I live in Seattle where its like living inside a cloud and you don't have anything like weather unless you count humidity, so I just take a bar of soap with me on my way to work.
I tell people the locals have had their heads in the clouds so long they've forgotten the meaning of weather. They often call a sprinkle a downpour, I think just for something to complain about besides being depressed.
I actually try to get one in in conjunction with sweating at the gym. So I take two short showers most days; less than five minutes total water usage each as I turn off the water to put on the soap and so forth.
Me before work, I work office based. Boyfriend after work, he's an electrician so he tends to get dirty and sweaty.
before i have to be around anyone who has to be around me. otherwise just when i get itchy or can't stand my own funk. maybe every couple of days or so, no real schedule. seldom more then a week though.
It’s absolutely both for me, I love the feeling of a hot powerful shower. I like to go to bed clean, and wouldn’t leave the house in the morning all beddy!
I shower on getting up out of bed in the morning about 8.00am. Then I feel good and clean for day until evening. I shower again around 6.30pm in the evening, and then I get into some comforts like an Under Armour T Shirt and shorts. Then I feel good and clean for the evening. That is unless I am going out for the evening of course, then it would just be wearing whatever suits for the occasion. BUT. That shower is a must no matter what. PS. I am retired so I can pretty much do what I want with the day.
Before bed.. too sweaty after work especially in summer.. feels nice to get under the covers with the AC blastin right after
I've lived in places like Hawaii that have no real weather. In Hawaii, half the island gets rain every day like clockwork for one hour and it pours for that hour, but that's the extent of their normal weather. Seattle doesn't even have that, because its a sheltered harbor. All they get is weeks of drizzle. Its like living in the top of a redwood tree.