Originally posted by mikoyan29
View Post
Originally posted by Andara Bledin
View Post
Originally posted by Greenday
View Post
When I was in high school, I had a chemistry lab in the garage: I could make my own compounds. I had burners, distillation equipment, the whole nine yards. I regularly made all kinds of complex compounds from household chemicals . . . sometimes with the aid of specially bought ingredients, sometimes not.
Mostly what I did was them was do "magic shows" for local kids. Mixing various chemicals can cause fun and dramatic color changes and liquid reactions that are lots of fun. The only time Mom got upset with me was when I dropped a container of ammonia and stunk up the garage.
What she didn't know was I was making my own sulfuric acid and nitric acid. Dad caught me preparing to soak fibers in a bath of them to make gun cotton. He stopped me, and we had a lengthy discussion of the wisdom, or rather the lack thererof, of making bombs in the house. Well, actually, I didn't want to make bombs. I just wanted to see the explosive reaction when I lit the fibers on fire (which I planned to do in the local park, not the backyard . . . I wasn't that stupid).
I went on to become a nurse, not a terrorist or a criminal.
Point is, kids are naturally curious about explosives and explosive reactions. Most satisfy their urges with fireworks, which is more dangerous in my mind because they never learn how to handle them properly.
What this girl did has been done a million times, and will be done a million times more. The correct reaction is to redirect her curiosity into a safe environment, rather than come down on her with a hammer.
Originally posted by Andara Bledin
View Post
Comment