The Turn
of the Screw
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
You
may have had a sense lately that something is just not right in
your domestic life, not calamitously bad but just bad enough to
be annoying on a daily basis and in seemingly unpredictable ways.
You
are not alone. In fact, a huge variety of personal and social problems
trace to a single source.
First
an inventory to establish what I mean:
- You have
the vague sense that your bed linens are not so much comforting
you as hemming you in, restricting you and just not breathing
as they should;
- To clean
your bathtub and kitchen sink requires an inordinate amount
of cleanser and bleach;
- Whereas
you remember showers that once refreshed you, they now leave
you only feeling wet;
- It should
be pleasure to put on a bright white crisp undershirt but instead
it seems rather routine, dull, even uneventful;
- The mop
has a dusky smell of an old rag and you keep having to replace
it to get rid of the reappearing and never disappearing stink;
- Your dinner
tonight reminds you of your dinner last night and that night
before, and the flavors seem to be piling up into one big haze.
These
are just six of the many dozens of typical symptoms of one of the
most common household problems in American today. What is that problem?
The simplicity of the answer might shock you: your water heater
is set at too low a temperature.
Most
people don't want to think about their water heaters. It is a subject
we would rather avoid. It just sort of sits there like a steel totem-poll
in a dusty closet that is otherwise not used for much because there
is not room for much else. The heater itself seems intimidating,
plastered with strange insulating devices and warning stickers.
It is something to be touched only by specialists. We even fear
cleaning behind it, worrying that we will be zapped or scorched.
Sure,
we know people who have had to "replace their water heaters" because
their "water heater went out," but because this has never happened
to us, we don't worry about it. Besides, what if it turns out that
the water heater has some sort of scary blue flame and a clicking
starter or something? Better to leave it alone so that it doesn't
become volcanic.
All
of these impulses are wrong. The water heater can be your friend.
It can be your greatest friend in your struggle to create and maintain
a happy domestic environment. It wants to be useful. There is nothing
to be frightened of. There are no blue flames (they are mostly electric
now.) A water heater is made to heat and hold water. It is begging
you to do something that will change your life from grey to bright
white: turn up the temperature!
Chances
are that your water temperature is set at 120 degrees. This is the
preferred temperature of the establishment. Water heaters are shipped
this way and installed this way. The regulations on new home construction
mandate it to be this way. Who thinks to change it?
But
120 degrees? Come on. By the time the water leaves the heater and
travels through the pipes and hits the air before landing whenever
it is supposed to land, chances are that it will fall to 118 degrees.
In the dead of winter, with pipes running under the house, it can
be even lower.
Think
about this: 118 degrees is the temperature at which yeast thrives.
It is the temperature for proofing. What does that tell you? It
tells you that things can grow at 118 degrees.
In
other words, this is too warm! To know what 118 degrees feels like,
imagine a bowl of water that you stick your hand in. It is warm,
even quite warm, but you don't really have the drive to pull your
hand out to keep yourself safe. You can adjust. You know what? Everything
adjusts to 118 degrees: germs, viruses, bacteria, dirt, smudge,
sludge, stink, dust, and every other damnable thing in the world.
All of this lives, even thrives, at 118 degrees.
Revelation
3:16 has it right: "So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither
cold nor hot, I will spew thee out of my mouth."
Who
came up with the idea that the standard temperature should be 120
degrees? The usual bunch: governments that want to impose a variety
of deprivations on you, anti-energy people who think the less technological
consumption the better, environmentalists who want to stamp out
all things bright and beautiful, litigious lawyers who have intimidated
heater makers, and safety freaks of all sorts. A
quick search shows all.
We
know these people. They are the people who say we should eat our
own garbage, invite bats to live in our attics, and refrain from
killing mosquitoes in the marsh. They are the ones who gave us toilets
that don't flush and shower heads that don't spray. They seem to
think we should all go around dirty and dissatisfied, and that anything
resembling clean, neat, and, well, civilized has to be stamped out.
These
people are always worrying about the risks of life, but what about
the health risks of living in squalor of their creation?
Defy
them all in one fell swoop! Turn your temperature up to 130 degrees.
How hot is this? Contrary to the claims, it will not scald you.
Imagine again a bowl full of water. Put your hand into this temperature
and you will say: "Yikes!" or "Ouch!" or "Yeow!" and pull it right
out and shake your hand in the air. However, it leaves nothing red,
no burns, nothing awful. It is just what used to be called hot water
before the lukewarm crowd changed everything.
How
does yeast respond to 130 degrees? It dies. Bread bakers know this.
You know what else dies? All the icky things mentioned above. They
all die mercifully quick deaths at this temperature. Clean clothes!
Clean sinks! Satisfyingly hot showers! Comfortable sheets! Clean-smelling
mops! Plates that come out of the dish washer without dinner build-up
on them! All of this awaits your act of defiance.
A
brief note on shoes. Have you ever bought a new pair because your
old ones…stank? Of course they did. Your socks are not getting clean.
They infect your shoes. Oh sure, try to keep it at bay with Dr.
Scholl’s. It won't work. A shoe stink sticks forever. You thought
you had a physical disability, and embarrassing foot odor problem.
Nope. It's your hot water heater.
How
to fix all this? It will take less than a minute. If your temperature
dial is in the open, good for you. Turn it to 130 degrees or higher.
There is a reason these tanks go up to 170 degrees. I read a manual
for a dishwasher that says it wants water of 145 degrees. When I
was in the dish-washing business, you had to use heavy rubber gloves
just to get near water. So be it.
If
your dial is covered, ignore all stickers and scary warnings about
scalded babies. Take off the steel plate that covers up the setting.
Remove the Styrofoam. There you will find a tiny little dial. Use
a dime or a screwdriver and give the dial a teeny tiny little turn
over to 130 degrees. The benefits will start within hours. Within
a day, you will experience the greatest increase in your standard
of living since your gas grill and automated sprinkler system.
Your
new life begins with a comfortable and happy sleep, a blasting hot
and refreshing shower, a crisp T-shirt and clean socks, followed
by breakfast on a plate so clean it squeaks. Even cleaning up breakfast
will be pure pleasure: the sink gleams, the floor has never been
cleaner, and your mop will end up as fresh as the day you bought
it.
Indeed,
with a water heater set at 130 degrees, all is right with the world
at least that part of it that you can control. Even if the
whole world is conspiring against civilization, you can preserve
your part of it with the smallest turn of a screwdriver.
February
20, 2004
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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