So if anyone didn't know this, antiperspirant can have a rebound effect that makes you sweat more over time. And it is also responsible for the crusty stains on your t-shirt armpits. Regular deodorant won't do that.
When I switched to just regular deodorant my armpits stopped sweating so much after a few weeks, and then it was no longer an issue. And no more ruined shirts. Wish I had known this sooner in life.
I'm going to make a wild guess and say we probably have different DNA. 😂
Yeah I dunno, it doesn't affect everyone like that obviously but I've told that to several people over the years and many of them were like "yep exactly" so it's not that uncommon. But my pits used to soak my shirt at work, at a fucking office job. It was gross. Once I stopped using antiperspirant after reading/hearing/finding a pro-tip (from where, I have forgotten), that issue completely went away.
Just doesn't seem to be compatible with certain body chemistry.
They're referring to the white buildup that happens from the aluminum in antiperspirant. Deodorant without aluminum (and therefore not an antiperspirant) won't give this buildup.
What's a regular deodorant? Also are there any solutions that don't involve the plastic container for it, I'm already on solid soap and shampoo for years but my deo still produces plastic waste.
It won’t say antiperspirant on the label, it will just say deodorant, which means it doesn’t have any of the chemicals or metals they use to block your pores (or however it works, I’m not an antiperspirantologist)
Try Nuud. It's made from sugarcane (except for the lid), and it's a great deodorant. It's a bit expensive but it does last a long time and functions really really well. I'm referring to the cream as I haven't tried the stick yet.
Gel plugs (how antiperspirant works on your sweat glands) are finicky. They need a little bit of sweat in order to form—but not too much. Antiperspirant applied in the morning isn’t ideal, because people sweat more during waking hours, when they’re active. If the armpits are too sweaty in the hours after application, the product gets washed away before it can form the plugs. The body is cooler and calmer during sleep. For gel plugs to form, “baseline sweating is optimal at nighttime before bed,” Glaser told me. Nighttime application has been shown to increase the sweat-reduction ability of normal antiperspirant from 56 percent to 73 percent.
Huh. In the past couple of years I've switched from showering in the morning to go to the office, WFH and all, to showering at night after I get sweaty hitting the trails, kayaking, lawn work, whatever.
Never had a BO or sweat problem, but I'm going to try skipping it before I work out in the afternoon. Bet it makes no difference!
To be fair though, most people with a BO problem don't know they have a BO problem because the human brain is incredibly good at simply throwing away at "constantly present" smells. That's also why people have a quasi unique scent, but they don't know what their own is.
I have definitely had a few coworkers with a BO problem that thought they didn't smell at all, so YMMV.
What kind of anti perspirant are you using? The one I have just stops the bacteria on my skin from making the smelly chemicals. At least, as far as I know
Wait, but wouldn't I just wash it right off the next morning when I shower first thing? Well.....3rd thing. First I poop. Then I wait a half hour. THEN I shower.
Hard take that will expose me and a lot of people might not relate. But I shower at night before bed. I don't shower in the morning. Never smelled or anything. For those who shower after pooping, I'm an evening pooper as well. So, maybe there's something to this. Even with moderate sweat during the day, I never have body odor. It usually takes very heavy sweat from exercise or sports, or two days at least without a shower (very rare occurrence) for me to smell like anything.
A lot of it is body chemistry as well. For example sweat caused from stress smells worse than regular sweat. And then everyone's own chemistry is different on how their odor smells and how pungent how quickly.