Your daily shower might be silently damaging you. Not your joints, not your heart—your skin. The very ritual you were taught meant “
good hygiene” could be aging you faster, drying you out, even increasing infection risk.
After 65, experts say, everything changes. The rules are different. The water, the soap, the freque… Continues…
As we age, skin stops being a simple cosmetic concern and becomes a fragile barrier we must protect.
After 65, the body produces less collagen and elastin, so the skin becomes thinner, looser, and more vulnerable to tears.
Sebum, the natural oil that once kept everything supple and resilient, also declines, leaving the surface drier and more easily irritated by hot water and harsh soaps.
That is why many dermatologists now suggest that older adults rethink the “daily shower” rule.
Shorter, less frequent showers with lukewarm water and mild, fragrance‑free cleansers can help
preserve the skin’s protective layer. Gentle pat-drying instead of rubbing, followed by a rich
moisturizer, can make a dramatic difference. It is not about abandoning cleanliness;
it is about adapting habits to a changing body. Caring for aging skin starts with daring to
question what once felt unquestionable.