I’m currently living in my first apartment, and I’ll be moving out soon. I’ve got tons of scuffs on the walls from stuff like installing my furniture while moving in and bringing my bike in and out of my apartment. I tried cleaning them with soap and water, but they weren’t budging at all, so I sighed and resigned myself to losing my deposit. I mentioned it off hand to my dad recently, and he told me to try using a magic eraser. I was a little skeptical, but I went out and got one anyway. I was amazed, literally one swipe of the eraser was able to get rid of the smaller marks instantly. My walls have never looked better!

I had always assumed magic erasers were just sponges with some soap already inside them, maybe with a scotchbrite pad attached. But I looked it up, and no, the “eraser” in the name isn’t metaphorical. They work exactly the same as pencil erasers. They’re super fine plastic sponges, and when you rub them on the wall they break down into tiny sharp plastic fibres which act as an abrasive. I found that super interesting to learn, and now I have another tool in my toolbox.

  • @kitnaht
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    367 days ago

    I just buy microplastics in bulk and eat them directly now. Much healthier than absorbing them through the skin.

    • Optional
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      77 days ago

      Pfft if you want pfas-laden frackwater poisoning. I only eat organically sourced microplastics from recycled infants toys and military packaging waste. Cleaner chain of custody, you can tell where each batch is from.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      7 days ago

      You don’t have to eat them, they are already inside you and every newborn. So it’s actually part of you, like your gut bacteria.

      Me 💗 my microplastics 💗 my gut bacteria, we are a small family