When Avoiding Chemicals Means Avoiding Others: Relational Exposures and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“You have the power to reduce or eliminate the disability and make the [multiple chemical sensitivity] sufferer’s life bearable and even productive, or you can also increase the disability, which ultimately can lead to distressing conditions such as isolation and poverty.”L’Association pour la santé environnementale du Québec/Environmental Health Association of Québec
1.1. Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS)
1.2. Chemicals in Society
1.3. Personal Protection Strategies
1.4. Relational Illness
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Polluted Spaces
It’s really scary with multiple chemical sensitivity to confront neighbors because there’s just so many stories of people who get resentful and then intentionally expose you to stuff. So, it’s one of those things where we’d rather not bring it up. Yeah, there’s been cases, I think I’ve heard of people, like dumping pesticides on your lawn and stuff like that, just because they think you’re crazy. And they think that you’re asking too personal things of them.
The biggest issue I had with my neighbor…was when he started priming the exterior of his house with Kilz brand primer. Kilz is really toxic because it contains an added fungicide. I was working on my laptop in my house, unaware that he was even going to paint, when I felt really acutely sick from something. I looked out the window and saw him starting to paint. The next day I went over and saw that he had a 5-gallon bucket of Kilz that he was planning to continue using. It could well have made me homeless if he did that, given how sick I got from him painting a small area. So, feeling rather desperate I explained that the Kilz was making me sick, and said I would buy him a bottle of low-VOC (volatile organic compound) primer at my expense instead. He grumbled a little but agreed. So, I immediately ordered the safer primer from our local ACE Hardware and was able to pick it up two days later and deliver it to my neighbor. He used it and I never felt a thing from it, fortunately. That was a huge relief and bullet dodged.
I’m well aware that people are more likely to help you when needed if they like you. So, I think I benefitted in this case from making an effort from the time I moved in to get to know my neighbor and find common ground with him. And I had told him about my chemical sensitivities, so he was already aware of that. It helped that he was a good guy whom I genuinely liked. And I think because we already had a good neighborly relationship, he was willing to help me out when I needed it.
Melissa: For example, they wanted to stain the house this summer. Like, that is going to mess me up for a long time. And trying to find a product that wasn’t like three times as expensive that I could also tolerate that would also meet what they were looking for was a challenge. And we had a lot of fights about it.Interviewer: Okay. Did you find something?Melissa: Yeah, I’m not sure how well it worked but we did eventually find somethingInterviewer: Like how well it worked on the outside of—on the house?Melissa: I think some of that had to do with a person applying it, he didn’t really follow the directions, it was gonna require some extra effort on his part to do it correctly and he just did it his way. So, it didn’t turn out quite as well as I think it could have.Interviewer: That’s frustrating. And did you feel like you were impacted by the product? Or did you leave for a while? How did you deal with that?Melissa: Yeah, I went camping for a week. And when I came back to the house, I had to have the house closed up for a little while after that, it did eventually dissipate
3.2. Contaminated Bodies
Yeah, it’s so obnoxious at a certain point…I’ve gotten to the point where these smells, you know, because I don’t have laundry smells or anything in my house, I am not habituated to them. And so, yeah, you’ll be walking behind, a group of women or something. And then you’ll smell it, but also taste it a little bit. I guess, it just feels like they’re just constantly polluting the air. And it’s like, this is so unnecessary. And it makes my life so much worse. Like, please.
Even you- just traveling in -your being in a car on the road, with car fumes and stuff. You would be breathing out car exhaust. It’s very noticeable to someone with multiple chemical sensitivity for a couple days, two or three days. I mean, it takes that long for your body to get rid of all that. But you didn’t know, you know, people that- when you live in the soup you don’t notice.
3.3. Chemical Contagions: The Movement between Bodies and Spaces
Everything is to a limit. You know, my two closest friends, Richard and Louise, they were married… And I can see both of them a little bit. But not a lot. Richard has a thing. He loves Old Spice. His grandfather was an Old Spice guy. He’s an Old Spice guy. He’ll do me a favor and he won’t bathe when he visits, but you know, just the residue. Sometimes I can tolerate him, for a few hours, other times not. Sometimes we’ll go out to a restaurant that’s not too bad because when food smells are in the air, it actually helps. Louise has got something going on with her hair. I don’t know if it’s a shampoo or color. Well, I don’t think she colors her hair. I think it’s shampoo or I don’t know. But shampoos are really bad for me. So, I’ll just go to her house because she’s afraid to contaminate my furniture and it’s like that kind of stuff. Somebody comes in, sits on my couch. It’s kind of a hair-raising thing...
For drugstores, I’m okay in a drugstore long enough to go and pick up my medications. But because my roommate insists that if I ever go inside, like if I leave the house and go inside somewhere else, I have to bring my outdoor clothes and then I come in and I have to change at the very least if not shower too. And so sometimes to simplify that I’ll just do outside pickup of my medications.
Nope, nobody comes into my home unless they’re toxin free. And living a toxic free life. You know, that’s my children all live that way. And also, they do detoxes before they come. Because one person in your home for a short time can totally contaminate your home. And you can react for months afterwards.
I ask them not to stop anywhere else before they come here because transference can happen from say if you stopped into a coffee shop or whatever. Which actually, the second example actually happened. My daughter was out, and she was coming here. She stopped into a coffee shop, and they happened to be mopping the floor. Toxic scented crap. And she came in here and it stopped my breathing. So yeah, not good.
4. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Clark, I. When Avoiding Chemicals Means Avoiding Others: Relational Exposures and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100528
Clark I. When Avoiding Chemicals Means Avoiding Others: Relational Exposures and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(10):528. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100528
Chicago/Turabian StyleClark, Isabella. 2024. "When Avoiding Chemicals Means Avoiding Others: Relational Exposures and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity" Social Sciences 13, no. 10: 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100528
APA StyleClark, I. (2024). When Avoiding Chemicals Means Avoiding Others: Relational Exposures and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. Social Sciences, 13(10), 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13100528