Sorry I lost you, here it is again a bit different. We all know that in the morning on a warm day we can walk outside at the first dawn and everything is wet. That is caused by a phenomenon known as dew point. The ambient air is exposed to a condition that causes it to dump it's moisture. Basically the water is shocked out of the air by a temperature change. This can happen in chimneys, within block walls, in your attic, anywhere that you have air and the possibility of a sudden temperature change. This phenomenon can occur within the walls of your shower due to the sudden application of warm water to the cold surface of the shower wall, the air within the wall is warmed, shocked and dew is formed. Simply, it rains in your wall. In a dark place that has any type of nutrient this becomes an area for mould growth. Over the ages mould was not generally looked at as an evil demon, so we didn't really build to stop it. Most of our tried and true construction methods took no consideration at all over mould prevention or it's total control. We have as of late learned that it can be very bad stuff, so we have to adjust our way of construction to completely eliminate it's environment.
Once a wall has water within it the water draws addition moisture into the wall, there is a name for this but I don't remember it exactly, like how capillary attraction can draw a liquid up a pane of glass, defying gravity. A properly done system should only ever have to be redone because the wife is sick of looking at the tiles, it should hold as log as the structure. You could say, well why didn't my 1935 house have these troubles. Well your 1935 house may have been brick, brick breathes and moisture can escape from the brick just like it came in. Your 35 house had no insulation, the air pocket was large and not trapped so it could not be shocked. Your wall on the 35 house was a concrete mortar subbase tile job, it was 2 inches thick, the house could burn down before the heat would go through a 2 inch concrete wall. Most of the cases where you see a tar paper used in a home of 35 it was used as an insulant against sound, to stop floor squeaks etc. It is designed for a roof to shed water, in a wall on a parallel plane where is it shedding this water to? The floor? Back into the shower pan? It just doesn't fit into the modern mould prevention mentality. It has been exposed as an omen or precursor of bad things to come. I have seen people actually say as I opened a wall "Oh my God!, there is tar paper in there!" trust me I was taken a back by this myself.