As long as there isn't "stuff" (hairs, pieces of dirt, etc.) stuck on the soap, what's the problem? We have two different kinds of bar soap (a facial bar and a deodorant bar) and it is hard enough to arrange for soap trays for those two. I can't imagine having one or more separate bars for each person who uses the same shower/bathtub. (All four members of our family use the same bathroom for bathing/showering because our only other bathroom is on a different floor of the house from our bedrooms.)conandrob240 said:
Bar soap and we each have our own. Growing up, it was one bar for 4 people. Looking back, that was kind of gross.
Tom_Reingold said:
I read that body wash is more common now because it's much more profitable. I'm glad for the warning. I use glycerine bars which feel non-gooky. No clogs yet.
shoshannah said:
But wait. "Body wash" is not soap. Don't you need soap for its antibacterial qualities?
The_Soulful_Mr_T said:
All women think they have 'sensitive skin' so they have to use special moisturizing crap, with Shea Butter (what the ***** is Shea Butter anyway?) No woman has normal skin or normal hair. Special shampoo, special conditioner and some kinda special rinse.
Men? Cheap bar soap, store brand shampoo.
My thoughts exactly.Tom_Reingold said:
I dunno. Seems to me that if you rinse the bar of soap, it should be pretty clean. I mean, it's soap, ya know?
conandrob240 said:
Because you, presumably touch the soap to your body or to a washcloth that you use to scrub your body. At best, it is covered with someone's skin cells. At worst, well...
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we have so much clutter in our bath room because we use so many different products. wish i had my own bath room; especially after the boys use their smelly bath stuff!