Water Mattered – My Mother Knew It Before I Did
Growing up in Korea, I was taught that water mattered. Whenever we travelled abroad, my mother would remind me to wash my face with bottled water if the local water felt harsh or unfamiliar.
At the time, it sounded like one of those things mothers say. But she wasn't entirely wrong.
I travelled to Europe frequently from a young age and noticed the difference. My skin felt drier. My hair felt rougher. Showers simply felt different.
Still, I never thought much about it. Those trips were temporary.
Then I moved to Berlin.
What had once been an occasional inconvenience became part of everyday life. The difference was impossible to ignore.
The Water in Berlin Is Not the Water in Seoul
The more I researched, the more the pieces started to connect.
Tap water in Germany is some of the cleanest drinking water in Europe – and for drinking, that's true. But "safe to drink" and "kind to skin" are not the same standard.
Water designed for municipal treatment is intended to be safe for consumption. That doesn't necessarily mean it was designed with the skin barrier in mind.
Seoul, where I grew up, is a soft-water city. Berlin sits around 17 °dH – roughly 303 mg/L of dissolved CaCO₃, around four to six times the level I grew up with. On top of the minerals, the water arrives at your shower with residual chlorine left over from municipal treatment.
That was the one thing I had never changed. Not my cleanser. Not my moisturiser. The water hitting my skin every single day.
And many of the concerns people try to solve with skincare alone are shaped, at least in part, by the water underneath it.