The process of sweating is one you can feel, beyond just the sensation of moisture. I'm more surprised that there are people who can't feel the difference.
Also, sweat has a much different consistency than water.
I'm a warm, sweaty person. Maybe I sweat too often to notice it's happening. I do great in winter though and don't complain about 90F+ days under 20% humidity. Sadly, I live where summers are 90/90
Yeah I don't really feel the difference either. Intriguing. Whether I'm wet from the shower or from sweat, it feels about the same to me. It's only after it's drying that there's an obvious difference to me
Sweat is basically water so sweating in a shower would be useless. I don't even think it's possible tbh. Once you get above a certain temperature you're just burning yourself.
Sweat is salty water, so it's different. It's released more when your body is hot, not because it's dry. You probably aren't sweating in an air conditioned room and showers are typically hotter than room temperature, probably hot enough to make you sweat. I'm not sure why you think your sweat would turn off just because you're wet. If that was the case, you wouldn't have pooled sweat pouring off you on humid days
I was thinking more along the lines of the water from the shower already acting as sweat by absorbing the heat. Which would make sweating useless. I dont feel like I've run into a situation which like this before, but based on people's comments, I may be wrong here.
If you start sweating in the shower you are doing it wrong. It could easily turn into heat stroke. This is more of a problem with hot tubs and hot springs