On Wednesday night I read a very, very, very early (and very, very, very explicit) excerpt from my book at the Brillobox as a part of their monthly Bridge Series. I wanted to get a workout and a sweat in before the reading (which started at 8:15 p.m.), so I went to LA Fitness at 6 to hoop for an hour or so. Both the LA Fitness I frequent and the Brillobox are in Pittsburghโs East End. I live on the Northside, which meant I just wouldnโt have time to leave the gym and drive home and shower before the reading. Which meant Iโd have to shower at LA Fitnessโthe first time Iโd ever taken a shower in a public locker room.
Suggested Reading
โWait,โ I imagine some of you thinking. โDidnโt you play basketball in high school and college? How is this the first time youโve showered in a locker room?โ
This (the basketball thing) is true. And I did take showers in college. But that was in a private space with my teammates. A shower in a public space with dozens of strangers is an entirely different dynamic.
But before we dive into that, letโs talk a little bit about the difference between showering as a high school athlete in your teamโs locker room and showering as a college athlete in your teamโs locker room. (Also, I must note that this experience may be menโs-basketball-specific.)
No one showered in high school. You practiced or played in a game, you put your school clothes back on and then you went to Burger King. Showers happened at home, and Iโm not sure if the showers in my schoolโs locker room even worked.
Now, this showering dynamic has one major caveat: race. None of the guys I knew who went to predominantly black high schools or high schools with an even distribution of black and white kids showered in their locker rooms. It was more of a mixed bag, however, with the kids from predominantly white high schools. You still didnโt have many locker room showerers, but you had some. Either way, if you happen to be out somewhere this winter and you happen to see a group of high school basketball players having a postgame meal at Applebeeโs, please know that they all probably smell like horse stables sprayed with Axe.
This dynamic changed in college. Now, not only did you showerโyou were commanded to. I remember an actual almost fight one of my teammates (โRickโ) got into with an assistant coach over showering. He didnโt get off the bench during the game, was pissed about it and got dressed after the game without showering. The coach ordered him to shower, saying that he wouldnโt be able to board the plane back to Buffalo, N.Y., without one. Rick (who I think was 22 at the time) replied, โIโm a grown-ass fucking man. I know how much I sweated tonight. Youโre not gonna make me take a fucking shower.โ
They had to be separated. Rick โwonโ and didnโt have to shower because the head coach heard the commotion and ordered us all to hurry up and get on the bus. And since Rick was a bit of an asshole, too, he wet a paper towel, wiped his face with it and said, โYou happy now?โ to the assistant, who turned beet red. It was the funniest thing Iโd ever seen. He got kicked off the team two months later.
Anyway, at LA Fitness Wednesday night, from the time I entered the locker room to the time I left after showering and getting dressed, roughly a half hour passed, and Iโd say 75 different men entered (and left) the locker room at some point. Most didnโt shower, choosing instead to just change and leave or go to the bathroom. But of the ones who did shower, I was the only black guy.
Although this observation is obviously limited to that particular time and circumstance, it matches up to what Iโve observed over 20 years of experience in locker rooms at LA Fitness and Bally and the YMCA. White guys are just more likely to shower at the gym than black guys are.
(Also, the older and whiter the guy, the more likely heโs going to be walking around the locker room butt-ass naked, too. While most other men seem to try to get dressed as quickly as possible, these dudes will brush their teeth, trim their beards, text their stockbrokers and do Bikram yoga with their dicks out. Iโd say that roughly 89 percent of the visible penises in public menโs locker rooms belong to white men over 50.)
Again, this is all anecdotal. Thereโs no science behind these observations. But an informal poll of like seven people (all black) that I took yesterday reinforced it! (The black women I asked shared that white women seem to shower at the gym more frequently than they do.)
Does anyone have any theories about why this might be? (I have my own, but theyโre mostly terrible and I donโt want to print them.) Also, for those who work out frequently at gyms, do you shower there? Why or why not?
Straight From
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