So the hubby bought Q-tips the other day, and he said, “Hey! It says on the box not to stick these Q-tips in your ear. What are you supposed to use them for?”
Are there other products that contain explicit warnings against using them for whatever people most commonly use them for?
All I can think of off the top of my head is Go-Gurt. (Ya know, yogurt in a tube?) It says “Keep Refrigerated” but I always get them for car trips because they’re not messy, and if you eat 'em within four days or so you don’t really have to keep them refrigerated. (After four days, they get a little lumpy . . . but still taste fine.) I imagine that most people use them in lunchboxes and stuff, and rarely are the actually kept refrigerated at all times.
**Disclaimer: Podkayne is not advocating sticking Q-tips in your ears or eating unrefrigerated yogurt. She is simply describing her own possibly unwise patterns of use.
Contrary to package instructions and warnings, I put each in my nose (not at the same time, silly) when I have a cold and my nasal passages are dried out and hurting,
I must lead a protected life, surrounded by law-abiding people. I swear that until I was an adult I never heard of people putting Q-tips in their ears (and it’s not because I’d already put them in my ears…). I never would have even thought of such an idea.
Why do you think we have little fingers? They’re exactly the right size, and designed so that you can’t poke out an eardrum with them.
I used to gargle and rinse my mouth with some kind of stuff that foamed up a lot. Can’t remember what it was called, tho. Hydroxide? Anyway…I’m pretty sure the bottle said something like, “Don’t put this in your mouth!”.
Cal, little fingers are a useful stopgap measure, to be sure, but, ah, there is nothing like the satisfaction of a Q-tipping well done. And think of the poor people with fat little fingers and small ears!
So, uh, what do you use Q-tips for? Cleaning tapeheads and makeup application?
I have, on occasion, been forced to stick a metal fork into a toaster in order to dislodge a wayward piece of bread. I am fairly sure this is frowned upon in several jurisdictions. I do believe I read some warning about this in the toaster safe-use instructions that I threw away long ago.
'Scuse me? That’s precisely what jackstands are for according to most folks. You’re not supposed to get under a vehicle supported solely by a jack (they can fail without warning).