
The Japanese have taken the art of bathing to a whole new level; transcendence.

These neighborhood bathhouses consisted of not much more than 10–20 shower stalls and a central hot tub. Simple but effective.
(Image source)
Modern convenience


For your pleasure. Your ultimate pleasure.
Nevertheless, the Japanese have not abandoned the art of bathing. Instead, they’ve improved it, and taken it to a whole new level.

Over the past few decades, a number of large, ultra-modern bathing complexes have opened in most Japanese cities.
These sparkling new facilities might have 50 or more shower stalls, several hot tubs of various temperatures, a cold tub, a Jacuzzi, a jet bath, an outdoor bath or two, a tea bath, an herbal bath, an electrical bath (Yep, an electrical bath. Zap!), a steam sauna, a dry sauna … and maybe even a waterfall bath. All for your pleasure and relaxation. And mine. (Image source)
Note re the aforementioned “shower stalls”: When taking a shower, the Japanese sit on small stools.
Which makes a lot of sense.
See my comment in Tatami Note #12 re "perfection" .
Introduction to – “Notes from Under the Tatami Mats” (right-click on title)
Top 2 Misspellings of My Name by Japanese People
Top 6 Nicknames for Yours Truly
Top 3 Meanings of “Koorin” When Written in Kanji
... and more
Links to my Other Series …
Introduction – "Intro to Vocab-ability" (right-click on title)
Guide – "Guide to Entries" (right-click on title)
Index– "Index" to all Chapters and Sections (right-click on title)
Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 1" (right-click on title)
Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 2" (right-click on title)
Images sourced from Google Images, unless otherwise indicated or unless my own.