Standing in the kitchen wondering if I can ever leave the kitchen. There could be glass in all little places. How do I vacuum a vacuum cleaner?

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“I just broke a glass bowl full of water in the kitchen. I swept up the big pieces, put them in a plastic bag, and then in a garbage bag. I put on shoes to avoid stepping on the shards and used the vacuum cleaner to pick up the rest. But now I’m worried there might still be tiny glass pieces scattered everywhere, even outside the kitchen. I’m unsure how to safely vacuum outside the kitchen without spreading glass further. Plus, there’s water all over, so I’m waiting for it to dry. Standing here, I feel overwhelmed—what if glass ended up in unexpected places like the laundry room? Should everyone wear shoes in specific areas now to avoid tracking it around? I don’t even know what to do with the shoes afterward. And once I dispose of the glass, what happens next?

This reminds me of when I moved into my new office in July. I had a large round glass table that shattered in the studio. I cleaned up most of it but left a box of large shards in the corner for about a month. Each time someone entered the studio, the box was still there. It took me a while to ensure there was no glass left in the space.”

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1 Comment

  1. Kit Troyer's avatar Kit Troyer says:

    I went through a glass door as a kid, so I’m careful as hell around any broken glass, whether in my own home or just out in the neighborhood when walking my dog. I clean it up wherever I run across it. And I definitely get OCD about it if it’s in a common area of the house like kitchen.

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