Famous billionaire Howard Hughes stored his own urine in large bottles.
Howard Hughes Stored His Urine in Bottles for Months
In 1958, billionaire aviation pioneer and filmmaker Howard Hughes locked himself in a darkened screening room at Goldwyn Studios for four months straight. Surrounded by Kleenex boxes and empty containers, he watched films obsessively while subsisting on milk, chocolate bars, and pecans. When nature called, Hughes didn't bother getting up—he urinated into bottles and jars that accumulated around him.
This wasn't a one-time occurrence. Throughout the final two decades of his life, Hughes repeatedly stored his urine in large bottles, keeping specimens lined up in his closets and rooms. The behavior became one of the most disturbing symptoms of his deteriorating mental health.
The Paradox of Germophobia
Here's what made Hughes's behavior so contradictory: he was terrified of germs. His obsessive-compulsive disorder manifested as an extreme fear of contamination from other people. He wrote detailed memos to staff about handling objects with tissue paper and avoiding direct contact.
Yet paradoxically, Hughes lived in appalling squalor. His bedrooms were never cleaned, sheets rarely changed, and dust and wastepaper covered every surface. While hoarding bottles of his own bodily waste, he saw no contradiction—his own germs were safe, but everyone else's were lethal threats.
The Screening Room Years
Hughes's most extreme isolation period came in 1958 when he essentially moved into a projection room. For four solid months, he conducted marathon movie-watching sessions while reclining in a chair—often completely naked. He refused bathroom breaks, instead relieving himself into milk bottles and other containers.
Staff members who worked for Hughes during his final years confirmed the urine storage wasn't limited to this one episode. In his various hotel penthouses and hideaways, bottles containing urine specimens were preserved and stored, sometimes for extended periods.
Mental Illness and Isolation
By 1966, Hughes's descent into mental illness was unmistakable. His OCD worsened dramatically, compounded by:
- Chronic pain from multiple plane crashes
- Increasing deafness that isolated him further
- Growing addiction to codeine and other drugs
- Paranoid delusions about contamination
Psychological experts who later studied Hughes identified his condition as an unusual variant of OCD where germ phobia coincides with deliberate avoidance of cleaning. His hoarding of urine bottles fit the pattern—collecting and preserving rather than disposing.
The Final Years
When Hughes died in 1976 at age 70, he weighed only 90 pounds, with a long beard and fingernails like corkscrews. The brilliant innovator who had built planes, produced movies, and dated Hollywood starlets had become a ghost, hiding in darkened rooms surrounded by the physical evidence of his mental deterioration.
The urine bottles were just one visible symptom of a man whose mind had turned against him. What began as mere eccentricity evolved into debilitating mental illness that consumed the final decades of an otherwise remarkable life. His story has since become a cautionary tale about untreated OCD and the isolating effects of unlimited wealth combined with deteriorating mental health.