably very unclean :)
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Date: 2007-10-04 11:11 am (UTC)Well, yeah - they're probably quite wet by the time you've finished washing. :-)
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Date: 2007-10-04 11:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:32 am (UTC)THE CRAZY WAS NOT ALONE!
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Date: 2007-10-04 11:35 am (UTC)Of course, that was as a child, and pre-pubescent girls are going to produce less ick than grown women. I may also, of course, be misremembering horribly, but I think that the old Victorian saying of 'always wear clean knickers when you go on a train, in case there is an accident' also carries with it the definite assumption that under normal conditions you may well not be wearing clean underwear. And it's interesting how drastically things have changed.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:36 am (UTC)If they go more? CRAZY PEOPLE TALKING. What you should remember is that about 1/3 of s_f joined because they were featured. Some of them appear sane most of the time, but every now and then you can just see the crazy coming through. :-)
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:39 am (UTC)I wasn't actually that hideously offended by the entire entry. It just struck me as random and odd and got me thinking about the weird way times have changed.
I've also got the slightly odd perspective of actually having lived in a country without mod cons. When I was in Nepal I got to wash under a cold pump in the middle of the school playground if I wanted to wash, and laundry happened once a month in a giant washday.
I actually gave up wearing knickers whilst I was there (I was wearing a floor length sari, so I felt it safe to assume no one would be sneaking any peeks) and mostly just washed the essential areas in a bowl of water once per day. To wash properly I had to hoik my petticoat up to my armpits and wash in that, in public, or I had to go into Kathmandu and book into a youth hostel for a night to get a cold shower there.
It gave me a different perspective on life.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:44 am (UTC)I suspect it's a reaction to when I was much bigger and had many more sweat problems. Whilst the issues are no longer relevant, I remain OCD about showering. And washing my hair.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 11:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 12:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-04 08:11 pm (UTC)I wear my bra more than once before washing it and often go without washing jeans for a week or so. Unless it smells/looks dirty, why should I wash something that's only been on my body a few hours?
People wonder why they get so sick - they over anti-bacterialize.
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Date: 2007-10-04 09:32 pm (UTC)I'm not sure whether to curse or congratulate you ;)
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Date: 2007-10-04 09:32 pm (UTC)Nice icon, btw :)
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Date: 2007-10-05 01:22 am (UTC)I make a habit of changing my undies daily, but I shower every three days or so (sooner if my hair has gotten particularly greasy). During the summer months, I change clothes far more often than in the winter, just because shirts and the like tend to get sweatier and are in need of a wash sooner. But pants? I can go a week switching between two pairs of jeans, maybe longer if they aren't warped from falling asleep in them lol.
I seriously think that this is why so many children are born with allergies though. All this craziness involving antibacterial soaps and such, over cleanliness. I wonder how many people know that there are essential bacterias on their body that they are killing off, making room for infections and sickness.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-05 08:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-08 04:46 pm (UTC)I think I fall heavily under the crazy neurotics who have to shower and change regularly, brush teeth after every meal and do an awful lot of laundry. And handwashing. a lot of handwashing.
Mind you, after I've been camping for a few days, I start thinking, "sure, the meat fell on the ground, but the ants haven't gotten to it yet. it's still good."
no subject
Date: 2007-10-08 04:48 pm (UTC)