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Face it, your house is filthy.
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It's filled with dead skin cells, dust, and around 200,000 different species of bug, bacteria, and fungus.
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Now, it's tempting to assume that most of them live in your toilet.
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After all it's where, you know.
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But here's the thing, the dirtiest place in your house isn't your toilet.
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It's actually you.
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Household microbes lurk in the most unlikely of places.
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Take a heat loving bacteria called Thermus aquaticus.
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These guys can only be found in two environments, blisteringly hot geysers like Old Faithful at Yellowstone and your hot water heater.
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Another example is Penicillium fungi.
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They creep into your air conditioner from outdoors and when you switch on the AC their spores get blasted around the house.
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They're known to cause allergies in 2-6% of people.
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So when you notice a funny musty smell coming from your AC, it's probably the fungus.
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But before you start eyeing your central air suspiciously, think about this, you dump microbes all over your body every time you shower.
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It turns out trillions of organisms live in your shower head, pilled on top of each other in a slimy layer half a millimeter thick.
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But that's not necessarily a problem.
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Researchers found that a type of shower dwelling mycobacterium actually boosts levels of serotonin.
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That's a neurotransmitter thought to lower stress and increase happiness.
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And when those arrant microbacteria land on you, they join the tens of thousands of other microbe species that live in the dirtiest place around, your body.
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Like Corynebacterium, the microbes that give your armpits that stinky odor and simultaneously fight off harmful pathogens like E. Coli.
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Meanwhile, 300 to 500 species of microbe colonize your gut and are thought to play a role in maintaining your immune system, digestive system and even mental health.
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In the non bacteria category microbes, you've got such guests as microscopic mites that live on your face and mold that colonizes into your toes.
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While the idea of them might give you chills, microbes like these help keep you safe.
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You see the number of harmless microbial species in the world outnumber harmful ones, by a trillion to one.
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In fact, less than 0.00000001% of microbial species account for nearly all infectious diseases in the world.
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And all these harmless bacteria crawling on your skin means less room and resources for pathogens like antibiotic resistant microbes,
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which also means they have less opportunity to take over and make you sick.
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So even when antibiotics fail, it could be all those other microbes crawling in and on you that keep you safe.
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So in a way, you need to get a little dirty to stay healthy.
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But full disclosure, that's not an excuse to swear off your shower.
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Besides, you don't wanna miss out on that feel good mycobacterium.
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This video was made in large part thanks to Rob Dunn and the information in his new book Never Home Alone.