Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Home Invasions

If you are anything like me, my home is my sanctuary and safe place. I've worked hard to make it a scent-free environment and I'm comforted by its own homey, familiar smells. 

Any foreign stink invader is usually readily identified as an intruder and cause for high alert.  Other than online shopping deliveries with perfume samples, here are other common home invasions I've experienced:

Visitors  Naturally, anyone wearing scented products is a problem. Friends, relatives, neighbors, salespeople, politicians, fair princesses, religious fanatics and trick-or-treaters. I have a sign on my porch that reads, "Fragrance-Free Zone. Poisons Not Allowed." Does anyone read it? NO. So I added another sign on my door window that went into great detail what fragrance-free means if they manage to by-pass the porch sign. Still, I'd get people knocking on the door.  I'd answer the door and they would move to the bottom of the porch steps, apologizing profusely but still managing to try to sell me whatever they felt I needed to buy.

Enemy Combatants

Finally, I put a sign on my gate that read, "NO TRESPASSING. KEEP OUT." Does that stop anyone? NO. Mormon boys march right through as if on a mission. Finally, I just locked the gate. Does that stop them? NO. I watched my neighbor slither her skinny little fingers through the fence posts trying to trigger the latch. In frustration I ran out there and yelled, "CAN'T ANYONE IN THIS TOWN READ?" Now when visitors can't figure out how to trigger the latch they knock on my kitchen window. There is no stopping them.  It's like a war zone.


Defensive Measures

Construction Workers, Repair People, Utility Workers, etc.  It's difficult when you need someone to come to your home to fix something. I always warn the person with whom I make the appointment that whoever shows up better not be wearing any kind of scented products or they won't be allowed on the property. This usually works. Sometimes it doesn't and they are asked to leave. Fragrance-free is a requirement if they want my money!

Construction Supplies  Paints, caulking, sealers, paint thinners, plywood, etc.  . If you can determine in advance what might stink and if there are green alternatives, this may help. If not, seal off the area, open a window, put the air purifier on high.


Call the bomb squad!
Gifts Friends used to mail me gifts saturated with their own perfume. I had one friend with whom I exchanged Christmas and birthday gifts for twenty-five years. As hard as I try, I could not get it through her head the reason her smelly gifts would end up out in the garage or in the garbage. She ended up refusing to talk to me, whining, "You don't like my perfume."



Magazine Subscriptions  Sorry! No more Vogue, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, O Magazine. Fashion magazines and most women's journals are OUT. I can't stand the perfume samples in them. Sometimes there are air freshener samples, too.  I miss them. Curling up with a fashion magazine was great entertainment. Even those in the library never offgas enough to be usable.



Library Materials This is a sneaky one. Perfumed people wipe their stinky, sweaty hands all over the books they read and then you check them out. Or the librarians putting lotion all over their hands and wiping it all over the books and videos. I might not notice the stink until it's in my car or at the very latest until I sit down on my couch with the book. It's then sealed it in a plastic bag and returned.



New Clothes If you shop department stores, new clothes will almost always have perfume on them from other shoppers or salespeople touching them and/or the fabric treatments used in manufacturing for fire retardation and mold inhibition. Straight from the shopping bag and into the washer!



Photocopies  Someone once sent me photocopies of documents bathed in perfume. Their temporary office girl did the copying. Didn't see that coming.

Neighbor Stink  If you are lucky enough to own property, there might be enough space between you and your neighbor to avoid toxic exposures. Unfortunately, my neighbors are too close and too stupid to be safe. During the spring and summer I watch all of them strap on those sprayer packs and spray down their lawns, walkways, and driveways with herbicides. We live right next to a river. I even wrote a brochure called "Save the Bees" on the ramifications of using toxic lawn chemicals and mailed it to everyone on my block. No one cared. Their lack of insight is jaw-dropping. Then there is laundry detergent, fabric sheets or dryer exhaust polluting the fresh air. Car exhaust is another issue. One morning both my neighbors warmed up their  gas-guzzling trucks at the same time for about an hour. It was like living on a freeway meridian. I lock myself in the house and pray for a good strong wind blowing in the opposite direction.

Of course, if you've ever been on the website www.neighborsfromhell.com you'll realize smell could be the least of your worries. Gun fire, homemade bombs, barking dogs, barking attack dogs, loud music, insane parties, drugs, theft and personal threats are cause for all kinds of worry. The world is full of ignorant sociopaths with entitlement issues.

Home, Sweet, Home....

8 comments:

  1. Hahaha!!! The bomb squad indeed!!! You can buy magazines on iTunes and read them on your laptop or iPad! :) you can buy songs online too on iTunes and listen to them on your iPod! :)

    I can't even bear the smell of photocopy papers, newspapers, new magazines or even new books, the chemicals used in the printing make me sick. I now read everything online!! Or let my books stay in the bookshelves until the 'new smell' has worn off!

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    1. I don't have an iPad. I read off a computer all day so it's not something I want to do for recreation. It's a different experience reading from a book or magazine than on a computer, but I definitely understand your attraction. I can't be around new books, newspapers or printed materials either but at least with ink, it does offgas after a while.
      I do want an iPod! I'm just not ready to spend the money.

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    2. I am a die-hard Apple fan! Hahahaha! :) I love my iPod! Hehe...

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    3. I want an iPod so badly! Do you have a port for yours so you can hook it up to speakers in your house? My problem is figuring out where to buy this stuff for the best price.

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    4. I only listen to my iPod using my headphones. But my friends have speakers which you place the iPod on it like a dock. There are many, many brands out there.

      I want to invest in a camera. I have a home-theater system which works just fine for me. :) I am happy with what I have!

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  2. Funny thing is I am able to eat more food with salicylates but have become zero tolerant to smells. I used to be able to withstand smells better. But then when eating was concerned, I was terrible and severely limited. My mom said it is better to be able to eat than to be able to smell and not eat! I think so too!!

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    1. Yeah, your mom is right. If you can't eat you die and in many ways we can control or filter out smells.

      But should you be eating food with salicylates even if you can? Wouldn't that contribute to an overload which is why sometimes some foods all of a sudden create problems when they didn't before?

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    2. It is like a 'balance game'. I eat 99% of the time salicylate free. And when my body is strong and I can feel the salicylate level is very low, I indulge a bit and then go salicylate-free again.

      I just have to make sure the meter is not full. Can't pig out and eat whatever and whenever I want.

      Once I feel this 'sick sensation' or 'burning mouth syndrome' I go salicylate-free again. I just have to be balanced. That is how it works for me.

      Even my immunologist said that this can be a way for me to survive. I just have to be careful. And he said being happy and positive will help me to overcome this better. 3 years ago, I could hardly eat anything!

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