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To pee or not to pee
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Is it really that unhygienic to relieve oneself in the shower if urine is sterile and just gets washed straight down the plughole anyway?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well, if you have ever suffered from thrush and followed GP advice to pee while in the shower while running water over the affected area, you would be be glad of the chance to shower pee!
I don't think it is unhygienic - as long as you are not leaving a stale puddle! - we just seem to get ourselves in a state about what is deemed appropriate and inappropriate, hence the billions we spend on cleaning materials and the subsequent affect this stuff can have on our health (skin conditions, breathing problems etc).
I pee in the shower (there, I said it!) if I feel the need.
Madonna - allegedly! - pees not just in the shower but over her feet, as this is meant to have positive effect on the skin!
I must be the odd one out here - I have never pped in the shower, the bath, the swimming baths, or the sea, not because I have any aversion to the notion - I am happy to concede that fresh urine contains minimal bacteria, it has simply ever occured to me to do so! I always have a pee beforer embarking on any water-based activity, so I never have a full bladder when showering, bathing or swimming, that's something I've always done. Interesting debate though.
Provided there is no splash beyond the area that water flows over it seems to me no-one would ever know nor be adversely affected - I would not describe it as unhygienic but I concede that there are those who would deplore the practice (as Andy Hughes). I have aimed down the drain on rare occasions when taken by a sudden and urgent need. The point about getting swimming pool water into your mouth is one which is a very significant consideration in some countries but not too important in others. British people are very averse to washing (with soap, not just casually wetting themselves) BEFORE entering the water and contibute generously to the mix in the UK, but abroad I have seen them being sent back to wash off properly before being allowed into the pool where, as a cosequence, the water is not as likely to be alive.
Not in the bath, no! The swimming pool thing? Well, if I was in a pool here I wouldn't. But on holiday, in a private villa pool, I sometimes do. I think this is more to do with the big temp change from being in the sun to getting into a cold pool - even if I have just been, this usually creates an immediate urge!