Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Roland Piquepaille writes "I guess we shouldn't be surprised by the fact that our pillows are miniature zoos containing millions of fungal spores, with some species able to cause diseases and even death. Researchers at the University of Manchester have studied the fungal contamination of our pillows for the first time in seventy years and discovered that these pillows were hot beds of fungal spores. After dissecting both feather and synthetic pillows in regular use between several months and 20 years, they've "identified several thousand spores of fungus per gram of used pillow -- more than a million spores per pillow." Pillows Dangerous for Your Health Log in/Create an Account | Top | 336 comments (Spill at 50!) | Index Only | Search Discussion Display Options Threshold: -1: 336 comments 0: 329 comments 1: 259 comments 2: 170 comments 3: 62 comments 4: 40 comments 5: 29 comments Flat Nested No Comments Threaded Oldest First Newest First Highest Scores First Oldest First (Ignore Threads) Newest First (Ignore Threads) The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way. I prefer to think of it (Score:5, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 15, @03:29PM (#13798464) As a challenge for my immune system. If I am weak, I shall die... but if I strong, I shall live and reproduce! My genetic information will spread! [ Reply to ThisRe:I prefer to think of it by rbarreira (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @03:39PM Re:I prefer to think of it (Score:5, Insightful) by KiloByte (825081) on Saturday October 15, @03:40PM (#13798533) Even worse, if you remove all the germs, your immune system will stay defenseless. You do need to be in contact with the spores if you want to be able to resist them -- and you will have to resist these sooner or later. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:I prefer to think of it by ScrewMaster (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @06:52PM Re:I prefer to think of it (Score:5, Insightful) by Jesus_666 (702802) on Saturday October 15, @06:59PM (#13799409) Which is why it's important that kids play outside, get themselves dirty and come back to a home where it's not SOP to treat every spot with antibacterial spray. The more exposure to germs you get as a child, the stronger your immune system becomes.I know people who barely sneezed once during their childhood and who now can catch a cold from the temperature shift when they get out of bed in the morning, while people who spent half of their childhood sick tend to be more robust. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:I prefer to think of it by NormalVisual (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @10:38PMRe:I prefer to think of it by Afrosheen (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @11:32PMRe:I prefer to think of it by Quino (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @11:30PMRe:I prefer to think of it by Madxx (Score:1) Sunday October 16, @12:56AM1 reply beneath your current threshold.Re:I prefer to think of it by chooks (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:32PMWhoa there, hotshot by Gadgetfreak (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @07:00PMRe:I prefer to think of it by Xyrus (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:27PMRe:I prefer to think of it by Aenema (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @08:10PMRe:I prefer to think of it by ash.connor (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @09:04PM Re:Evolution (Score:5, Funny) by britneys 9th husband (741556) on Saturday October 15, @04:21PM (#13798778) (http://www.uskatrinarelief.com/ | Last Journal: Friday October 14, @02:42AM) Especially slashdotters who expect to get a girl into a bed full of filthy pillows that they're using to "boost their immune system" [ Reply to This | Parent1 reply beneath your current threshold.7 replies beneath your current threshold. how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:5, Interesting) by yagu (721525) * <yayagu@gmail.com> on Saturday October 15, @03:29PM (#13798465) (Last Journal: Friday October 14, @01:20PM) Well as one who has struggled with asthma forever I find this interesting newsand could offer potential explanations for the ratcheting up of symptoms whengoing to bed (always, weird). It would have been nice if the article offered up moreideas about approaches to attenuate the exposure and risk of the fungi. For thosewho scanned, the best and only tidbit I could find in the entire article wasthis indirect advice: " Fortunately, hospital pillows haveplastic covers and so are unlikely to cause problems, ..." [ Reply to ThisRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by toddbu (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @03:33PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Seumas (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @03:41PM Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:4, Interesting) by Jeffrey Baker (6191) on Saturday October 15, @03:57PM (#13798638) What's the deal with the ratcheting up of thread counts lately? I go into Bed Bath and Beyond or some other consumer hell and even the off-brand junk is advertising 1000-2000 threads. It's silly because most of those fabrics are still junk, but junk with a lot of threads. Personally, after going through two expensive sets of name-brand, high-thread bedding that hardly lasted 3 years, I bought a set from a hotel supplier. They don't specify it, but if I had to guess, I'd say the thread count is 250 or so. They feel great and are like-new after years of use.As for bleach, try hanging your bedding in the sun. It works great and costs nothing. [ Reply to This | Parent Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:5, Funny) by Seumas (6865) on Saturday October 15, @04:23PM (#13798787) I never saw the point in high threadcount until I had bedding with high threadcount. I notice a big difference, but being a guy, I'm a bit rough around the edges to start with. Girls notice a HUGE difference though. I think 1500tc is maybe overkill even with good material, but I got a great deal on my bedding. I got like $6,000 worth for $2,000 (comforter, duvet, sheets, pillows). I went from sleeping on a $100 futon mattress tossed on the floor my whole life to sleeping on satin sheets and $400 italian goose down checked pillows. I've never slept so soundly and comfortably. I wish I had spent the money and time investing in high quality bedding (and bed) many years ago. I could have avoided a lot of groggy mornings and painful aching days.Anyway, I don't care if there's bed bugs in my bed. I figure my pubic lice have to be strong enough to kill them all while I sleep. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by gameboyguy13 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:39PMI certainly hope you're joking by dyoung9090 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:57PMRe:I certainly hope you're joking by dyoung9090 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:03PM Re:I certainly hope you're joking (Score:4, Funny) by bombadier_beetle (871107) on Saturday October 15, @09:20PM (#13800091) 1500 thread count is nothing. I recently upgraded to pure plastic sheets, which have practically infinite thread count - perfectly smooth, no detectable weave texture at all. If chicks dig 1500 thread count sheets, just wait till they see the plastic sheets on my bed. They'll go nuts. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:I certainly hope you're joking by pafrusurewa (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:34PMRe:I certainly hope you're joking by mixmasta (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @09:21PMRe:I certainly hope you're joking by porcupine8 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:37PMRe:I certainly hope you're joking by Dashing Leech (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @09:07PMRe:I certainly hope you're joking by puetzk (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @09:06PM2 replies beneath your current threshold.2 replies beneath your current threshold. Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:4, Insightful) by HairyCanary (688865) on Saturday October 15, @04:07PM (#13798704) Off-topic, yes, but here goes... There is no such thing as 1500 threadcount fabric. Nothing in four digits at all. What you got there is a cute marketing department that took two fabrics optimistically containing 750 threads per inch and wove them together getting 1500. Except it's not at all comparable to what real 1500 threadcount fabric would be like if you could make it... [ Reply to This | ParentRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Seumas (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:59PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by NMerriam (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @06:56PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Doppler00 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:34PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by utexaspunk (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:45PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by hunterx11 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @06:29PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Jesus_666 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @07:07PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Hal_Porter (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @08:24PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by dyoung9090 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:08PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by coopaq (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @11:28PM Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:5, Funny) by Hangin10 (704729) on Saturday October 15, @04:48PM (#13798898) (http://lostunknown.deviantart.com/) For increadibly high thread counts, be careful your bed doesn't fork. [ Reply to This | Parent1 reply beneath your current threshold. Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:4, Informative) by xSauronx (608805) <xsauronx&cox,net> on Saturday October 15, @03:59PM (#13798649) im a drycleaner and im here to tell you that using excessive amounts of bleach is going to cause any fabrics to wear out faster. use whatever amount the directions on the bottle tell you to, and be sure to rinse thoroughly after bleaching anything. hot water boosts the strength of bleaches, though if you prefer, a lukewarm or cool soak can be effective (though not always to the same extent), but will require a longer bath before rinsing to do the job. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by mOdQuArK! (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:24PMPlastic covers... by Auraiken (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @03:33PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by drinkypoo (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @03:45PM Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:5, Insightful) by InvalidError (771317) on Saturday October 15, @04:23PM (#13798786) Break out the aluminium foil.Cotton can survive spending an hour at over 100C, fungi and germs cannot. Cover one oven tray with foil, put the second tray at the next lowest position and put your pillows on it. The foil should prevent the cotton from burning due to direct IR exposure. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Troglodyt (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:25PM Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:4, Funny) by PingPongBoy (303994) on Saturday October 15, @05:45PM (#13799127) Break out the aluminium foilNot to worry. If you don't have an oven, you can still use the foil to wrap your pillow or your head. [ Reply to This | ParentSpores can, though by FlippyTheSkillsaw (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:47PMRe:Spores can, though by InvalidError (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @06:18PMRe:Spores can, though by Austaph (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:25PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by kevcol (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @05:49PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by pintomp3 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:11PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by toad3k (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:44PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Alystair (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @07:57PMtime to go into business... by bitingduck (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @10:19PM2 replies beneath your current threshold.Re:how do we "treat" this problem? by Xarius (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @03:45PM Fungus AmongUs (Score:5, Insightful) by drgonzo59 (747139) on Saturday October 15, @03:56PM (#13798630) My wife has bad asthma so we :1.make sure to buy new pillows every year or so (the cheap synthetic kind)2.wash them often in hot water3.wash the pillow cases in bleach and hot water every week4.use protective dust mite covers (not sure if these work for fungual spores?). The plastic ones should work too.All in all it works pretty well. This article though seems to fall into the "let's play on people's fear of the invisible deadly germs" category. Everyone has been sleeping on old pillows made from animal feathers for centuries and millenia probably and we seem to have survived. So people who are healthy could just continue sleeping the way they did before. There are probably other problems in the world to worry about other than fungus in pillows. [ Reply to This | Parent Re:Fungus AmongUs (Score:5, Funny) by Bastian (66383) on Saturday October 15, @04:06PM (#13798698) There are probably other problems in the world to worry about other than fungus in pillows.You're right.FUNGUS IN MATTRESSES! OH MY GOD, WE'RE GOING TO DIE! AAAAAAAAA! [ Reply to This | ParentRe:Fungus AmongUs by Headcase88 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:25PMRe:Fungus AmongUs by peterpi (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:19PM1 reply beneath your current threshold. Re:Fungus AmongUs (Score:5, Informative) by MagicDude (727944) on Saturday October 15, @04:29PM (#13798814) Something I want to point out is that spores are different from bacteria. A spore is structure of protein encapsulating bacterial DNA. It is formed by certain species of bacteria in conditions of low moisture, nutrients, temperature, etc. They are metabolically inactive and are incredibly tough to destroy. Once a spore finds itself in a suitable environment (like your nose or throat), it will germinate into a single bacterium and attempt to multiply. Getting back to killing spores, bleach is a good sporicide, but your solution should be about 1:5, or at least 1:10 (You want a minimum of 2500 ppm of chlorine in your solution, and normal household bleach is 5% available chlorine). Hot water will not kill spores. Boiling water will not kill spores. Spores require a temperature of about 121 C to be destroyed, and boiling water only reaches 100 C. Hospital supplies have to be autoclaved for 15 minutes to be sterilized. Basically, autoclaving involves superheated steam at high pressures to reach the required temperatures. Also, remember that there are various levels of disinfectants. A cleaning agent doesn't kill spores unless it specifically says its a sporicide, which is different from it being "antibacterial". [ Reply to This | ParentRe:Fungus AmongUs by Wilson_6500 (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @06:58PMRe:Fungus AmongUs by Hannah E. Davis (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @06:59PMRe:Fungus AmongUs by Billly Gates (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:18PM Although I'm no allergologist... (Score:5, Informative) by DrYak (748999) on Saturday October 15, @08:57PM (#13799971) (http://www.sympato.ch/) They are metabolically inactive and are incredibly tough to destroy.On the other hand, I don't think the parent poster wanted to destroy the spores.He said his wife was asthmatic and AFAIK (im not allergologist, only MD), Acari [wikipedia.org] are much more common allargen causing asthma and therefor I think that's what they targeted in their cleaning method.Like he said : people are living with all these bacterial spores for ages without much problems. There's no point at all in sleeping in a surgical-grade sterile bed. Only some people have asthma problems and must pay a little attention.Reasons why sterile bed sheets are stupid :- There's litteraly millions of bacterial spore around. A few more or less in the bed aren't making change at all.- Out of the incredible amount of bacterial species, only a really tiny fraction are pathogens. The biggest fraction don't harm the human body at all. Mostly because they just don't reproduce well in "body environnement" (for exemple : most bacteria have an optimal temperature of 20C or less, whereas pathogenes are usually among the few that work better around 37C)- TFA is about fungal spores (Aspergillus in this case). Normally, fungi *are completly harmless*, except in some very *special* occasion, like reduced immunological function (the article mentions leukemia, AIDS and drugs like steroids and drugs used for transplantations) and/or free sterile niche (we human aren't sterile at all. But most of the time we are covered with completly harmless bacteria, that just sit here and take the place, so there's no more free room for pathogens. - Example : when taking antibiotics that are to strong and not enough specific, too much of the normal harmless bacteria may die and thus leaving place for Candida to proliferate). Healthy people shouldn't care.- Allergies (and asthma) don't develop just like this by themself. For an allargen to create a new allergy, there must be always some chemical that triggers the immune system, usually an irritating one (in case of Acari, it's the protease that they secrete in their feces. In case of animal fur, it's other enzymes that are present in the saliva and that the animal spreads on his/her fur when cleaning him/herself). But spores are, as you said, an inactiveted form of the bacteria, sleeping and waiting for better time. And thus, they don't secrete much, so they cannot produce irritating chemicals that could trigger an immune reaction. Therefor, they cannot create a new allergy on their one. There's only an allergic reaction if something else has previously created an allergy and if antibodies of this new allergy can also cross-react with the non-irritating stuff.- Some evidence tend to show that sterile environnement *may* be bad for allergy. Because allergy is a form of immune system malfunction, and in non sterile environnement you keep one's immune system busy with other things, therefor preventing allergy to happen in those people who have such allergic immune system. ...Once again, I'm not an allergologist, so maybe there's some revelent detail that I haven't studied. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:Although I'm no allergologist... by Dire Bonobo (Score:2) Sunday October 16, @12:42AMRe:Fungus AmongUs by tivoKlr (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @09:54PM1 reply beneath your current threshold.Re:Fungus AmongUs by Aqua OS X (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:12PMRe:Fungus AmongUs by failedlogic (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:31PMRe:Fungus AmongUs by Snaller (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @08:58PMRe:Fungus AmongUs by Jeffv323 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @11:42PM2 replies beneath your current threshold.Re:how do we "treat" this problem? by Jinxyjeanes (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:01PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by kevcol (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:53PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by hunterx11 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @06:35PM Re:how do we "treat" this problem? (Score:5, Funny) by tolkienfan (892463) on Saturday October 15, @04:04PM (#13798682) Time to start microwaving pillows, everyone! [ Reply to This | ParentRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Vr6dub (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @08:57PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by EnderWigginsXenocide (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @04:09PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by ergo98 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:11PMmicrowave you pillow by max born (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @04:13PMRe:microwave you pillow by ichigo 2.0 (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @09:58PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by GodGell (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:32PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by Malc (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @05:22PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by GodGell (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:27PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by dracphelan (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:35PMRe:how do we "treat" this problem? by tf23 (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @07:16PM4 replies beneath your current threshold. And how many spores.... (Score:5, Insightful) by MetalliQaZ (539913) on Saturday October 15, @03:30PM (#13798468) And how many spores do I inhale just by walking outside my front door? How many live in the rugs at my place of work? How many may be found in the seats at the movie theater? Millions. Thats why he have an immune system IIRC.-d [ Reply to This Re:And how many spores.... (Score:5, Insightful) by madprof (4723) on Saturday October 15, @03:32PM (#13798478) (http://www.madprof.org/) Exactly. If this was worth panicking over then why are we not all dying en masse due to the widepread use of pillows across the globe? [ Reply to This | ParentObviously... by Auraiken (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @03:35PMRe:Obviously... by gbjbaanb (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:10PMRe:And how many spores.... by noy (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @08:28PMRe:And how many spores.... by Snaller (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @09:02PMRe:And how many spores.... by bheer (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:09PMRe:And how many spores.... by going_the_2Rpi_way (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @04:15PM1 reply beneath your current threshold.Re:And how many spores.... by zippthorne (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:59PM 20 years? (Score:4, Funny) by grinwell (138078) on Saturday October 15, @03:31PM (#13798472) The real question is who uses a pillow for 20 years. That fungus could be older than your kids. [ Reply to This Re:20 years? (Score:5, Interesting) by DarkBlackFox (643814) on Saturday October 15, @03:38PM (#13798517) Hey, I'm 21 and have been using the same pillow since I was 3 or 4. It's hard to break a pillow, so it makes sense that they can last many years. Just like with a computer- as long as it keeps doing it's job, there's no reason to replace it (Unless you want more power, but I dare you to find me a more powerful pillow than the one I've been using for 18ish years.) [ Reply to This | ParentRe:20 years? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:53PMRe:20 years? by jarich (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @08:25PMRe:20 years? by nogginthenog (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:33PMRe:20 years? by DarkBlackFox (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:46PMRe:20 years? by zCyl (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:12PMRe:20 years? by whorfin (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @07:46PMIn the words of JarJar by voxel (Score:1) Sunday October 16, @12:48AMRe:20 years? by DarkBlackFox (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @05:59PM2 replies beneath your current threshold.Re:20 years? by BrookHarty (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @03:56PMRe:20 years? by poopdeville (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:34PM1 reply beneath your current threshold.Re:20 years? by Jamu (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:00PM Re:20 years? (Score:5, Interesting) by EnderWigginsXenocide (852478) on Saturday October 15, @04:14PM (#13798741) (http://ladeda.com/) The real question is who uses a pillow for 20 years. That fungus could be older than your kids.Frack pillows. Stuffed animals are made of similar construction. How many of us have grandma's first stuffed animal in their child's crib. My mother-in law had this elephant. My wife had it as a child. Now our oldest child is the new keeper of the elephant. People throw pillows because they have little emotional investment in them. The same isn't true for our beloved animal shaped pillows/stuffed animals. [ Reply to This | ParentRe:20 years? by eboot (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:22PMRe:20 years? by jonastullus (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @08:38PM Re:20 years? (Score:4, Funny) by xgamer04 (248962) <xgamer04@yaho[ ]om ['o.c' in gap]> on Saturday October 15, @10:09PM (#13800283) My mother-in law had this elephant. My wife had it as a child.Wait, so your mother-in-law and wife gave birth to the same stuffed animal?!?!??! [ Reply to This | ParentRe:20 years? by Bill Dog (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:15PM2 replies beneath your current threshold.Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by dshaw858 (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @03:31PMSo THAT's why King Tut used a rock for a pillow by schwaang (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @03:39PMRe:So THAT's why King Tut used a rock for a pillow by iminplaya (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:53PMRe:So THAT's why King Tut used a rock for a pillow by schwaang (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @06:04PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by axonal (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @03:42PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by bleckywelcky (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @03:44PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by mikael (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:12PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by Bill Dog (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:38PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by tolkienfan (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:42PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by cornface (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @07:28PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by tolkienfan (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @11:56PMRe:Not that we Shouldn't Use Pillows. by russellh (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @10:52PM1 reply beneath your current threshold. Think that's bad? (Score:5, Funny) by aliens (90441) on Saturday October 15, @03:32PM (#13798477) (http://53cleveland.org/ | Last Journal: Tuesday June 24, @03:11PM) They should have studied my Calc 2 text book from college. I caught myself asleep and drooling on that poor book more times than I can remember. [ Reply to ThisRe:Think that's bad? by cvd6262 (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:19PMUse the bacteria killing Pencil!!! by Fluffy_Kitten (Score:3) Saturday October 15, @03:32PMRe:Use the bacteria killing Pencil!!! by TooMuchEspressoGuy (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @03:35PMRe:Use the bacteria killing Pencil!!! by Hognoxious (Score:2) Saturday October 15, @04:24PMRe:Use the bacteria killing Pencil!!! by bigtrike (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @04:49PM Goodnight (Score:5, Funny) by smvp6459 (896580) on Saturday October 15, @03:32PM (#13798482) Goodnight Timmy and don't let the fungal spores cause you respiratory distress. [ Reply to ThisRe:Goodnight by Belseth (Score:1) Saturday October 15, @05:34PM

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