this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2025
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me_irl
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I had a friend of mine recommend a book on the subject of dust ... and how this stuff just permeates our environment, into space and throughout the universe.
She gave me a strong warning about the book ... she said that once you read it, you'll never breathe comfortably again knowing that every breath you make for the rest of your life is saturated with all kinds of things from all kinds of places and that 99.99999% of the time everything is just fine but every once in a while, a tiny particle of the right type with the right content just ends up in your lungs and completely screws up your biology.
I would not be okay after reading such book. I am most certainly never going to do that.
What's the name of the book?
How to get OCD and obsessed with cleaning
from ashes to ashes and dust to dust
hope we get an answer, but maybe it's ## Dust: The Modern World in a Trillion Particles
Well now you got me breathing manually
I had a similar feeling of overwhelm when I heard how many kitchen sponges have been found with fecal matter contamination. I've since switched to Swedish dishcloths and hope to never touch a sponge again in my life.
Counter-point: AFAIK "fecal matter contamination" usually means "we found some ecoli". A bacteria that is completely ubiquitous and almost always harmless unless you manage to ingest a significant amount or rub them into your eyes. It can be a useful general cleanliness indicator, for example if high concentrations of ecoli are measured in a body of water it probably means raw sewage made its way there, and you should be worried about the things that aren't ecoli. However you're not particularly likely to catch cholera or dysentery from your own sponge.
Furthermore sponges aren't meant to be clean per se. They're meant to be mechanically abrasive, so that all the impurities are detached from the surface you're cleaning. Those impurities then bind to the soap molecules which prevent them from clinging to surfaces, and therefore allow them to be easily washed away when rinsing.
It does not matter much if the sponge was dirty because the bacteria from the sponge will rinse away alongside the bacteria from the item you're cleaning. Just make sure to soap, rinse, and dry things properly and wash your hands after handling a sponge.
That makes so much sense, and makes me feel better about using sponges.
But at some point it has to become the source of bacteria, no? Yellow sponges that look more like a greyish brown can not possibly sanitary food-safe items you want to rub all over your eating dishes. And they're not exactly expensive.
Do not look into bathrooms and tooth brushes then.
I cut out the middle man and just end up rinsing my toothbrush in the toilet bowl after I brush my teeth.
I decluttered and simplified by simply brushing my ass instead of wiping.
I change my dish sponge every couple weeks, and toss any that are visibly dirty at all. If it sits in the sink longer than like 20 seconds, trash. I do not understand why people hold on to these $2 items until they're entirely new colors, probably harboring germ colonies on the verge of space travel.
I always had a hunch that people that drive all crazy do it because they drive a lot, causing them to drive by road kill a lot which wofts of rabies into their lungs and over time they get crazier and crazier
This is such an interesting idea. I feel like, if this was true, I would be crazy though.
In Worm, some superheroes are tinkers. Super scientists and engineers. Like Iron Man or Mister Freeze. Most tinkers have a speciality.
There's an Indian tinker whose name translates as Particulate. He's a dust tinker. And he's a total maverick with a super destructive dust cannon who decides to take on an Endbringer with it.