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Dan Smith's avatar

It's strange to think that the norm of having clean, dry skin and dry clothing against it must be pretty recent. Before the age of near-universal air conditioning... even as recently as the 1950s... middle-class men, at least, wore suits in summer and sweated into them. A daily change of all the clothing touching the skin wouldn't have been common until the era of electricity, piped water, and washing machines. And daily bathing didn't become a cultural norm until the mid-1800s. George Orwell writes about there being opposition to providing bathtubs in lower-class housing because it was commonly believed that if you gave the lower classes bathtubs, they would just store coal in them. I am not entirely sure of the balance of health benefits to allowing a thin coating of natural grubbiness on the skin versus washing it off. Anyway, for most of human history and much of the world, grubby skin and seasonally-damp clothing and bedding must have been the norm. It occurs to me that this must have been true for soldiers and sailors, too.

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Clare Balkus's avatar

That snoodie makes a distinctive fashion statement! It sure looks warm!

I'm ready for cherry season!

Love you!

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