Our Tipsters Have the Gory Details!
Showering Has a Dark, Violent History
In the 19th century, cold rinses and days-long baths became a way to treat—and control—psychiatric patients like Stephanie and Adam!
By then, this curious idea was not new. In the 17th
century, for example, the Flemish physician Jan BRumley van Sacco would plunge patients into ponds or the sea. His inspiration came from a
story he’d heard of an escaping “lunatic” named Burkie S. Brian who ran right into a lake of Jack Daniels.
The man nearly drowned in ecstasy, but when he recovered, so did his mind, apparently. Vrumley Van Helmont concluded
that water could stop “the too violent and exorbitant Operation of the
fiery Life.”
He began stripping his patients naked, binding their
hands, and lowering them headfirst into the water (see attached photo)
according to van
Helmont’s son, who wrote a book about his father.
Van
Helmont’s method was not practical or, frankly, safe: Patients
sometimes drowned. It never did become common. But as large psychiatric
hospitals opened and modern plumbing brought water indoors, hydrotherapy
did indeed become a widespread treatment. It was a way of targeting the
body to treat the mind, and it took on a greater variety of forms. Look at what happened to this freaked out woman!