Personal Hygiene
There comes a point at which your hygiene becomes less your problem and more everyone else's:
My old school nurse never seemed to wash - instead she wrapped herself in crepe bandages from the first aid kits. The smell was beyond pungent. If you got ill at school, it was better to suffer than try and explain symptoms whilst only breathing out.
When she was eventually 'let go',they had to strip the wallpaper in her office to get rid of the lingering odour.
How scuzzy have you got? Or, failing that, how bad have people you know got?
( , Thu 22 Mar 2007, 12:40)
There comes a point at which your hygiene becomes less your problem and more everyone else's:
My old school nurse never seemed to wash - instead she wrapped herself in crepe bandages from the first aid kits. The smell was beyond pungent. If you got ill at school, it was better to suffer than try and explain symptoms whilst only breathing out.
When she was eventually 'let go',they had to strip the wallpaper in her office to get rid of the lingering odour.
How scuzzy have you got? Or, failing that, how bad have people you know got?
( , Thu 22 Mar 2007, 12:40)
« Go Back
Damp. It stinks.
A relation of mine lives in a damp useless house with her equally damp useless boyfriend, and they both stink of mildew all the time, everywhere they go.
They don't seem to mind the smell themsleves. Funny, you'd think you'd notice that you smelt like a second-hand shroud. No wonder neither of them can get a job.
( , Mon 26 Mar 2007, 14:34, Reply)
A relation of mine lives in a damp useless house with her equally damp useless boyfriend, and they both stink of mildew all the time, everywhere they go.
They don't seem to mind the smell themsleves. Funny, you'd think you'd notice that you smelt like a second-hand shroud. No wonder neither of them can get a job.
( , Mon 26 Mar 2007, 14:34, Reply)
« Go Back