How Household Chemicals could Easily Become a Nightmare.

16 May 2015

Today’s homes are becoming more and more like chemistry labs.

The huge number of household cleaning products that can be found there is a modern phenomenon. Such that few people can imagine their daily lives without the enormous range of cleaners in liquid, powder, gel or spray form that we use. These products are not just confined to the bathroom and kitchen, but are increasingly deployed, as if from crop dusting planes, on to windows, tiles, floors, lawns, cupboards, cabinets, hard furniture, soft furniture, curtains and carpets. They are added to toilets and baths, sinks and dishwashers. We fertilise our plants, use bug spray indoors and out, flea spray the cat and de-worm the dog. Even the family tortoise gets a dose of Mr. Muscle.

Then on ourselves we apply shampoos, soaps, shower gels, shaving foams, mouthwashes, toothpastes, perfumes, lotions, face creams, deodorants, suntan lotions, make up, make up remover, hair removal cream, hair growth tonic, antiperspirants and aftershaves.

We polish our shoes, the car, the table and our fingernails.  We impregnate our coats, our footwear and our furniture. We de-odourise our feet and then aromatise our rooms.

After that, we use drugs.

Ointments and eye drops, insect repellants and bite creams, anti-histimines and mood modifiers. Drugs to keep us awake and others to make us sleepy. Capsules for this and suppositories for that. The list is near-endless.

Then we add chemicals to our food. We include baking soda, salt, preservatives, dyes, essences, colourings, starches, flavour enhancers and more.

The whole array of products, if left in the wrong hands, amounting to a small chemical weapons dump.

In fact, why was George W. Bush looking for chemicals in the Iraqi desert, if they were actually located under the kitchen sink?

Because these days, any amateur terrorist can learn online how to turn these harmless household products into highly effective smoke bombs, tear gases and combustion accelerators. Most of the ingredients are produced at a local, as well as a multinational level, and all are virtually untraceable.

Added to the fact that every second home is connected to the gas grid and it soon becomes quite difficult to have a restful night.

So maybe, in trying to prelong our lives and make ourselves prettier and healthier, we have inadvertently made a new threat. Alongside climate change and tectonic shifts, nuclear conflict and solar flares, we should now include the lethal environment which consumer society has created in our homes.

If this message scares you, then your fears are quite just. We have learnt to deal with many threats and dangers in the past, but maybe this new one requires more than a finger wag of caution. Maybe a new level of respect for chemicals should be established.