This time I really have to agree with the other members! You MUST change things.
Point 1: Don't store chemicals in a place where you live many hours a day (bedroom, kitchen, living room). Even if you have good containers, there
will be vapors and/or dust. You are exposed to chemicals in small quantities, which do not pose an immediate risk, but what is the effect in the long
run? It is just as with smoking cigarettes. From one, or even a few cigarettes you will not get ill, but what if you smoke every day? Your exposure to
chemicals builds up over the days, weeks, months, years. Avoid this! Put them in a garage, or in an attic room, but not where you are many hours a
day.
Point 2: Don't experiment in a place where you live. This probably is even worse than storing things in a place where you live. Experiments always
introduce vapor and dust, no matter how clean you are working.
Point 3: Some of your chemicals can be accessed by animals and who knows also by children. The stuff in the lawn can be picked up by anyone. Keep
chemicals in a safe place where only you and your parents can access them.
If you care for your long term health change points 1 and 2 and if you care for other's health and safety also change point 3.
You are fortunate that I don't see really toxic stuff in your list, just the more common acids and ferricyanide. So, you are not yet exposed to bad
vapors or cumulative poisons. But I know that in due time you tend to collect more and more chemicals, including the more toxic/cumulative stuff, such
as metals salts (e.g. nickel, cobalt, lead) or organic solvents other than the simple alcohols and acetic acid, and then the long-term low-level
exposure REALLY becomes a problem.
Now is the time to take action |