What do you shower with, if not soap?

I use deodorant soap on the areas with apocrine glands, and either Ivory or a glycerine soap on everything else. OK, sometimes I use baby shampoo instead of bar soap.

And yes, I meld the soap bars. I don’t put them in cute little drawstring bags, and I certainly don’t melt them down and make new bars from them. When a bar of soap is small enough to be melded to the next bar, then it usually fits right into that concave area.

My wife.

Yes, indeed…1973 called, and it wants its personal-care products back. :slight_smile:

I wash myself with a rag on a stick.

Your girlfriend sounds like my wife. Hey!?

I have the Ivory soap too, and my wife cracks jokes with other women about it. They do the knowing looks all around, as if that somehow explains why I look and act the way I do.

She has at least three types of liquid soap and three bars in the shower caddy. There is a whole box of various cleansers in our other bathroom. Rejects from body washing experiments? Was the lavender too strong? Did the lemon scent of the body wash clash with the peach in the facial scrub? Was the mosturizing bar not moist enough? I may never know.

I use this (the shampoo). I’ve never liked bar soap, it creates so much residue and makes my skin feel drier. I have mild ichthyosis so my skin is already dry and doesn’t shed dead cells properly, I spend a lot of time manually exfoliating.

Hey, if it worked for gladiators…

Just coming back to say WASH!!! Damned spell check.

I apply a body wash or preferably a moisturizing body wash with scrubby gloves. I used to use a washcloth and Ivory bars but I like the lather and flexibility of the liquid + gloves combo. And it just feels neater to close up a bottle than to leave a used bar lying in its own moisture. (I know that’s not quite rational though.)

A friend of mine who is an aged care nurse told me she uses sorbolene cream on her clients. As it is a moisturizer, often recommended by doctors for skin problems, it works perfectly as a non drying soap. She uses it as shaving lather for her male clients. I started using it to shave about 12 months ago and it cleared up all my facial skin problems.

You can buy huge bottles of it anywhere in Australia for a few bucks and I had assumed it was universally well known but, looking it up online, every site that mentions it is a .au

As to washing, at the moment, I use this mint and tea tree shower gel. As it says it has so much mint in it that it tingles.

Liquid soap.

I don’t particularly like sorbolene cream but, as you say, you can buy it anywhere and everywhere here and I too had assumed it was universal.

I held out for a long time but I recently converted from Sunlight/Velvet soap to body wash and my old skin really does feel better. I get headaches from most of the fragrances in soaps, body washes, creams and lotions so the real challenge is to find something that’s unscented.

tried and true century old Brillo pad, soap and an exfoliater.

Ivory is older and maybe better.

Female - I use shampoo on my entire body. I’m much too cheap and lazy to do anything else than that.

I could be wrong, but I’d guess that that’s a LOT more expensive than, say, bar soap. Right now my hair’s real short (I’m in process of deciding whether to keep it that way), and I just rub a bar of soap over my head rather than using shampoo.

Bar soap makes me feel disgusting. No matter what brand I use or how I use it I end up feeling like I have a thick film of soap scum on me.

Besides, I don’t use expensive shampoo.
Also, my hair is thick and a few inches past my shoulders. With as gross as bar soap feels on my skin, I can’t imagine how it’d feel on my hair.

Soap: standard bar of Ivory.
Shampoo: Dawn dishwashing detergent.

I have an oily complexion and oily hair. One day without a shower, and with a wringer and a strigil my hide could serve up enough gunk to supply a chandler’s shop. As petroleum spill cleanup crews have found, Dawn detergent (the bottle of liquid for washing dishes by hand, not the ammunition for a dishwashing machine) is an industrial strength anti-oil agent that happens to be perfectly safe for use on living things. So, as some of my friends have recommended, I’ve tried it as a shampoo. Works great!

I also recently discovered that when the tub grime inevitably starts to accumulate, I pour a few tablespoons worth of Dawn over the grubbier areas, then fill up the tub with the hottest water I can coax from the taps and let it sit overnight. In the morning, when I drain the water, the grime is gone. No scrubbing involved.

Oh yes, I almost forgot. The reason I bought the big bottle of Dawn in the first place was that I had made the mistake (over about two weeks) of dumping cat litter – a non-flushable brand, as it turns out – in the john. When the pipes started backing up, I used my mighty Google-fu to look up recommendations for solving the problem that would not involve admitting my idiocy to my apartment super. On several separate boards I read of a remedy that involved pouring Dawn into the toilet with a chaser of boiling water. On the first try, ta-daa!

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Body wash. I can’t stand bar soap, it makes you feel as if you just coated yourself with candle wax.

I can’t quite figure out what “use directly” means in soap terms.

I used to pop corn at a movie theater, in a special popping room. This was back when we used coconut oil, so you can tell it’s been a while. Anyway, once the oil liquified and I started popping, oil got EVERYWHERE, and Dawn was the best degreaser that I found.

Back on topic, I will sometimes wash my face with Noxzema cold cream during the day, rather than using soap. If my face feels especially dry, I’ll put the cream on my face about 15 minutes before I take a shower. This surprised the hell out of my husband the first time he saw me in whiteface.

It means rubbing the bar directly against your skin, rather than working up a lather in a washcloth or even in your hands.