Copyright (c) 2008 Jon Dacken
Is your home free of mold?
Are you terrified of mold? Especially black mold? If you inhale mold spores are you concerned that you will become ill or die within a few weeks?
If these statements describe how you feel about mold, here are three interesting facts you need to know:
Fact #1
Every time you step outside you are inhaling mold spores, usually more than you would inside.
Fact #2
Eliminating mold entirely from your home is both unnecessary and almost impossible to achieve.
Fact #3
Most common molds are black.
Unless you live in a sterile bubble with a very special air filtration system, I guarantee there is mold in your house. It’s impossible not to have mold.
How can this be true?
It’s true because of a simple fact of nature. You can save yourself countless hours of worry and hundreds of dollars in mold testing and cleaning once you understand this simple fact.
What is this simple fact? Mold exists everywhere in nature!
Not all mold is bad. Without mold human life would be much more difficult.
It’s what makes bread dough rise and beer ferment. Mold has also saved thousands of lives. Alexander Fleming discovered that a type of mold called Penicillium notatum killed bacteria in 1928. Penicillin came from his discovery. Penicillin has saved more sick and injured folks than any single invention in history. During Word War II Penicillin was so valuable that it was filtered from the urine of soldiers and reused.
You cannot go anywhere in nature and not have mold in the air. It is part of Mother Nature’s plan. It doesn’t matter if you are in a city or the middle of the wilderness. Mold is there also.
A few years ago I backpacked Isle Royal walking about 55 miles in 9 days. Isle Royal is an island in Lake Superior. It’s a national park and very remote. There are no roads, cars, telephones, houses, electricity, running water, or sewer systems where I was. You have to travel a few hours by boat to get there. Many locations were too remote to even make a campfire. I never saw another human the entire trip, but I did see a lot of fresh wolf tracks every morning.
But there was mold everywhere. On the ground and in the air.
It is just part of nature.
So how do I know there is mold in your house? Because mold is in the air outdoors. And the air inside your house comes from outdoors. The mold doesn’t disappear when the air moves inside. Furnace and air conditioning filters remove very little mold if any.
Now here is the question you really need to ask: Is the mold in your house a problem? If it isn’t a problem, you don’t care about it. But if it is a problem, you need to know about it. Normal mold concentrations are ok. Abnormal concentrations can be a problem.
The good news is that you can do some simple, free tests to determine if you have a mold problem. All you need to invest are a few minutes of your time. They’re easy to do and well worth your effort.
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