Buying deodorant in Europe
#5
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Hi<BR><BR>You may be lucky.<BR><BR>A couple of countries have started experimenting with piped water to houses. I still believe it won't replace the donkey pulled water cart we so often see. <BR><BR>And electricity is spreading rapidly towards Paris.<BR><BR>Peter<BR>
#8
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Even though this is an obvious troll, here's a serious answer: deodorant is widely available. Buying an ANTI-PERSPIRANT (anti-transpirant in French) is another thing. When we first moved to Brussels, I couldn't find anti-perspirant in any of the places that sold deodorants. I finally went to a pharmacy to ask for it. I got a long lecture on how the chemicals in anti-perspirants are not good for you and that they shouldn't be worn every day. If I really wanted one, she would see me a cream anti-perspirant in a tube that I would apply every day for a week, then every other day for two weeks, and then stop using.<BR>However, things seemed to have changed. There are a few brands of anti-perspirant now for sale in the various grocery stores and "drogueries" (which don't sell drugs). But the selection is nothing like the U.S. or U.K. One brand of anti-perspirant also is running some clever ads on Dutch and Belgian TV.
#13
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It's a joke, dollface. The product is for disinfecting countertops and toilets.<BR><BR>This Lizzie Borden Axe stuff, what are the ingredients? It might contain something that's not allowed by our Food and Drug Administration, or maybe found only in certain brands.