C
catherineajt
Guest
So we had the respiratory flu this Lent. We were “well” in time for Easter, but I kept getting worse. It felt like my sinuses were permanently clogged with pus (yellow-orange-red, like a pretty sunset in my tissue), and my chest was wheezing and I couldn’t smell. I have a very acute sense of smell, so this was like an orchestra conductor going deaf.
Just when i was ready to go to the doctor, my DH noticed that one of the towels in our master bath “smelled gross”. I apologized for not washing towels that day and told him to just put it in the washer, I’d wash it with hot water and borax or bleach. Which I did.
The next night he said “It still smells moldy, I’m throwing it out.”
The next morning I woke up and my head wasn’t pounding and I wasn’t blowing my nose every 2 minutes to clear my sinuses. My wheezing was significantly reduced.
Did I mention I’m highly allergic to mold? (insert “D’oh!” here)
We threw out all our towels–nine years old towels, with bleach spots where I had tried to disinfect them–and I went out to buy all new, white (bleachable) towels at the store.
I can smell again. My wheezing and coughing is gone. And my sinuses are returning to normal.
Many people are sensitive to mold without being allergic–my husband is, for one. Some are allergic and don’t know it. I didn’t know until I had an anaphylactic reaction and ended up in the ER five years ago, and got tested.
So, especially in the rainy season, make sure your towels and bathmats are hung up smooth to dry well–if you don’t have windows in your bathroom, run the exhaust fan to draw out moisture! And wash with hot water, bleach, and use the dryer. And replace bath towels at least every nine years, as we did.
Just when i was ready to go to the doctor, my DH noticed that one of the towels in our master bath “smelled gross”. I apologized for not washing towels that day and told him to just put it in the washer, I’d wash it with hot water and borax or bleach. Which I did.
The next night he said “It still smells moldy, I’m throwing it out.”
The next morning I woke up and my head wasn’t pounding and I wasn’t blowing my nose every 2 minutes to clear my sinuses. My wheezing was significantly reduced.
Did I mention I’m highly allergic to mold? (insert “D’oh!” here)
We threw out all our towels–nine years old towels, with bleach spots where I had tried to disinfect them–and I went out to buy all new, white (bleachable) towels at the store.
I can smell again. My wheezing and coughing is gone. And my sinuses are returning to normal.
Many people are sensitive to mold without being allergic–my husband is, for one. Some are allergic and don’t know it. I didn’t know until I had an anaphylactic reaction and ended up in the ER five years ago, and got tested.
So, especially in the rainy season, make sure your towels and bathmats are hung up smooth to dry well–if you don’t have windows in your bathroom, run the exhaust fan to draw out moisture! And wash with hot water, bleach, and use the dryer. And replace bath towels at least every nine years, as we did.