...Only you know where all your stuff goes and what's most beautious. Cleaners can even harm your room (once a cleaning specialist almost threw away half of my music, I only found out by accident, taking out leftovers) horroors!
...It seems the best way in general is to clean your room more often, perhaps if so rich I can afford to pay the rich some other time, perhaps this month in 2015! If you then opt in to do your cleaning on your own, one of the main cleaning chores is cleaners especially if you have allergies. What's the best liquid cleaner, and how to use them even with allergies?
See bottom of pg. for a way to clean almost as well as bleach yet without corrosion, risk of cancer, allergy risk ect. "Tea Tree Oil". I use this wonder for safer maintenence cleaning between the times when the boss visits, bless her for her business.. ...Even so Here's what else I've also learned about other cleansers in 15 years of labor (I'm awake this month!).
...One thing is certain, ammonia is maximum wimpy for basic strong cleansing and the odor is worse than wimpy. Same for Hydrogen Peroxide.
...Baking soda in a mop is worthless without huge scrubbing on walls and floors. It's abrasive so it scrapes a bit (makes a good countertop scrubber, and for a laundry detergent/deodorizer, salt is cheaper) but it's almost worthless for floors or walls without bocoups scrubbing. I'm speaking here of cleansers for walls or the kitchen or bathroom floor, There is a way, Read on...
...Baking soda and vinegar are a combination praised for a general cleaner. This may be good to clean out your drain because it's better than Draino (worthless for drains and extremely toxic and pollution bound, as a rule they say it's best for the ecology to not put any refresher cleaner down the drain you wouldn't drink yourself). It's non polluting and somewhat strong, but not nearly as strong as......
...BLEACH AND BAKING SODA... Baking soda improves the power of bleach a lot. This is good for the ecology and allergies, because you can dilute the bleach more with practice with the right amount of bleach like in a cup with more water in the jug. Chlorine bleach starts converting to almost completely salt water in a few minutes, so it's safe for the ecology. You use less bleach with the baking soda for the same or perhaps twice the power, so you clean better even with reduced fumes. Even so bleach is still bleach and there are tricks to use bleach the best.
....Bleach And Walls
....Tired of scrubbing for years to remove just a scuff mark from your wall? Bleach is essentially a self cleaning wall. There is a way to use bleach even if you have allergies. As you may know about cleaning off cement mold outside bleach continues to clean for years even in the rain outside on the patio. It's imbedded in the surface. Once you add it to the wall it not only cleans, it cleans for years. And it not only cleans your wall, it's a good air cleanser. A way I have of cleaning my walls with bleach even with allergies is to pour a small pile of bleach in an out of the way realm of the tiled floor, e.g the washer dryer room. Pour the small pile of bleach wher no dogs, kids or the reduced fumes are a problem. This will also cleanse the air in whatever room you use so you may also to use the kitchen floor like under the shelf where you won't walk on it if it's also safe here too for a more optimal use. To reach the wall with the bleach the trick is to use an acid brush (a scrub brush with dense bristles and a handle to reach that is acid proof). Add the bleach to the acid brush by moving it around the edges of the pile of bleach, you want just so much it will go on the wall and not enough it will run. Next take the slightly moisted brush and add the bleach to the wall you are cleaning. Smooth it over so much of the wall it won't run, this is the trick. By using a small amount of bleach on the scrub brush from the pile of bleach it's spread out so much both on the brush so it won't drip while you walk and it won't run when you widely spread it on the wall and the fumes are much reduced. Add bleach higher up than the rug, lots of rugs aren't bleach proof, caution! Put a small box flush with side of walk under bleach to catch any runs. Always keep bleach from rugs, or test rug out of sight to see if you have more room. To make sure of no runs use small bleach doses as high as you can up the wall and spread the bleach out, watch carefully a while from the side and the other side to see if any runs start and disperse the runs well with the brush. Lower spots to remove are of worth if you take special care to watch for runs by these methods. If you don't remove the spot the first time, repeat with bleach, and use baking soda and water on a scrub brush, this is the most powerful safe cleaner I've seen in 15 years. It's also a good room air cleaner because you spread the bleach out over a wide area of the wall, so as the bleach evaporates it cleans the air nearby. The good thing about this is because the bleach is just a coating and a small batch in the other room it won't fill up the room with too much bleach before it combines with the air, so it's better for allergies even with bleach. This is common if you take a pan and try to clean the air with the bleach by letting it stand awhile, you'll find it doesn't smell like it's dispersed much, this is where I got this idea. The wall is like a five times larger dish of bleach that both cleans both wall and air.
...To clean without any fumes at all pour bleach on a few scrub brushes, let dry outside perhaps a day. Watch for the small amount of fumes when you pour bleach on brush. Add baking soda and spray water on the wall, scrub and it's clean! Use many brushes when the bleach in one brush used up, you don't have to wait five days for five brushes. Be sure to not let any of the "dry" bleach water reach the floor if you have a rug. Never use the scrub brush for cleaning any shelf or dish you may use to eat out of.
For allergies, I was reading about how horses have respiratory problems due to ammonia, so a trick I use is to put a bit of clay powder in my nose, this absorbs the ammonia and will save your nose from allergies for perhaps 3/4 better defence if you must use bleach or ammonia with allergies. Better yet might be the clay (like zeolite) in a face shield blended in with a moist cloth. Clay is not advised for those with life saving perscriptions due to it being absorbed out. Zeolite is an absorber and natural detoxifier, it was even used for the Cheyrnoble disaster to absorb the radiation, and most horses in threir stalls had much reduced respiratory problems with zeolite to stop the ammonia. If you see an ant just stopped it's just snoring with small ant schnozz! I buy clay at Swanson's online cheap. ..
...Floors/Rugs
....To clean rugs a great way to remove dander is Baking soda and then Vinegar on a mop. Baking soda alone leaves a white powder, combining it with vinegar leaves no powder and cleans better cheap. Baking soda is an alkali which means it combines with fat or oil to form soap. The vino multiplies up the power of the lava science project eruption method! Baking soda on another mop is real good to clean out the tub fast for the same reason. CLICK HERE for More.
...FLOORS/SOLID
First I find my worst stains, these are usually water stains. I apply some baking soda over the blemishes then pour some bleach in just one puddle say 3 inches. Taking the brush in hand that's shielded (permanent thick plastic, cheaper in the long run than disposables, disposables always wear out eventually, like in the 1700's the gloves were created by hand!) dip it in the bleach and then scrub the baking soda in removing the spots. Then I bleach the entire floor, and stand back to admire my labor. Washing the bleach off in a few minutes with water and the mop to diliute it, I then look for blemishes I missed and do the same scrubbing/brush/bleach/baking soda method there, going from general mopping to exact scrubbing. Bleach and baking soda on the mop alone aren't enough for water stains too, so a more exact scrub method is needed. Even so this works for cleaning most of the floor. Especially if you use a large towel underfoot after the water phase dilutes the bleach in a few more minutes and reduces the fumes, you'll be amazed what the towel picks up, water stains unknown, your floor may look clean with just some bleach and water on it, but there's a lot more in future water stains if you don't complete with the towel. And of course after you've toweled dry to walk on the floor and let it dry, for cleaner yet you can repeat the brush/bleach/baking soda method and finish. Before you begin see if you can remove your stove door and shelf below to another room to stop corrosion. To reduce use of your kitchen floor while you do other cleaning after your floor is dry, put down dry towels ect. to stop corrosion of my water heater, I set up my utility closet where it is with all the stuff in place just so for the site manager when she arrives for the yearly inspection and then leave it just that way. Nothing used nothing to clean, nothing to mop, so no corrosion. This method of REDUCED USE has many uses, what else, right!
....Wait perhaps 45 minutes for the bleach to soak in and then just go over the bleach/water/baking soda with water on the mop, diluting the bleach and improving the air in your room. Remember even with lower dose bleach the other methods without fumes may be better even if slower because it still has fumes. LAY DOWN BLEACH, Always GO IN OTHER ROOM, OPEN DOORS TO OUTSIDE. WHILE YOU SIT NEARBY TURN ON A FAN LIKE A BOX FAN. The bleach baking soda makes it safer to use, but it's still a strain if this plan is plan B. The average person puts their hand to their nose 3 times a minute, be careful to wear gloves and not try to see if there is bleach by hand to nose. If you start to do this be sure to wash your hands before you do.
CLEANING SOLID FLOORS (LIKE KITCHEN FLOORS) TO FINISH UP
...For dry eye you may want to try Flax, it moisturizes and reduces inflammation in the short term plus to cure the virus Olive leaf Extract may be of worth, Thought now to to be the greatest Herb in the History of Medicine. Olive Leaf Extract is a powerful immune booster, when your immune system is winning the war, the rest of your immune system rests more, reducing allergies, sort of like a war where if you're winning you rest easy if you're where your country is safest where you live not on the battle front. Olive Leaf is also great for sinusitis, it may be a cure because it's intracellular going right through the outside of your nose to reach even where surgery often can't to stop the risk of otherwise often incurable severe pain. It's cheap and has no side effects even at 100s of times the recommended dose. It dissolves the cell wall of harmful bacteria and is a true antiviral. It permanently stops viruses from replicating, and with such powers it's being used to treat a host of viruses like polio 1 and 2 and even malaria.