Anonymous wrote:If you are a woman and haven’t worked out and are smelly and absolutely need a shower after one day, what is going on? Do you sweat a lot? Do you eat a ton of junk food? Where is the smell coming from? I am fascinated by people who feel or are in fact filthy after about 16 hours without exercise.
Anonymous wrote:I’m always fascinated by the “not-every-day” bathers. We always did every day from when they were sitting up (supervised, of course.)
For us, it was less about cleanliness/stickiness and more about the all-important bedtime routine. Taking the bath was a really important part of wind down time. Because it was such an ingrained thing, we never got the resistance I hear about from PPs or some of my relatives.
It’s really a shame in the case of one kid I know, who at age six, after a day of running around is definitely in need of a bath, but it has now become a battle royale in their house, as the parent (who is not-so-great in many ways) just doesn’t want to put in the effort, so the kid... smells. I’m a bit worried for when he goes back to school this fall.
PPs—-I’m not saying *your* kids smell. I don’t know them!
Like I said, for us is was every day and it was because it was part of the routine bath—>books—>bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to do every night but if my younger ones fall asleep before bath time(like in the car), I don’t wake them up to give them one. I would never take them to an activity or class though if they hadn’t been bathed within the last 24 hours. My kids play outside nearly all day sweating and getting dirty, so if they have gymnastics in the afternoon I give them baths right before we go. My five year old obviously doesn’t have body odor but they definitely have a smell when they’ve been playing outside all day.
So you bathe your kids before exercise? Huh.
Yes, because I don’t want my kid smelling gross or having dirty feet when they have coaches touching them and picking them up. My 5 year old trains 3 hours per day at gymnastics so usually she falls asleep on the way home so I’d also rather not have her be even more dirty from being outside all day plus gymnastics.
OMG. You have much bigger problems than being super anal about bathing. And you realize they will be sweaty within ten minutes? Maybe you should stand on the side of the mat and wipe her every few minutes during her three hour workout at age 5.
I’m certainly not anal about bathing.. I said I don’t always bathe every night but wouldn’t send my kid to an activity smelling like sweat and grass, with sand and dirt under their fingernails and toenails(which is how they look after playing outside all day) how is that anal? And yes, my kid is on Pre-Team with many other kids her age and they have a gymnastics camp. In the fall it will be just two nights for three hours a night. I don’t care if they are sweating at an activity, that’s usually what happens when you’re active, I’m just not sending them visibly dirty and honestly it’s hard to get a leotard on a sweaty,dirty kid so the bath solves that.
No 5 year old can focus or should trained for three hours at a time! If it’s “camp” that’s one thing and they aren’t training for three solid hours.
Do you even know what pre team is? My daughter was invited to pre team but we declined. But for her it only would have been 3 hrs a week (two 90 minute sessions). PP, did you mean 3 fours in one session, or 3 total for the week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to do every night but if my younger ones fall asleep before bath time(like in the car), I don’t wake them up to give them one. I would never take them to an activity or class though if they hadn’t been bathed within the last 24 hours. My kids play outside nearly all day sweating and getting dirty, so if they have gymnastics in the afternoon I give them baths right before we go. My five year old obviously doesn’t have body odor but they definitely have a smell when they’ve been playing outside all day.
So you bathe your kids before exercise? Huh.
Yes, because I don’t want my kid smelling gross or having dirty feet when they have coaches touching them and picking them up. My 5 year old trains 3 hours per day at gymnastics so usually she falls asleep on the way home so I’d also rather not have her be even more dirty from being outside all day plus gymnastics.
OMG. You have much bigger problems than being super anal about bathing. And you realize they will be sweaty within ten minutes? Maybe you should stand on the side of the mat and wipe her every few minutes during her three hour workout at age 5.
I’m certainly not anal about bathing.. I said I don’t always bathe every night but wouldn’t send my kid to an activity smelling like sweat and grass, with sand and dirt under their fingernails and toenails(which is how they look after playing outside all day) how is that anal? And yes, my kid is on Pre-Team with many other kids her age and they have a gymnastics camp. In the fall it will be just two nights for three hours a night. I don’t care if they are sweating at an activity, that’s usually what happens when you’re active, I’m just not sending them visibly dirty and honestly it’s hard to get a leotard on a sweaty,dirty kid so the bath solves that.
No 5 year old can focus or should trained for three hours at a time! If it’s “camp” that’s one thing and they aren’t training for three solid hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to do every night but if my younger ones fall asleep before bath time(like in the car), I don’t wake them up to give them one. I would never take them to an activity or class though if they hadn’t been bathed within the last 24 hours. My kids play outside nearly all day sweating and getting dirty, so if they have gymnastics in the afternoon I give them baths right before we go. My five year old obviously doesn’t have body odor but they definitely have a smell when they’ve been playing outside all day.
So you bathe your kids before exercise? Huh.
Yes, because I don’t want my kid smelling gross or having dirty feet when they have coaches touching them and picking them up. My 5 year old trains 3 hours per day at gymnastics so usually she falls asleep on the way home so I’d also rather not have her be even more dirty from being outside all day plus gymnastics.
OMG. You have much bigger problems than being super anal about bathing. And you realize they will be sweaty within ten minutes? Maybe you should stand on the side of the mat and wipe her every few minutes during her three hour workout at age 5.
I’m certainly not anal about bathing.. I said I don’t always bathe every night but wouldn’t send my kid to an activity smelling like sweat and grass, with sand and dirt under their fingernails and toenails(which is how they look after playing outside all day) how is that anal? And yes, my kid is on Pre-Team with many other kids her age and they have a gymnastics camp. In the fall it will be just two nights for three hours a night. I don’t care if they are sweating at an activity, that’s usually what happens when you’re active, I’m just not sending them visibly dirty and honestly it’s hard to get a leotard on a sweaty,dirty kid so the bath solves that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to do every night but if my younger ones fall asleep before bath time(like in the car), I don’t wake them up to give them one. I would never take them to an activity or class though if they hadn’t been bathed within the last 24 hours. My kids play outside nearly all day sweating and getting dirty, so if they have gymnastics in the afternoon I give them baths right before we go. My five year old obviously doesn’t have body odor but they definitely have a smell when they’ve been playing outside all day.
So you bathe your kids before exercise? Huh.
Yes, because I don’t want my kid smelling gross or having dirty feet when they have coaches touching them and picking them up. My 5 year old trains 3 hours per day at gymnastics so usually she falls asleep on the way home so I’d also rather not have her be even more dirty from being outside all day plus gymnastics.
OMG. You have much bigger problems than being super anal about bathing. And you realize they will be sweaty within ten minutes? Maybe you should stand on the side of the mat and wipe her every few minutes during her three hour workout at age 5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to do every night but if my younger ones fall asleep before bath time(like in the car), I don’t wake them up to give them one. I would never take them to an activity or class though if they hadn’t been bathed within the last 24 hours. My kids play outside nearly all day sweating and getting dirty, so if they have gymnastics in the afternoon I give them baths right before we go. My five year old obviously doesn’t have body odor but they definitely have a smell when they’ve been playing outside all day.
So you bathe your kids before exercise? Huh.
Yes, because I don’t want my kid smelling gross or having dirty feet when they have coaches touching them and picking them up. My 5 year old trains 3 hours per day at gymnastics so usually she falls asleep on the way home so I’d also rather not have her be even more dirty from being outside all day plus gymnastics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to do every night but if my younger ones fall asleep before bath time(like in the car), I don’t wake them up to give them one. I would never take them to an activity or class though if they hadn’t been bathed within the last 24 hours. My kids play outside nearly all day sweating and getting dirty, so if they have gymnastics in the afternoon I give them baths right before we go. My five year old obviously doesn’t have body odor but they definitely have a smell when they’ve been playing outside all day.
So you bathe your kids before exercise? Huh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are a woman and haven’t worked out and are smelly and absolutely need a shower after one day, what is going on? Do you sweat a lot? Do you eat a ton of junk food? Where is the smell coming from? I am fascinated by people who feel or are in fact filthy after about 16 hours without exercise.
I'd imagine that armpits and genital/anal area would probably be pretty ripe without regular cleaning. I hope the non-daily bathers at least do a wh*res bath.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are a woman and haven’t worked out and are smelly and absolutely need a shower after one day, what is going on? Do you sweat a lot? Do you eat a ton of junk food? Where is the smell coming from? I am fascinated by people who feel or are in fact filthy after about 16 hours without exercise.
I'd imagine that armpits and genital/anal area would probably be pretty ripe without regular cleaning. I hope the non-daily bathers at least do a wh*res bath.
PP here. I’m not asking about imagining. Do you actually reek after one day without vigorous exercise? I don’t at all. What do you attribute the dire need to wash after one day? Are you sweating a lot? Is it hormonal? dietary? Do you not wear deodorant or wipe?I’m really trying to understand this obsession with filth because neither I nor my kids stink to high heaven by nighttime. Is it just the fear of smelling or do people actually stink after one day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are a woman and haven’t worked out and are smelly and absolutely need a shower after one day, what is going on? Do you sweat a lot? Do you eat a ton of junk food? Where is the smell coming from? I am fascinated by people who feel or are in fact filthy after about 16 hours without exercise.
I'd imagine that armpits and genital/anal area would probably be pretty ripe without regular cleaning. I hope the non-daily bathers at least do a wh*res bath.
Anonymous wrote:If you are a woman and haven’t worked out and are smelly and absolutely need a shower after one day, what is going on? Do you sweat a lot? Do you eat a ton of junk food? Where is the smell coming from? I am fascinated by people who feel or are in fact filthy after about 16 hours without exercise.