Anonymous wrote:My DH doesn’t sweat under his arms at all so doesn’t wear deodorant, even with intense physical activity in the summer, no sweat glands in the pits, but he’s a head and foot sweater. His feet reek, at the end of the day. And the rivulets run down the sides of his face during outdoor exercise.
My step dad also didn’t wear underarm deodorant, He was a nose and upper lip sweater.
People who don’t sweat under their arms or in the groin area tend to have less stinky sweat. But they still sweat, and the smell is different or near odorless, back sweat, nose and head sweat don’t smell the same way that underarm sweat does, groin, boob, sweat not a good smell (errogeanous) zones). Bathing and deodorant help, not it’s really not a bathing thing, they are literally different types of sweat glands.
I have a friend who has no sweat glands at all, she has beautiful skin, and never smells, but she’s trapped inside on hot summer days.
Eh it’s much easier to buy some spray deodorant and spray the parts no one really sees. It would be much worse to have a pool of sweat, even if not at stinky, under your nose or rolling off of your head.
Anonymous wrote:Most men, no. I think DH probably could. He's weirdly odorless and doesn't really sweat.
Anonymous wrote:When I forget deodorant I only start stinking once I realize it 😅 and start sweating because I’m embarrassed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I use a 40 grit sandpaper to scrub off the old deodorant. WTH kind of deodorant are you using that it takes an abrasive, or even a washcloth to remove it. Soap and water work just fine for me. It only takes seconds. I think most people know how to properly clean themselves.Anonymous wrote:I think if anyone washes VERY well with anti-microbial soap or wash to eliminate 99% of bacteria in the shower, wears very clean breathable clothes, most would go 12-24 hours without smelling strongly unless they had stress/emotional sweat or worked out very heavily and then let it marinate.
The problem is many people, especially men, don't know how to properly clean themselves. Many people don't use proper soap, a washcloth or something abrasive to scrub off old deodorant and dead skin that bacteria like, and don't wash for long enough to get rid of the bacteria. Most people are rubbing some soap under their pits or swishing a dirty old loofah under their for a few seconds and calling it a day.
Lmao you’re proving my point. I bet you’d be real funky at the end of the day if you didn’t use deodorant because you don’t clean properly.
I almost never wear deodorant because my skin doesn’t like it and I only ever get odor under my pits if I get very very upset. But I spend adequate time and attention cleaning, and yes, it does require something to scrub off the remaining film of deodorant. So I’m fine without it for 24-36 hours until I shower again.
Anonymous wrote:It's highly individual, OP, and despite my personal experience, not gender or ethnicity related.
My husband has never worn deodorant because he only stinks when he works out intensely. I'm very jealous, because I need deodorant every day unless I do absolutely nothing!
My son has inherited my husband's biochemical make-up, my daughter is like me.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I use a 40 grit sandpaper to scrub off the old deodorant. WTH kind of deodorant are you using that it takes an abrasive, or even a washcloth to remove it. Soap and water work just fine for me. It only takes seconds. I think most people know how to properly clean themselves.Anonymous wrote:I think if anyone washes VERY well with anti-microbial soap or wash to eliminate 99% of bacteria in the shower, wears very clean breathable clothes, most would go 12-24 hours without smelling strongly unless they had stress/emotional sweat or worked out very heavily and then let it marinate.
The problem is many people, especially men, don't know how to properly clean themselves. Many people don't use proper soap, a washcloth or something abrasive to scrub off old deodorant and dead skin that bacteria like, and don't wash for long enough to get rid of the bacteria. Most people are rubbing some soap under their pits or swishing a dirty old loofah under their for a few seconds and calling it a day.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I use a 40 grit sandpaper to scrub off the old deodorant. WTH kind of deodorant are you using that it takes an abrasive, or even a washcloth to remove it. Soap and water work just fine for me. It only takes seconds. I think most people know how to properly clean themselves.Anonymous wrote:I think if anyone washes VERY well with anti-microbial soap or wash to eliminate 99% of bacteria in the shower, wears very clean breathable clothes, most would go 12-24 hours without smelling strongly unless they had stress/emotional sweat or worked out very heavily and then let it marinate.
The problem is many people, especially men, don't know how to properly clean themselves. Many people don't use proper soap, a washcloth or something abrasive to scrub off old deodorant and dead skin that bacteria like, and don't wash for long enough to get rid of the bacteria. Most people are rubbing some soap under their pits or swishing a dirty old loofah under their for a few seconds and calling it a day.