Brush rinsing and drying? From faucet to resting place, quick shake dry, tap on the sink edge, thumb the bristles, or dry with hand towel
Enjoy the arguments. For your data, I don’t use water at all before brushing, only after to rinse the brush itself once I’m finished. I’m glad you posted this, it’s reminded me of Hypercritical and I’m due for another listen through.
I got one question as well! A little bit of a background: my wife and I have the same electric toothbrush. My looks pretty much as new, while hers is all crusty and scaly, especially at the charging base.
I came to the conclusion that the only difference in what we do is that I shake twice when I’m done. As a dude, it comes naturally. However, she’s never acquired the habit to “shake afterwards” and just puts the wet toothbrush back on the charging base.
So my question is: do you shake the water off before putting the toothbrush away?
And to answer OP: I rinse the toothbrush before putting toothpaste on, she wets it after.
That is something I had thought of when I was considering an electric toothbrush; why don’t the charging bases cradle the middle of the brush so it can lay on its side? It could fit in a drawer or a vanity that way, and wouldn’t risk becoming coated in dried saliva paste. Must be since it’s not as elegant or something.
Anyway, I’m still using manual brushes (I know), but I both tap on the sink edge and use a thumb a few times across the bristles after a rinse to flick the water off. Not 100% effective, but it’s fine for the short lifespan of a manual brush.
If you would like to stoke the flames of controversy, channel your inner Siracusa and investigate:
Enjoy the arguments. For your data, I don’t use water at all before brushing, only after to rinse the brush itself once I’m finished. I’m glad you posted this, it’s reminded me of Hypercritical and I’m due for another listen through.
I got one question as well! A little bit of a background: my wife and I have the same electric toothbrush. My looks pretty much as new, while hers is all crusty and scaly, especially at the charging base.
I came to the conclusion that the only difference in what we do is that I shake twice when I’m done. As a dude, it comes naturally. However, she’s never acquired the habit to “shake afterwards” and just puts the wet toothbrush back on the charging base.
So my question is: do you shake the water off before putting the toothbrush away?
And to answer OP: I rinse the toothbrush before putting toothpaste on, she wets it after.
That is something I had thought of when I was considering an electric toothbrush; why don’t the charging bases cradle the middle of the brush so it can lay on its side? It could fit in a drawer or a vanity that way, and wouldn’t risk becoming coated in dried saliva paste. Must be since it’s not as elegant or something.
Anyway, I’m still using manual brushes (I know), but I both tap on the sink edge and use a thumb a few times across the bristles after a rinse to flick the water off. Not 100% effective, but it’s fine for the short lifespan of a manual brush.
Finally, another no water data point.