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“As We Grow Older, We Become Too Lazy to Wash Ourselves” – My Candid Conversation with a 70-Year-Old English Woman
As you grow older, its as though the simple act of washing yourself becomes an immense effort. Too weary to scrub, too sluggish to soakan oddly persistent theme in these strange night reveries.
Its a tale repeated, echoing in half-remembered corridors between sleep and waking. I dont argue with it; I simply recount it, as the telling itself drifts like mist.
Growing older truly does feel like wading through treacle. Rising from bed each cold morning, fumbling to brush your teeth with a hand that seems not quite your own, cobbling together an attempt at what once passed for breakfast. And doing the laundrygood heavens, its like scaling a mountain made of shirts. Theres a kind of lazy haze to everything, as if the house itself yawns along with you. Industriousness slips away, and you become a shadow in your own story.
And yet, beneath the idleness, rules linger, woven through the tapestry of English life. You really arent permitted to skip the basicsnot washing, not brushing your teeth, not rinsing your face, nor ignoring the jumble of unwashed jumpers and socks. Why? Because we all stroll through this green and pleasant land tethered by its unspoken laws.
Dont let your clothes become legends of neglect. Its not about the latest style, really. What matters is that everythings decently clean, not wafting the scent of a fortnights mustiness, not displaying the tell-tale sign of the jacket you haven’t peeled away since last Tuesday.
Your hair may well have turned silver, and wasting hard-earned pounds from your pension trying to hide it is little more than throwing coins into the Thames. For most, a humble bottle of shampoo from the corner shop will do just fine. Let your hair be clean, not dazzling. The same goes for your face. Theres a certain age when makeup seems like theatre. Cleanliness, though, is timeless.
On your handsperhaps a dab of hand cream, bought for a song at Boots. Beneath your arms, any old deodorant, so long as it does the job. In your shoes, a dash of baking sodaabsorbing those peculiar odours that waft up alongside your memories. If you notice a certain unpleasant scent clinging about your person, no need for grand solutions. The baking soda remains your quiet ally.
From this angle, the problem is simple. We cushion our laziness with excuses: blaming our age, our retired status, our dwindling bank balance. But in truth, it takes very little money to stay clean in England.
So, no matter how many years have slipped past, you owe it to yourself to remain human and to care for your own well-being. That, at least, is what I believewhether awake or adrift in tomorrows dream.
