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Why Do We Even Sweat, Anyways?

Dolphins speak. Elephants paint. Even spiders can manage to use tools. But humans do, in the end, have an edge over animals: Weve developed a hugely efficient way to control our body temperature. Dogs pant to cool down. Seals pee on their flippers. All we have to do is sweat.(Related:Natural Deodorant Reviews: Which Ones Pass Our Sweat Test?)Heres how it works: Humans have anywhere from 1.5 million to five million sweat glands distributed all over our bodies. As our temperature rises, our nervous system gets to work, stimulating those glands to release the salt water we have in our bodies, says Sarah Everts, the Ottawa-based author of The Joy of Sweat. Our hot skin evaporates the sweat away from our body, which whisks the heat away, she says. This trickevaporative coolingis what dogs do when they pant. Theyre evaporating water off their wet tongue. We can just do it over our entire bodies.”Not all of us sweat the same wayon a hot August afternoon, certain people will be soaked through, while others, miraculously, will appear bone-dry. Everts explains that those lucky ducks are sweating so efficiently, at exactly the right rate, that their sweat manages to evaporate instantly. Its still unclear exactly whats responsible; its most likely a mix of genetics and where you grow up. People are born with all their sweat glands, but they only become fully active within the first couple years of your life, she says. Researchers wonder if your climate then helps dictate the activity of those sweat glands.(Related:A Sweaty Gal’s Guide to Sunscreen)Its not as though humans abhor all perspiration: Sweat lodge ceremonies are common around the world, and it can feel like a workout barely counts if we dont break a sweat. But then we spend $75 billion a year on products trying to pretend we dont sweat at all, Everts says. Theres still stigma attached to a sweaty handshake or dark patches blooming under a work shirt. Enough. Sweating is a fantastic temperature-control system and one of the things that makes us human, Everts says. So I think we need to stop giving sweat the side eye.Next: Find out whether or not it’s a good idea to rewear those sweaty workout clothes.

The post Why Do We Even Sweat, Anyways? appeared first on Best Health Magazine Canada.

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