The other night we had a bunch of neighbors over for doughnuts.
When living in the country, the definition of “neighbor” stretches to cover several miles. Only one of the people in attendance was an actual bonafide “neighbor.”
But I digress.
We fried up most of the doughnuts ahead of time, timing it so I we were just finishing when people arrived. That way, the doughnut-making was still “A Thing” but the bulk of the work mostly done, freeing us to properly host and have fun instead of working the whole time.
At the start, people had cluster conversations — small pockets of conversation — but as it grew dark, we all gravitated to the fire. (The kids played a card game on the porch. It involved lots of shrieking.) We didn’t discuss anything profound — stories from the neighborhood, thrifted clothing, marathon training — but then I said, “So here’s something I want to know. How often do y’all wash your sheets?”
(Writing that just now, I realize how freakishly random that question sounds — and it was. I have no excuse.)
Turns out, most everyone had a set time for washing their bedding — more or less weekly, or maybe every other week — and same with towels. Some people even had actual assigned days for washing bath towels. They just round up all the towels in one fell swoop and wash them.
I was flabberghasted. Such organization! Such cleanliness! Such on-top-of-their-game-ness!
“What about you?” they asked me.
“Oh, um. . . whenever they get dirty? There’s no schedule.”
The truth is, we wash our sheets every 2 or 3 weeks on average — and we sometime go even longer — but surrounded by such disciplined, clean company, I tried to sound slightly less squalid.
I was much more comfortable sharing our towel-washing practices — whenever they start smelling (so every 2-3 weeks?) and each person is responsible for making that call — because, as my younger son pointed out that evening, “If your towels are getting dirty, then you’re not showering properly.”
But then someone asked, “How do you hang your towels?” and the plot thickened. Because if towels are hung on a hook, they don’t dry as well and get funky quicker. Rod-hung towels, on the other hand, dry out better and last longer. (We’re rod-hanging folk.)
And then someone brought up the blog post I wrote a few years back about making the bed and that sparked another round of fierce opinions. (All my neighbors except one are dedicated bed makers, good grief! Such collective domesticity boggles my mind.)
How often do you wash your sheets?
proof we’re not animals
P.S. As I was writing this post, I realized an important variable in this “how often do you wash your sheets” discussion: whether or not people shower before going to bed. Because if people don’t shower before sleeping and climb into bed dirty (oh, the horrors!), then of course the sheets need to be washed frequently.
Clearly, this conversation needs to be revisited. Doughnuts on the patio, anyone?
This same time, years previous: South Africa: examined experience, four meal deliveries: what I learned, wait for it, the quotidian (11.4.19), old-fashioned apple roll-ups, cinnamon pretzels, meatloaf, when your child can’t read, awkward, piano lessons.