Chelmsford Cancer Charity Quiz
Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by butter1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As a child I had a bath once a week(Sundays, prior to starting the school week!) which seemed to be the norm. A shower was unheard of, they basically didn't exist in most households.
Does your friend have a shower? As diddy says putting the immersion heater on just to bathe a child seems a bit of a waste. Provided the child washes each day there shouldn't be a problem.
For the record my children are showered every night but every household has different circumstances.
Excuse me blueeyedlass, if you read my answer properly you will notice that I'm not critcising my friend at all on how she is bringing up her child! How is asking a question about how many times you should bath a child critcising? I am simply asking a question that's all. I am not a mum myself so I don't know, I was just wondering. So I do not appreciate comments like that. In fact, I think my friend is a great mother, seeing as she is single and doing it all alone. So don't pass judgement until you know the facts please!
To everyone else, thank you for you sensible comments.
I live in Sweden now and I am very aware that although people wash regularly and are very clean, people here bath and shower much less frequently because they believe that overbathing/showering takes away a lot of the natural body oils. When I had my baby we were told not to bath her every day for the same reason - a daily top and tail wash and a bath once a week. Obviously that increases to bathin/washing more as children get older and can crawl or walk and get grubbier. There are really different views on this. It is really washing and keeping good body hygiene that is important.
I think Rev Shirls point about overwashing is very good. Too much bathing can certainly strip our skin of its natural oils and protection. We then have to apply artificial moisturisers, etc.
I must admit I shower every day, but back in the 'olden' days we bathed once a week and washed with a flannel each morning and evening. I particularly remember my mum scrubbing my knees clean every night! I don't recall people being any more smelly. There does seem to be an obsession about bathing, showering and applying all sorts of lotions and potions these days and I am taken in by all the advertising as much as anyone else.
My friends son doesn't look like a dirty child, he doesn't seem to smell - i just can't remember how many times I was bathed when I was younger. I vagily remember it being about 3 or 4 times a week. I just wondered how many times other people bath their child. Just curious. I know she hasn't got much money so may be it's to do with costing. But thanks everyone for answering my question.
RevShirls does make a good point - how many people shower and then lather on expensive cream to replace the natural oils, merely because the adverts say so? I live in a hot climate so shower daily, but I don't use anti-persperant and I don't get smelly (according to those who I'd like to thing would tell the truth).
As a kid, baths in the summer (running around getting sweaty) were much more common than the winter (sitting indoors watching the rain)