Safety in numbers: The reason running water makes you want to urinate
An evolutionary adaptation
There are a few theories on the all-important question of why the sound of running water makes you want to urinate. The most popular being a Pavlovian response to the sound of past urination sessions.
I offer a deeper hypothesis born of evolutionary adaptation:
The sound of running water mimics the sound of other human beings urinating in your proximity, and that can be taken as a sign that it is safe to urinate here and now.
The reasoning behind this hypothesis is as follows:
Picture the primitive communities in which we all spent a vast portion of our evolutionary history as modern/proto-human beings.
- Urination/waste disposal must be done some distance from the protection of the community for hygiene reasons. You are also somewhat incapacitated during the process.
- This makes urination inherently dangerous (if you stray too far from the fire you might get taken out by a big cat). You should therefore scan the area carefully before giving yourself the all-clear.
- By urinating together, in groups of 2 or more, it becomes far less risky (you bring with you the protection of the community). You have the eyes and ears of your fellow tribesmen as well as your own.
- If you can hear someone else urinating, you can safely assume they have checked their surroundings and determined that the coast is clear.
- If it’s safe enough for them to urinate safely, and you’re close enough to hear it, there’s a good chance it’s safe enough for you to urinate safely too.
- Those of us with the caution to urinate in groups were less likely to be taken out by a red-toothed predator and subsequently more likely to propagate our genes.
- Thus evolved over time, the physiological prompt to relax and urinate when you hear the sound of others urinating — interchangeable with the sound of running water.
Naturally, this hypothesis is highly speculative with no supportive evidence — but my gut tells me I’m onto something here.
Thanks for reading, and please comment if you have any evidence that contradicts the above hypothesis.
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