Exactly What Is A Bath


by Vcare365 - Date: 2010-09-10 - Word Count: 320 Share This!

You take a bath when you wash your body all over. People in civilized countries know now that keeping clean is one of the best ways to be healthy and escape diseases. This was not always known. Still, in ancient Greece and Rome, two thousand years ago and more, the people took many baths and kept themselves clean. Then, paying no attention to this lesson they should have learned, people in Europe and in America for hundreds of years bathed very seldom.
Less than fifty years ago in the United States, most of the people thought once a week was often enough to bathe, and the "Saturday night bath" was a standard joke. Very few American houses had bathrooms, which were thought to be an extravagance for the rich. An American would say offhand that there are two kinds of bath-the tub bath, and the shower bath. Actually there are dozens of ways of bathing that people have used through the centuries and still use today.
The Finnish bath, used also by people in the Scandinavian countries and in Russia, is a steam bath. It is taken in a separate bathhouse, usually a hut near the dwelling. Stones are heated and brought into the bathhouse, where cold water is poured on them. The water becomes steam, and bathers sit in the steam, and wash themselves with water. In the winter, when the ground is always covered with snow in those northern countries, they often leave the bathhouse and roll in the snow. The Turkish bath may be found in many big cities of the United States, as well as in Turkey and other countries of the Near East. A Turkish bath is taken in stages. One stage is a steam bath. In another stage, the bather is rubbed and massaged, and has hot air blown on him. The last stage of a Turkish bath is to sleep for some hours.

Related Tags: what is bath, uses of bath, saturday night bath, types of bath

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