I have had my close encounters with the smelly kind … very close
encounters for my comfort. I come from a family where people would go hungry
but not without a bath, particularly my elder sister and my dad.
No matter what happened, their priority remained having a bath for the day. Even when my sister was very sick with fever, or in her last stage of cancer, she never skipped having her daily bath. If by some chance she had to miss her bath for a day, than it was better to keep away from her; because she would be the grumpiest person you can come across. My dad and my sister had their timings fixed for bath and no one were supposed be in the bathroom at that time. We loved them both, so we put up with them.
No matter what happened, their priority remained having a bath for the day. Even when my sister was very sick with fever, or in her last stage of cancer, she never skipped having her daily bath. If by some chance she had to miss her bath for a day, than it was better to keep away from her; because she would be the grumpiest person you can come across. My dad and my sister had their timings fixed for bath and no one were supposed be in the bathroom at that time. We loved them both, so we put up with them.
Then I met my would-be husband. Now do not jump to conclusion that
he is the smelly kind I am going to talk about. He was very similar to my sister;
the only difference is he never began his day without having bath first thing
in the morning, whereas my sister loved to have her bath sometime in the
afternoon after dusting our whole house. Yeah, she religiously dusted the tape
recorder, radio, TV, doors, windows and everything around our home ‘EVERY DAY’.
If for some reason my husband could not have his bath, he would sit around at
home sulking without doing anything. Naturally, I assumed that from the land
where he came from, people began their day by having bath. I got married and
went to his homeland which was just 400 km away from the where I lived. Who
would imagine that at this short distance I would get the cultural shock of my life?
In Byndoor, there were no geysers or water heaters in homes back
in 1990s. Instead they had huge pots in the bathroom, in which they heated the
water for bath. Almost every home had coconut trees and the byproducts went
into heating water besides the wood brought from nearby forest. The whole
procedure took a lot more effort than hitting the button and heating water for
a relaxing hot water bath. So the people there dedicated two days in a week for
having bath. One was Friday and the other was Monday. On these two days, they
would fill the huge pot with water and make fire. All the people in the house
would have their bath on these two days. For some reason, they never had body
baths. Everyone around me bathed with the red Lifebuoy soap and only that soap.
It was also used to wash their hair, since no one were used to shampooing their
hair. Most of the people shared the soap and towel in the family. I am talking only about my surrounding and not everyone in the town.
Now here
comes the biggest shock for you all. If someone missed having bath on Monday,
they usually waited until Friday for their bath. In all these days in between
they wore the same set of clothes. They did not wear night dress or change
clothes when going to bed. Can you imagine women going to bed in the sari and
waking up in it for next day for 3-4 days? Men at least had two sets of dress. One
set was reserved for wearing at home and one for going out.
I was thrown into this scenario when I did not even know how to
make fire to heat the water. Thank God, the climate of the place was so hot,
that I did not need hot water for baths. In fact, I used to bath in cold water
whenever I felt sweaty or itchy and that was about 3-4 times a day. I would hear
the women whisper among them, give nasty stares and at times giggle as I went
to have my bath. I wondered what was wrong with them, but just went about my
own way. Finally, I got to know from a secret source that the women had their
bath other than on Fridays or Mondays was - when they had sex. It was a cleansing
bath required before they offered their prayers. So, all the giggles, looks and
whispers were directed towards their assumption that I was doing the same. OMG!
The well wisher wanted me to take my new married life a bit easy so she
revealed the secret in the process of convincing me not to overdo the sex thing.
Panic stricken, I ran to my husband and told him to get the
matter cleared that I was bathing only for bathing sake, and not for what they
were assuming it to be. He looked at me aghast and asked, “What do you want me
to say?” The poor man was confused and no wonder he was. Even I had no clue how
he could do that, I mean go out and tell all the women that his wife was having
bath just like that and not as they assumed it to be. The matter was dropped; yet I kept throwing accusing looks at him. But, I was not sure what I was
accusing him of.
The next time I wanted to have bath, I announced loudly to my husband,
“It is so hot in this place that I feel itchy and sweaty all over. I need a
bath to feel better”. I looked around to see if the message had been passed,
but they all acted or were really dumb. I started feeling so conscious when
walking in for a bath or walking out of the bathroom. I would feel as though
all the eyes were peering at me.
Giving up bathing would have killed me for sure, because the weather in Bangalore (where I grew up) is so pleasant in comparison to Byndoor. I started sneaking into the bathroom when no were around for my baths. Fortunately, the ordeal ended for me when we went back to Bangalore to spend some time with my parents. The relief was welcome even if it was temporary.
Giving up bathing would have killed me for sure, because the weather in Bangalore (where I grew up) is so pleasant in comparison to Byndoor. I started sneaking into the bathroom when no were around for my baths. Fortunately, the ordeal ended for me when we went back to Bangalore to spend some time with my parents. The relief was welcome even if it was temporary.
It was time for my husband to go back to Dubai for work and we
went back to Byndoor. The whole ordeal started all over again for me. Then came
the D-day when my husband, reluctantly left me behind and went away to work in
gulf for at least a few months before he could come back. The next day when they
found me walking out of the bathroom after a cool relaxing bath, they shot
questioning look my way. OMG! I needed to address this issue now. I told them
that I did not grow up dedicating days for bathing. I knew there were days
dedicated to certain festivities and national holidays etc, but never did I know
about days dedicated for bathing. I loved to keep the sweaty and itchy feeling
away from me, especially when I hit bed at night. I did not like to smell
awful. I could hear them murmuring after
I left, “She is trying to mislead us by continuing to have her baths”. Sigh! I
gave up trying to explain them anything.
They did not change their routine for years. Monday and Friday
remained the days when they would have their bath with the Red Lifebuoy soap. They
still heat the water in the big pot, which I learned to do later in my life. Two
years ago, when I left Byndoor to come and settle down in Bangalore, I had my
final cold water bath as we are yet to install a water heater there. Now I have
the instant water heater at my service here.
The younger generation has been changing the trend of bathing on
Fridays and Mondays. The modern homes have come up with attached bathrooms and
water heaters for that instant relaxing bath. But people who do not like the
change have been sticking to the old rules.
NOoooo....Not that smell again |
I dread sitting near them or
getting too close to them on Sundays and Thursdays. I think you can guess why. The
simple involuntary process of inhaling air becomes a torture for me because no
matter how much smelly they get, they are supposed to reborn with hot water
only on Monday or Friday, even in sweltering summer.
So on a Sunday or Thursday, I don't have to ask, "What's That Smell, Boss?" because it is so obvious.
This post is a part of contest on Indiblogger - Close Encounters of the Smelly Kind by Racold Water Heaters.
This post is a part of contest on Indiblogger - Close Encounters of the Smelly Kind by Racold Water Heaters.
That made a real interesting read.
ReplyDeleteBut it was an horrible experience for me TF. Now I can laugh about it, but back then it was kind of irritating and uncomfortable for me.
DeleteFun read, good luck for the contest.
ReplyDeleteIt was not fun smelling them out though! I can assure you that.
DeleteDue to water scarcity or other reasons, people often do not have bath everyday. I don't think it is a crime to save water. Give a serious thought whether we need to waste water by having bath more often than needed.
ReplyDeleteFirst let me tell you that I agree with you and respect your views. We need people like you to maintain ecological balance on our earth. Now in my defense- We did not have running water there. The water had to be drawn from the well. I could not waste water much because I had tough time drawing water because I was not used to it. I just took enough for feeling better. Also, the water from washing clothes, dishes or bathing is not wasted there. It goes to feed the coconut or any other trees growing in the backyard. Hence feeling less guilty of those baths.
DeleteVery candid true-life story shared with such frankness, Faridaji.
ReplyDeleteBathing is so important, yet people associate it with different things! Bathing for bathing sake! :)
Best wishes :)
Thank you Anita. Bathing has so many traditions and cultures attached to it in our land... So funny!
DeleteVery strange, bathing just twice or thrice that too by choice. Good for you that your husband was different from them. A new kind of experience but a great read.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the lovely comment at my blog Farida.
That's a strange tradition they follow there. One would think, they must need to take bath more than once a day since it is so hot there.
ReplyDelete2015-6-30 xiaozhengm
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