
Either I just learned a lot of science or I just primed myself to join a microbiome cult.
Either I just learned a lot of science or I just primed myself to join a microbiome cult.
Thankfully, this was not an in depth examination of what it's like to quit showering for extended periods of time. Instead, an illuminating look at the history of our excessive fixation on "clean." The classist, racist, and residual ideology of purists has left us in the west with a host of health problems that are exacerbated by too much soaping up.
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James Hamblin is a doctor with a residency in preventive medicine, & a journalist. In Clean: The New Science of Skin, he talked to people in a wide variety of scientific disciplines as well as folks involved in beauty & grooming industries. He outlines cultural & theological meanings of cleanliness, & the ways our personal care habits affect the microbiome of our skin & our larger environment. A fascinating #audiobook read by Barrett Leddy.
The skin microbiome represents a new and important reason to reconsider much of the received wisdom about soap and skin care, and to think deliberately about the daily habits many of us undertake in pursuit of health or wellbeing.