You know, zerg, I've tried to be patient with you. I really    did. I know that you're young; and I know from nearly two    decades of experience that people of a certain age (the late    teens and all of the twenties) tend to move through life with a    nearly imperturbable confidence in their own knowledge base. I    don't know for sure that you're in that general age range, but    that's my best guess.  
    I know that in part because I have very clear memories of being    equally confident at that age.  
    However, a lot of the statements in this post fall into a trap.    Many of the statements you make above treat your anecdotal    observations as absolute facts. I'm not going to parse your    post into specifics because it's clear that you're not    interested in listening to anything that anyone--newbie or    oldtimer, professional or amateur--here has to say if it    doesn't confirm what you've already made up your mind to    believe. And frankly, I have better things to do with my time    than waste it trying to prove that someone is wrong on the    internet.  
    However, for any other readers who might still be willing to    listen, I want to point out the following.  
    Sean is a professional in the pest management industry. He has    all the officially recognized bona fides that come with the    professional training and experience that the state requires in    order to be credentialed to treat peoples' homes to rid them of    pests.  
    zerg_infestor is a bed bug sufferer who has read some stuff on    the internets.  
    I know that for a lot of people,particularly in the rampantly    anti-intellectual culture of the United States, charges of    elitism are quick to get thrown around. There's a very long    tradition in the US of many people mistrusting anyone who seems    to be pretentious.  
    All of which means that especially people who've been burned    before by bad PMP or people who generally are inclined to think    that the advice to hire a PMP is some sort of conspiracy that    reveals that we're in bed (metaphorically) with the pest pros    are quick to assume that those of us who push professional help    are doing so because of some hidden agenda.  
    I've said it before and I'll say it again: I get that there are    people who are in a tough financial situation and who cannot    afford to hire a PMP. But I also know that some people who    claim they can't afford to hire a PMP have enough disposable    income and just think that the whole thing is a racket.  
    Clearly, zerg_infestor is in the former category. And zerg's    case is complicated by living at home with his or her parents    who own the home.  
    In that case, my advice would be, if zerg's a minor, to call    whatever state agencies he or she can to get them to force the    parents to treat. Because all the self-treatment in the world    isn't going to solve the problem if the whole house isn't    treated.  
    If not, then it's harder, but the answer still has to involve    getting the whole family on board somehow. I'm not a social    worker or a psychologist. I don't have the experience or the    skills to give advice about how to do so; but I know enough    about bed bugs to know that until that happens, chances of    solving the problem are slim.  
    If I break my ankle, I'm not going to read on the internet how    to set it myself. I'm going to hire someone who has the hands    on, day to day experience of setting other peoples' ankles    properly. I don't think that makes me elitist or pretentious;    it makes me someone who respects the experience that others    have that I don't.  
    There are reasons that, for example, the medical profession    prohibits doctors from treating relatives in some situations.    When you have a problem that requires specialized expertise to    solve, unless you have years to develop that expertise, you    hire someone who has it.  
    Yes, the fact that not everyone can afford to do so creates a    boatload of problems. Clearly, laws and our social support    system need to catch up to the reality of this infestation.  
    And zerg's case is particularly complex.  
    If zerg doesn't own the home, but zerg's parents do, zerg's    parents are going to have to get on board with a treatment    plan.  
    If that's not possible, then the fastest, most effective, most    likely to succeed, and in the long run cheapest approach is to    get the parents to hire a *good* PMP to treat the house.  
    (For what it's worth, I've always found that most of the PMP    here don't speak in pretentious language at all. And I would    think that the number of times I've been told by posters to    stop using such big words, my evaluation of pretentiousness    would carry some weight. Maybe not. Maybe some big meanie like    me who actually evaluates how trustworthy I find posts based on    a host of complex factors including but not limited to the    potential bias of a person because of what I know about his or    her entire background, the person's data sample size, the    amount of experience the poster has in dealing with bed bugs,    and, yes, even the quality of the person's writing and grammar    can't be trusted because I'm clearly an elitist, pretentious    something or other.)  
    However, I don't see anything pretentious or elitist in Sean's    post. (Please note: for the record, I find ad hominem attacks    to be the fastest way to get me to dismiss a person's opinion.    If the poster cannot even differentiate between the posts a    person makes and the person him or herself, it's a pretty good    sign to me that I shouldn't bother engaging with the person in    question. I'm just sayin'.)  
    Pretentious means that someone is putting on airs and talking    down to someone in a condescending manner. What I hear in    Sean's post is a clear explanation of the actual facts about    the regulations for applying a chemical. What I hear in zerg's    post is a lot of selective listening.  
    From where I sit, when you're talking about applying chemical    pesticides? I'm going to listen to the person, professional or    amateur, who takes the time to explain step by step why a    particular kind of application might be dangerous before I take    the advice of a person who declares someone who takes that time    to be pretentious or elitist by providing such information.  
    And a post that ends with:
    A responsible DIY who is resorting to self-treatment as a last    recourse because of financial constraints, it would seem to me,    would be happy to hear advice from a PMP on how to most    effectively apply chemicals. Responding to a "hey, btw, that    product that you're using isn't supposed to be used by people    without the credentials of a pest management pro" with that    sentence seems to me to be the response of someone who may, in    fact, be harboring an unstated bias against professionals in    the pest management field or just professionals in general.    Coupled with a post that repeatedly describes someone who took    the time to share expertise as both elitist and pretentious?  
    Well, if this were a short story I was analyzing--you know,    reading between the lines to see what the story implied as    opposed to what it explicitly said?  
    I would infer that any text so quick to use labels like    pretentious and elitist was, consciously or not, probably    showing some of that anti-intellectual bias so common today.    Since I don't know the person, I can only describe what the    text itself gives away, and the text itself is screaming that    kind of loudly to me.  
    I would just like to remind readers that anyone in the US has    the right to post anything he or she wants. I can post that the    sky is really red and that everyone who calls it blue is wrong    and delusional. However, saying that won't make it reality.  
    When I read statements like this:
    And zerg, I just want to be clear: I teach writing for a    living. I'm pretty fluent at looking at a sentence and figuring    out both what the phrasing in question actually says to most    readers AND what I think the writer meant to say.  
    I'm not sure what a PMP acting like a poster not a PCO even    means. My best inference is that PCOs act, well, elitist or    pretentious by daring to suggest that the hundreds or thousands    of cases of bed bugs that they're seen might give them a larger    data set of knowledge and expertise to draw from than someone    who is fairly early on in a battle against bed bugs. From where    I sit, that sentence reveals more about the bias and suspicions    of its author than I think the author meant the sentence to.  
    I'm also not at all sure what a social failure is, exactly. I    mean, I've never met Sean. But I doubt he's a bigger geek than    I am. I'm betting he gets out more on weekends than I do    (seeing as how I could be at parties downstairs at the    conference I'm at rather than typing this up on a Sat. night).    More importantly, I do know this:  
    I don't give a rat's posterior about what a PMP's social life    is like if he or she can effectively treat a bed bug problem.  
    And since I benefitted tremendously from the advice on this    subject given by many people on these boards who have tons of    professional experience with bed bugs, I would be very, very    sad to see them chased off by this attitude that crops up from    time to time among a handful of posters that somehow there is    some big conspiracy on the part of the pest management industry    to hide the good chemicals or the magic secret to getting rid    of bed bugs from the general public so that they can continue    to profit off of the rest of us.  
    If there were a safe, effective, OTC treatment for bed bugs,    I'd be singing its praises from the rooftops in a heart beat. I    expect that the PMP here would, for the most part, move on to    treating other pests and do just fine making a living at that.  
    And I just hope that those posters who are willing to listen to    reason will keep those facts and arguments in mind as they wade    through the various posts on these issues. I also hope that    those PMP who do take time out to help people here for free    will not be put off by the people with the pest management    equivalent of the whole "the moon landing never happened" or    "the US government crashed the planes on 9/11 themselves" of    the bed bug world.  
    (Apologies if this is a bit disordered, but it's the third day    of the conference, and I'm pretty tired by this point in the    con.)  
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I found this at walmart  Got Bed Bugs? Bedbugger Forums