What Are The Best Practices For Pain...
Jobs & Education3 mins ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I was on my own with 2 boys (so no mens toiletries around) & as they got older - about the same age as your son I think - I asked them if they'd prefer something a bit less 'flowery' in the bathroom. Then you just throw in a body spray with the shower gel etc - they love it, makes them feel grown up. Until the novelty wears off that is! My youngest seemed to develop a soap & water phobia for a while - you have been warned!
Puberty means that perspiration develops bacteria, which is what smells, whjich is why younger children don't smell as bad, or as quickly.
By twelve, you should be educating your son into good hygene habits - daily bathing, and ensure an anti-persirant is available for him - offer unscented if he worries about the perfume, and encourage him that bathing and smelling nice are good things - B.O. is not!
you'll know and so will he when the right time comes. can't you try and get his dad to talk to him - man to man sorta things. don't make an issue of it he will sort it out himself, we all get thru puberty one way or another with no real harm done - its just life!
PS once girls enter the scene you won't be able to breathe for the smell of Lynx !!!
You could take him shopping - mother / son quality time... go to Boots and ask him what products he'd like now that he's growing up. Joke that you don't want him to use your products and smell like a girl! 12 year olds love bragging to their peers about which products they use - you should see the boys at my school when they get changed after swimming! I've never seen so many sprays!
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