Showering, Bathing And The Importance Of Keeping Clean

Besides an abundance of fresh air day and night, summer and winter, personal cleanliness immensely aids to health and the ability to sleep. In the old days people bathed to clean themselves when dirty. In those days once a week was considered frequent.

Today we shower to keep clean. Someone, probably Joseph Fels, has said that the civilization of a people may best be estimated by the amount of soap and water it consumes. If we start out well-groomed in the morning fresh from the bath with clean linen, clothes brushed and all our personal needs duly attended to we carry our heads higher, feel an uplift of body and mind that is impossible to the careless or untidy person.

The same influence applies to going to bed at night. If we retire soiled and worn from the day’s experiences, we may toss and turn with discomfort whose source we may not understand, or we fall into heavy, unrefreshing sleep.

The body does most of its breathing during sleeping-time. You know how the moisture from the breath shows on a mirror when you breathe on it: well, the skin gives off about three times as much moisture as the breath, and, unless the pores of the skin are free from all obstructions such as dust, old, dried perspiration, and similar soil, it cannot perform its work properly and to the advantage of the sleeper. If you don’t like water, use oil as the Easterns do. Even dry rubbing, if the skin is moist, will keep the pores open.

The little trouble entailed is more than offset by the refreshed feeling, the lightening of the mind as well as of the body, the more restful sleep, and the better health resulting from the practice.

One of the advantages of the night shower or bath is that it reminds us to change all the clothes we have worn during the day. If they must be worn again the next day, they should be spread out on the backs of chairs or on hangers, that they may be thoroughly aired before morning.

If we feel that we must have something more than the pajamas or night-robe, then there should be separate sets of underclothes kept for that purpose alone old, thin, partly- worn ones may be reserved for this use. Whether showers should be hot, warm, or cold must depend upon the individual. There is no set rule that applies equally to all persons.

Many people do find the cold plunge or shower most invigorating in the early morning hours, it is too stimulating to be taken at night and others cannot stand the shock of contact with cold water at any time. There is but one wise thing to do to experiment for yourself and adopt the sort of wash that seems best suited to your needs. Most people will find the warm shower more satisfactory than the hot or cold.
 

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