Any cures for body odor?

Man, this thread fills me with such anxiety. For all I know, I just haven’t yet overheard what everyone’s saying. How would I know?! :eek:

There’s been at least one study that claimes that vegetarians smell better. (BTW, the link is to a vegan site; I found other links but they were all subscription only) Anecdotally, I’ve noticed nasty body stink not from meat eaters specifically but from people who eat really crappy: meat and potato guys who never eat veggies and fruit.

Stop eating crap. Do it for the body odor but you’ll find yourself feeling better, looking better (even if your bad diet isn’t making you gain weight at your young age, it’ll catch up with you) and, with your family history, you need to start those good habits now to keep from being an old, diabetes ridden amputee.

I should have mentioned that I can detect the smell with my own nose.

We smell bad to Asian people. I heard it in that movie, Shogun, I think it was.
Actually, I did some checking, and apparently Europeans do smell ranker that Asians. In general.

Vegetarians seem to smell better *to other vegetarians.
*

But of course, eating really badly, and being full of gas and constipated can make you have horribly body odors. You can eat 100% Vegan and eat badly, note. It’s just hwaaaaay easier in todays world to eat fast food, which is mostly meat based.

Phew.

Phew.

Phew!

Well, that’s good enough for me… :slight_smile:

Nope. Neither does chest hair, although that is more prickly as stubble than underarm hair.

That’s not what the study found which didn’t use exclusively vegetarians for the “raters”. Here’s a link to the full text.

From the study:

You shave your chest hair too? :eek: Are you a guy I don’t want to be on the same commercial airliner with, or just a competition swimmer?

I have varying levels of BO from my armpits, that will not wash off. This BO is most definitely connected to my diet- if I eat beef from a fast food establishment (particularly Taco Bell) it spikes for days.

I don’t know if armpit BO can be independent of perspiration, but for me they are synonymous. I come out of the shower sweet smelling, exert myself enough to start sweating, and immediately I smell.

The interesting thing is that I have found that the more I sweat, the less severe the BO gets. When I’ve been able to get regularly to a sauna- and drink up to a gallon of water while doing so- the BO has disappeared entirely.

TimSmith, may I ask what you do for a living that has your boss watching you like a hawk?

I’ve never shaved my armpits but have shaved pretty much everything else at one point or another out of boredom, curiosity, or vanity and I’ve only found one area to really itch when it grows back.

Yeah. That one.

Speaking from experience, I also know this to be painfully true. Try rubbing about a tablespoon of aloe/lidocaine based sunburn lotion and a teaspoon or so of Benedryl lotion into the “affected” area. Takes the itch away immediately.

I would say those are probably my reasons, too. And it just seems to make sense when you’re going to the gym (you just never seem to see a hairy bodybuilder). Actually, body odor isn’t an issue of mine.

But I’ve never shaved “that one” area. Trim, yes. But not shave. Some areas, you don’t shave. You just admire. :smiley:

Question-if you think you know the cause, why not change some of it? Eat better, exercise, get more fluids?

Solid plan all around, believe me. Just mow it.

Indeed. That fell squarely in the second category and now that that’s been sated, it won’t be repeated unless it’s medically required.

Not only does it itch, it also looks absurd.

Oh, for Og’s sake, sweetie, it was set in feudal times, when Europeans believed bathing was bad for your health! I think Blackthorne would have stunk to even modern American noses.

Oh. I’m a sweetie. :slight_smile:

Uncle Cecil on Asian Body Odor.

That is a fair study, and it’s the first I have seen which didn’t use vegetarians. But the study group is small and the differences were modest. I’d say this needed more study (and the cite agrees). Still, it’s a good cite, and thank you.