Hate feeling sweaty and think it's gross?
Think again!
"It could have been so much worse," says Sarah Everts, the author of a new book called The Joy of Sweat, a book entirely on the science of sweating. Turns out, human sweat is our body's version of air conditioning. Dogs drool to stay cool, (and while vultures will poop on their legs and seals urinate on their feet) we simply sweat to stay cool. "We effectively dispatch water to our skin, and as it evaporates, it whisks heat away from our bodies," she says.
In Everts' book, she points out that this 'superpower' of ours, helps us to thrive and dominate across the globe as a human species. "Sweating allowed us to forage out in the sun without overheating, while our predators were relegated to the shade for survival," she writes, and it's advantageous for us to be able to adapt to many new environments. This enables us to basically be able to survive almost anywhere.
How much you sweat is affected by both nature and nurture. In Evertsβ book, she states that our sweat contains so much more than just.... water.
Here's an excerpt from an interview that she recently did on NPR.
Here's what she has to say about body odor changes, the content of your sweat, and the mix of bacteria that are metabolizing the sweat...