karpathy

Chemical hygiene

Following up on digital hygiene, I wanted to write up my (evolving, opinionated) guide to chemical hygiene. I keep ranting about this topic to all of my friends recently (you can tell I'm really fun at parties), so I thought it would be worth writing it up to have it all in one place/url:

Water

Starting out with controlling your water system, which is the easiest in terms of concrete, high confidence recommendations that in my experience still only <5% of my friends have adopted:

Water is the easiest section in this entire article because it has well-understood ways to spend $/risk reduction compared to a lot more complex categories we'll see later (food especially). I would recommend contacting a company in your local area to install both a whole home filter and an under-the-sink reverse osmosis system, to handle the ~yearly maintenance (filter changes), and conduct tests to demonstrate the improvement.

Air

Similar to water, air is relatively well-understood and simple to control in your home:

Food

Food is the hardest category to control because it involves extensively deep supply chains that have been ruthlessly efficiency-maxxed over the last few decades with little to no regard for public health externalities. The industry has a clear and immediate financial incentive to trade something 10% cheaper at the cost of something 10X more harmful to you as long as it shows up over a long enough time period that the accounting is impractical. And it just turns out that in food there are many, many ways to cut corners. Sadly, the US Government has been woefully inadequate in constraining the industry and lags far behind other countries (e.g. Europe especially), hence the recent MAHA efforts. I'll split this section into 1) food sourcing and 2) cooking/preparation.

Food: 1) sourcing

GvWK5b1X0AEevjd Example food, and what a grocery store should look like. From this tweet, with a bit more discussion.

Food: 2) Cooking & preparation

Fabrics

Our bodies come into frequent contact with all kinds of fabrics (clothing, bedding, furniture, rugs, mats, ...). As you handle these materials, they shed particles, which you end up breathing in.

Cleaning supplies: soap, dish washing, laundry, toilet, spray cleaners

Dental hygiene

This is a category that I was not able to make a dent into in my personal life, despite a number of attempts. The goal with all of this is go after the 80:20 low hanging fruit and this category for me falls into the latter category:

Sunscreen

Wellness

Learn more

TLDR. Keep your home unsophisticated. Filter your water and air. Eat real food (not edible food-like substances) from well-treated animals and with few, sensible ingredients and minimally sophisticated supply chains and processing steps. Say no to as many dyes and fragrances as you can. Surround yourself with simple, natural materials or strong and inert materials (e.g. stainless steel). Avoid plastics, especially if they are handled, heated, frozen - the risk is not just related to the tiny particles of these exotic materials accumulating all over your body and interfering with its chemistry, but the large zoo of chemical plasticizers that are added to plastics and then leech out. The government is significantly lagging behind the industry on chemical regulation and this is your responsibility.

This guide isn't perfect. It's a work in progress. I am not a professional toxicologist or food scientist so my tone above is my frustration that the government is forcing me to be a part-time investigative journalist just to exist in a modern society and not feel like I am poisoning myself and my family. And I didn't even go into and cover all of the environmental aspects of these industries. This state of affairs is much worse here in the US than e.g. in Europe - the EU bans or restricts many food additives, dyes, chemicals and food processing practices that are routine here. The FDA "Generally Recognized As Safe" (GRAS) system lets manufacturers self-certify ingredients without independent review and a new exotic chemical or process is innocent until proven guilty, while in Europe the default is often the reverse. So treat all of this as a starting point, ask your favorite LLM for more information on any of the items, let me know your thoughts (e.g. X/Instagram DMs) and I will aim to update this guide over time.