Sensi Star
Active Member
I know someone who is VERY liberal with his use of cleaning products. Not the new "green" kind, the kind with toxic chemicals like Lysol, bleach, etc.
I've analyzed this in the typical INTP fashion and my thoughts are: it is inherently irrational to use cleaning products, when the goal of which is to eliminate the POTENTIAL of germs.
It's one thing when you are certain that raw meat has contaminated your table, and you sanitize that spot with Lysol, but what I'm talking about is the heavy use of this stuff during routine cleaning.
My reasoning is that when you spray liquid cleaner, much of it becomes airborne and you WILL inhale it under most circumstances. These synthetic chemicals WILL enter your body and will do some small degree of permanent brain damage. I often get headaches when I smell a strong whiff of cleaning spray, which is indicative of slight brain damage.
The alternative: if you don't spray these cleaners, you MIGHT be susceptible to germs IF the germs are present and IF you happen to absorb them into your body. And even if you do happen to absorb normal "household" germs, it is highly unlikely that you will become ill, and even if you do become ill in most cases the damage is not permanent.
So I consider the relative risks of each scenario to decide which is preferable. When you use cleaning sprays you are subjecting yourself to a GUARANTEED health hazard, but when you avoid cleaning sprays you are only subjecting yourself to a POTENTIAL health hazard (of lesser extent and lesser likelihood).
So with this logic isn't it more wise to avoid cleaning products unless absolutely necessary, because in doing so you would be trading a POSSIBLE risk (germs) for a GUARANTEED risk (toxic chemicals)?
I've analyzed this in the typical INTP fashion and my thoughts are: it is inherently irrational to use cleaning products, when the goal of which is to eliminate the POTENTIAL of germs.
It's one thing when you are certain that raw meat has contaminated your table, and you sanitize that spot with Lysol, but what I'm talking about is the heavy use of this stuff during routine cleaning.
My reasoning is that when you spray liquid cleaner, much of it becomes airborne and you WILL inhale it under most circumstances. These synthetic chemicals WILL enter your body and will do some small degree of permanent brain damage. I often get headaches when I smell a strong whiff of cleaning spray, which is indicative of slight brain damage.
The alternative: if you don't spray these cleaners, you MIGHT be susceptible to germs IF the germs are present and IF you happen to absorb them into your body. And even if you do happen to absorb normal "household" germs, it is highly unlikely that you will become ill, and even if you do become ill in most cases the damage is not permanent.
So I consider the relative risks of each scenario to decide which is preferable. When you use cleaning sprays you are subjecting yourself to a GUARANTEED health hazard, but when you avoid cleaning sprays you are only subjecting yourself to a POTENTIAL health hazard (of lesser extent and lesser likelihood).
So with this logic isn't it more wise to avoid cleaning products unless absolutely necessary, because in doing so you would be trading a POSSIBLE risk (germs) for a GUARANTEED risk (toxic chemicals)?