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Is Dusting a State of Mind or Does it Lead to a Healthier Life?

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By Bill Primavera

If we are made from dust and shall return to dust, as the Bible tells us, does that give us a pass to live with the stuff in between?

While dust is inevitable, it horrifies some of us, as though its presence on our furniture and floors tells the world something unflattering about us, not only as housekeepers but as human beings. 

I don’t do the dusting in my household and I’m not quite sure if it would get done if I were responsible for it. On second thought, a few months into a global pandemic, I am spending all my time at home, so maybe having a dusty environment would get to me psychologically after a while. It might symbolize letting everything go.

I remember an interview long ago in The New York Times in which an eccentric artist said she hadn’t dusted her apartment in over 30 years, saying that “after the first two years or so, you really can’t tell the difference.” That kind of empirical research really impresses me.

In the HBO movie “Grey Gardens,” Jackie Kennedy Onassis’s aunt and cousin, Edie Beale, and her daughter are depicted as living in absolute squalor in a neglected ramshackle house, with garbage strewn throughout and a hoard of cats and raccoons relieving themselves on the floor. When Jackie arrives to help remedy the situation and registers her shock at the condition of the property, Edie dismisses her living environment by saying simply that her daughter “hasn’t been keeping up with the dusting.” 

Is inattention to dust the first degenerative step to chaos in the home? Maybe for some, depending on their mental attitude about it, and in turn, how unkempt homes can affect its occupants.

A recent survey revealed that 83 percent of us are happier in a clean house and just the act of cleaning gives 57 percent of the population a feeling of satisfaction. Further, it shows that 38 percent of women and 24 percent of men experience real stress living in a messy environment.

It would seem that, especially in these harsh times, dusting and cleaning can be therapeutic. Psychologists have found that there is a marked difference in mood before and after cleaning, just as with a therapy session.

Licensed psychologist Carol Nemeroff said a psychological boost may be derived from biological programming to clean our nests.

“And, because we know that good hygiene leads to good health,” she said, “cleaning may ultimately be related to a basic survival instinct.” 

Wow, get out that dust rag!

For those who don’t mind living with a coating of dust on their furniture and appliances, it may be motivating to know that dust is composed largely of our own flaking skin cells. Now that we know what it contains and that it can cause real stress, does this explain the expression uncomfortable in our own skin?

Add other flaky stuff like fabric fibers, dust mite excrement, hair, pet dander, pollen, regular dirt, debris and micro particles and you have a pretty nasty brew that can give people with allergies and breathing problems a real hassle.  

But beyond the psychological and unhealthy effects of dust, it can do real physical damage to most everything it lands on, from furniture surfaces to clogging computer keyboards and vents.

There are fancy and simple ways to get rid of dust. The fancy way is with an air purifier of which there are two types: those with fans that pull air through filters that trap the dust and those called electrostatic precipitators in which an electrical charge is applied to the dust drawn into the device and captured on oppositely charged plates. Both are available as either portable units, which offer varying degrees of effectiveness depending on the model, or as whole-house systems. Prices range from $100 for a portable model to more than $1,000 for a whole-house system.

But as a real estate agent, among the houses I’ve listed or sold, I was aware of only a couple that had a whole-house air purifier system. So unless people are plagued by allergies, I suspect that most of us dust with old-fashioned elbow grease, using either regular rags or one of those new magic dusters to which particles cling. Because the latter option can be expensive, a regular rag can be just as effective if dampened before use and shaken out frequently.

I definitely do not recommend a feather duster because it merely spreads the dust around until it lands again on surfaces.

It’s funny how the exploratory process can affect you. As I sit at my computer, I’m very aware and uncomfortable in the knowledge that there is a lot of dust trapped between on the keyboard. Are the raccoons soon to follow?

Bill Primavera multitasks as a communicator. He is founder of Primavera Public Relations, a full-service marketing firm, a journalist with this paper and concurrently serves as a licensed realtor with many years of experience in the field. For questions or comments about the housing market or for consultation about selling or buying a home, Bill can be reached at 914-522-2076.

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