Thursday, November 5, 2015

Bathing With a Bucket of Water

These days, I bathe with a bucket of water.  I should say, I try to.  Why am I sharing this strange and very personal secret with you all?  It is partly as a water conservation measure and partly as a life style lesson I am hoping to adopt for the rest of my life.

My wife lived her early years in several African cities.  In the late seventies and eighties when she lived there with her teacher parents, they got posted in several towns. As a young adult she lived in Nigeria.  One commonality in all these places in those years was poor water supply to the towns.  As a University student, she had to lug water up three floors to her hostel room in jerry cans as the taps there ran dry most days. So she learnt the art of having a bath with small quantities of water.  She claims that she could have a decent bath in one small bucket of water if she was not washing her hair.  Now we have water in plenty, when she stands under the shower, she says that it is an indulgence. Just indulgence, and not essential to cleanliness.

I started having the “bucket shower” after a student of mine got severely burnt when the mixer of the shower at her home malfunctioned.  I got scared of using the showers with very temperamental mixers after that. Then I started doing this more often when I had to travel, in hotels and guest houses, where I was unsure of the efficiency of hot water mixers in the showers. Every Indian bathroom usually has a bucket and a mug and I started using that to sluice myself rather than risk getting myself scalded.    I am now convinced that I too can have a decent bath and shampoo my much shorter hair, with just one bucket of water. So far no one has mentioned that I am any less clean than in the days when I used to stand under the shower for 10 minutes or more – possibly using up several buckets of water. So a bath in one bucket of water is the order of the day.

I understand that they teach naval personnel to have something called a “Navy Shower”.  Wet yourself, stop the shower, soap yourself well all over and wash yourself clean under the shower.  On board ships where clean water is a premium that is the way to go.   My “bucket shower” is similar.  If one carefully wets oneself, one can wet the whole body with a couple of mugs of water. Soap well, shampoo the head and with the water in the rest of the bucket one is done. No need to wait for the water to boil up in the heaters.  You get the water at the same temperature as you began as one is using only one bucket.  All round, less resources being used.

How would it be if one starts using less resource for everything?  Would life be good?  I am going to try that in to the future.  Now when I buy something, I will not buy two of it if just one serves my purpose.   One pen in the pocket is good enough.  No need for that expensive one which “makes one Paul”. I am now going to wait for the shirt to really fray up before buying the next one.  Get the shoes resoled more than once.  Reuse everything in my personal life.   So the next time, if you see me with a slightly frayed collar, don’t let it bother you. Walk on because I’m trying to do my little bit to live life less wastefully.


Bala@Panaji

4 comments:

Anindo Chatterjee said...

Excellent habits Sir. Reduce, reuse, recycle. If only all of us do that to some measure...

Bala said...

Thanks Anindo. As a child I used to have no shower as the water supply to my house was limited and there were possibility of overhead tanks. But now I should do it as a choice - before the choice is not with us any longer!

Bala said...

*were NO possibility of overhead tanks.

Mohit Dubey said...

When I was 10, we lived in a small town, and we waited in a long queue for our turn to fetch 3-4 buckets of water. The whole family was involved and I never knew there is something like a shower.
It's really an indulgence.
My 10 year young son recently learnt to bathe with a bucket. I will bathe so more often as well.

Thank you again!