Welcome to Magazine Premium

You can change this text in the options panel in the admin

There are tons of ways to configure Magazine Premium... The possibilities are endless!

Member Login
Lost your password?

Taking Care of Scraped Knees

March 11, 2009
By

Or, The Case of My Dad and Neosporin
I’d like to say, for the record, that I always thought it was weird that Neosporin had the word “spore” in the middle of it. That might have been, partly, why I always liked it.

I also know that I liked it because my Dad was totally obsessed with it when I was a kid. Back in the old days, before “store brands” were reinvented, my Dad basically followed us around with a tube of Neosporin, a box of Band-Aids, pliers and a bottle of Seagram’s 7.

The pliers and whiskey were really only handy for loose teeth and such, but for just about every other malady, Dad took a page from My Big Fat Greek Wedding and used a cure-all approach– Neosporin for everything from broken skin to broken curfews.

The Details

Now, Momcentral.com sent me a few of the latest versions of Dad’s favorites: Neosporin + Pain Relief (regular and Maximum Strength, which has the additional Bacitracin in it, making it a “triple antibiotic”) and the Neo-To-Go Spray, which is a liquid spray pump for easy stowage in your satchell, fanny pack or man-bag.

Neo To Go! I thought was quite handy, and my sister, Mary agreed– even said she had bought one already.

I checked the Walgreens website, however, and noticed that the .26 fl oz. size costs $6.50 (you can get it on Amazon for $3.50). That’s an awful lot for convenience. Also Mary said some piece of the packaging broke off whilst living in her purse, although it was still useable. Dad would have had a field day with that piece of news– no namby-pamby Neosporin he ever used would have had time to break before he used up a tube on the six of us.

Neosporin + Pain Relief is basically the same old Neosporin you have always used, even in the same old tube packaging (which I personally think is superior in its simplicity to the plastic casing).

It has Praxomine in it, some form of external analgesic. I just happened to have a very painful hangnail (don’t laugh! It really hurt!) and I tried it.

It did take the pain away at first but it was back in a few minutes. I think Dad’s pain removal technique of just telling us to “Stop crying or I’ll get out the iodine!” might work better, but I am not sure that is legal anymore.

WWDD?

So all in all, I was glad to see these “new” Neosporins were still the old Neosporins really, just with minor updates.  My Dad always had great, simple solutions to life’s little problems … like WD-4o for mobilizing anything NON-human, and a Labeler for quick and easy organization techniques! I can’t imagine the marketers at Johnson & Johnson could ever outdo Dad for the best answer to scraped knees.

Tags: , , ,

2 Responses to Taking Care of Scraped Knees

  1. Marty on March 11, 2009 at 6:27 pm

    You know – I love Benadril – in a, I don’t know what you would call it – a dauber? Like the Tide sticks. So mosquito bites, bee stings, poison ivy, etc – covers everything and makes everything feel MUCH better. Ahhhhh.

  2. paul merrill on March 14, 2009 at 4:50 am

    Hi Elizabeth.

    Wanted you to know that I added you to my blogroll. (And thanks for putting me on yours.)

    I just enjoy your observations of life!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*


CommentLuv badge

What We’re Asking…

January 2012

Wonderful.

The Archive



Photography