If most grime is non-polar, can you use a non polar solvent like oil, cover yourself in it, then either scrape it off or wipe it off with a towel to clean yourself?
That’s what the Romans did.
You’ll have to find your own link tho’ I’m to busy reading.
Yes, but it was the cleaning part. The actual bathing part was more like a modern swimming pool, and it was bad manners to bathe dirty.
DancingFool
A professor of mine stated that the scraping one received with a strigil was so pleasurable (or so painful) that the subject tended to doze off into something resembling an hypnotic state.
This, she explained, is why some Roman sarcophagi use the strigil as a decorative motif (See the wavy lines in this image, for example). Comparing the tranquility of the post-bath scraping to that of death.
No cite, by the way. I’m not sure I buy it myself.
The ancient Greeks used the strigil long before the Romans. I understand it’s used by some non-Western cultures, too.
A few years ago there was a guy at the arts and crafts fair in Salem, MA selling hand-made strigils. I’m sorry I didn’t pick one up. So evidently some folks are still using them.
Well, that will certainly work for the organic compounds; however, most of us these days feel pretty grimy if there’s a residue of oil on the skin. I do have a tube of hair grease (bought for Hallowe’en) that is sold as a hair cleaner – you work it in and comb it out, removing all manner of skin schmutz and leaving a head of hair that’s slick, clean, and shiny. Disgusting to me, but it seems appealing in a 1930s kind of way.