• eestileib@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    16 days ago

    My brother said something similar “I never shampoo and my hair doesn’t stink”.

    My wife and I informed him that his hair stank, and that we had to launder the pillowcase immediately after he stayed over because it stank up the room and adjacent hallway the day after.

    OP got used to his BO, I promise you the people around him know he does not use soap.

    • Simulation6@sopuli.xyz
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      16 days ago

      I have also not shampooed my hair for an extended period, and you do have to rinse it when you shower. I would put soap on the ends every so often and I had to rinse it with baking soda a few times to remove cooking odors (onions mostly).
      No one ever complained about a smell, but people tend not to say things like that.

  • Zozano@aussie.zone
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    16 days ago

    As someone who doesn’t use shampoo and has hair which has re-adapted to not having the natural oils stripped out, and doesn’t use soap for the same reason, I am confident to say:

    ** Showers are a good thing. **

    Just don’t blast your skin with steaming hot water and your skins microbiome and keratin glands will adapt. Being “100% clean” will lead to sweat which stinks because of the heat-resistant bacteria which flourishes (thanks to a less diverse microbiome) and produces bad odour after digesting your sweat.

    Sweat itself doesn’t have a smell, it’s why you don’t stink the moment you start sweating.

    What OP is doing here is fabricating a satirical story based on these principles.

    • Prime_Minister_Keyes@lemm.ee
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      16 days ago

      Kinda like H2S, I guess. You can sense its putrid smell it in the range of 0.47 ppb to 100 ppm, then your olfactory nerve becomes paralyzed. Just when you think the gas is gone, there’s a 50% chance of you dying at 800 ppm. Years ago, I read about a “mysterious deaths” case in which H2S was the main suspect because of this stealthy property.