As long as you keep your windows shut during the pollen blooms during certain weeks in the spring season, you don’t have nearly as many fungal spores in the air up there as we do down south where I’m living currently

I miss the days of my youth, but I guess this is an experience shared by all, regardless of one’s time period. Back then we were living up north where the weather was temperate for most of the year outside of winter. We had gorgeous forests and clean water in every conceivable direction. Unlike the sulfurous city water that gets pumped into our tap, back then we got all of our water from a deep well in the backyard. The quality of water coming out of that well was better than any of the tap water I’ve experienced in the five or six different states in which I’ve resided over the years. But there was far more than simply clean water to miss about the lands of my ancestors. While I was diagnosed with seasonal allergies at an exceedingly young age, I had minimal symptoms until my parents took my siblings and I out of that state to live a thousand miles into the deep south. We took it for granted that we could keep our windows open at night in the summer to let in the gentle and cold breeze without blasting ourselves with airborne allergens like we do in the south. As long as you keep your windows shut during the pollen blooms during certain weeks in the spring season, you don’t have nearly as many fungal spores in the air up there as we do down south where I’m living currently. I have to keep my windows closed at home at all times or I will run into issues with indoor mold and diminished air quality.

 

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