I was arguing with my sister. She said that we should never wash towels with our clothing.

I was arguing with my sister. She said that we should never wash towels with our clothing.

But I always wash them together. Can someone explain what the problem is?
I save time when I wash them together.

That’s exactly what I told her.

“Sylvie, you’re overthinking it,” I said, tossing both my gym shirts and a couple of towels into the washer.

She folded her arms, giving me that look. “Mara, you’re ruining your clothes. Towels are heavy and shed lint. They rub against softer fabrics, making them wear out faster.”

I rolled my eyes. “They’re clothes. We wear them, sweat in them, and wash them. It’s not that deep.”

Sylvie shook her head, clearly irritated. She’s always been the more meticulous one. I’m more… efficient, let’s say.

But later that week, something weird happened.

I pulled out my favorite navy-blue blouse—one I wore to work all the time—and noticed little white fuzzies all over it. I sighed, picked off some of the lint, and wore it anyway. No big deal.

The next day, I noticed my black leggings had tiny pills and were starting to look worn out—after only a few months of use.

I didn’t want to admit it, but Sylvie’s voice echoed in my head.

Towels rub against softer fabrics. They wear out faster.

Still, I told myself it was a coincidence.

Then came the real kicker.

One Saturday morning, I washed my towels and clothes together as usual. When I pulled everything out, there it was—my favorite cream sweater had shrunk.

Not just a little. It looked like it belonged to a teenager.

I stared at it, feeling this pit in my stomach. That sweater wasn’t cheap. And I’d only worn it twice.

Sylvie walked into the laundry room just then. She took one look at me holding the shrunken sweater and didn’t say a word. She just raised her eyebrows.

“I know, I know,” I muttered. “Don’t say it.”

She shrugged. “You can save time. Or you can save your clothes.”

Her voice wasn’t smug, just matter-of-fact. And that stung even more.

That night, I did some research online.
Turns out, towels are made of thicker, more abrasive materials. They retain more water, making the spin cycle heavier and harsher on delicate clothes. Plus, the lint issue is real. Fabrics like cotton and synthetics don’t handle that friction well over time.

Basically, I’d been slowly destroying my clothes to save twenty minutes of sorting.

The next weekend, I decided to change my habits.
I separated my loads. Towels in one, clothes in another. And you know what? My clothes started lasting longer. The colors stayed brighter. The fabrics felt newer.

Sylvie, being Sylvie, noticed immediately. “Finally joined the dark side, huh?”

I laughed. “You were right.”

She grinned. “I usually am.”

But the real twist came a few weeks later.

Sylvie called me in a panic. “Mara, can you come over? The washing machine won’t drain.”

When I got to her apartment, she was standing in front of the washer, a puddle spreading slowly across the floor.

“Did you check the filter?” I asked.

She bit her lip. “I didn’t know there was a filter.”

I sighed, grabbed a flashlight, and pulled off the bottom panel. The filter was completely clogged—with lint.

We spent the next hour cleaning it out. Clumps of towel lint, fabric fuzz, even a few coins.

As we worked, Sylvie looked embarrassed. “Guess all those perfectly separated loads weren’t so perfect after all.”

I smiled. “Nobody’s perfect. We all mess up.”

She chuckled. “Okay, okay. I’ll stay on top of the filter from now on.”

That moment kind of stuck with me.

We all have our blind spots. I thought I was being efficient. Sylvie thought she was being careful. In the end, both of us had something to learn.

Sometimes, it’s not about being right or wrong. It’s about being open—to advice, to learning, to helping each other out when things go sideways.

Now, laundry day has become a bit of a running joke between us.
We FaceTime while folding, trading tips and laughing at how seriously we once argued over something so small.

But I also think about it every time I’m tempted to cut corners—whether in laundry or in life.

Saving a little time now isn’t worth ruining something valuable in the long run.

If you’ve ever learned a lesson the hard way like this, share your story in the comments! And don’t forget to like and share if this made you smile. ✨

Related Posts

“My Husband Left for a Business Trip — Minutes Later, My Six-Year-Old Whispered, ‘Mommy… We Have to Run. Now.’”

My husband Derek had just left for a business trip when my six-year-old daughter tugged my sleeve with trembling fingers and whispered words that would shatter everything…

My husband kissed my forehead and said, “France. Just a short business trip.”

My husband kissed my forehead and said, “France. Just a short business trip.” A few hours later, as I stepped out of the operating room, my heart…

My eight-year-old son was beaten nearly to death in his grandfather’s driveway while three grown men laughed and held him down.

My eight-year-old son was beaten nearly to death in his grandfather’s driveway while three grown men laughed and held him down. That sentence still does not feel…

Never Had To Speak Until One Day Everything Changed

Wyatt came downstairs with that half-smile he had been wearing since he was seventeen, the one that meant he had already decided how the room was going…

I Was the Only One at My Grandpa’s Funeral Until a General Saw His Ring and Asked Me One Question

The Quiet Man As told by his granddaughter My grandfather was the quietest person in every room he ever entered. Not shy, not withdrawn, not socially inept…

My Parents Threw Me Out at 16 Until Years Later They Came Begging Without Knowing Who I Had Become

The Inheritance I was staring at the email when I realized my hands were shaking. The message glowed on my monitor, framed by the wide glass walls…