Hey everyone, welcome back to My Weird Prompts. I am Corn, and I am sitting here looking out the window at a sky that looks like it has been through an extreme Instagram filter from two thousand twelve. It is definitely a deep, heavy orange kind of day here in Jerusalem. It is Monday, February ninth, twenty twenty-six, and the world outside looks like we have been transported to the surface of Mars.
It really does, Corn. Herman Poppleberry here, and I have to say, the light today is truly eerie. It is that classic Hamsin weather, or what some call the Sharav. It is essentially a weather system where the hot, dry air from the Sahara or the Arabian desert just decides to pay the Levant a massive visit, bringing millions of tons of dust with it. Our housemate Daniel actually sent us a prompt about this today because he is feeling the physical effects and trying to navigate the practical side of living with asthma when the air looks and tastes like tomato soup.
It is a great question because it moves beyond the abstract. We talk about air quality a lot on this show in a general sense, but when you are actually staring at a notification on your phone that says the air is unhealthy, and you have a meeting across town, what do you actually do? Daniel mentioned he woke up feeling surprisingly great because they finally ran their high-end HEPA filter all through the night, which is a massive win for his lungs, but now he is facing the outside world. He is looking at the door like it is the airlock of a spaceship.
That feeling of being refreshed after using a HEPA filter is not just in his head or a placebo effect. If the indoor air was stagnant or full of the usual particulates that settle in an old stone house in Jerusalem—things like mold spores, pet dander, or fine construction dust—and then you suddenly scrub that air clean, your respiratory system gets a massive break. Your body stops producing as much mucus, and the inflammation in your bronchioles starts to subside. But then you look outside and see that AQI, or Air Quality Index, hitting one hundred five, or even one hundred fifty-two in some parts of the city, and the anxiety kicks in. For an asthmatic, that is a very rational fear.
So let us start there, Herman. For someone like Daniel, or anyone listening who has asthma or sensitive lungs, what are the actual numbers we need to be watching? Because one hundred five sounds bad, but is it stay-inside-and-lock-the-doors bad? Or is it just a bit-of-a-cough bad?
That is the crucial distinction we need to clear up. The Air Quality Index is a scale that typically runs from zero to five hundred. Most people think of it as a linear scale of badness, but for sensitive groups, the thresholds are very specific and the risks are non-linear. When the AQI is between zero and fifty, that is the green zone. Everyone is fine. From fifty-one to one hundred, that is yellow, or moderate. Most people are still okay, but if you are unusually sensitive to ozone or particulates, you might start to feel a little something in the back of your throat.
But Daniel is seeing one hundred five on his app right now. That puts him in the orange zone, right?
Exactly. The orange zone runs from one hundred one to one hundred fifty. The official label for this is unhealthy for sensitive groups. This is the specific bracket where people with asthma, the elderly, and children are told to reduce prolonged or heavy exertion outdoors. It does not necessarily mean you cannot step outside to grab the mail or walk to your car, but it means your lungs are going to be working significantly harder than they should. For an asthmatic, the orange zone is the warning shot. It is the point where your maintenance inhaler is doing the heavy lifting and your rescue inhaler should be in your pocket, not in a drawer at home.
Okay, so if the app says one hundred five, and he has a ten-minute walk to a meeting, is that considered prolonged exertion? Or is he overthinking it?
Probably not for a healthy person, but for someone with asthma, it depends entirely on the type of pollutant. Daniel mentioned PM two point five. That stands for particulate matter that is two point five micrometers or smaller. To give you some perspective, a human hair is about seventy micrometers in diameter. So these particles are about thirty times smaller than the width of a single hair. They are small enough to get past the hairs in your nose, past the cilia in your throat, and deep into the alveoli of your lungs. From there, they can actually cross the alveolar-capillary barrier and enter your bloodstream.
That is the part that always gets me. The idea that the air is not just affecting your breathing, but your entire systemic health because those particles are so small they basically have a backstage pass to your blood. It is not just a lung issue; it is a vascular issue.
Precisely. And in a dust storm like we are seeing today in Jerusalem, you have a mix. You have PM ten, which is larger dust and pollen that usually gets caught in the upper respiratory tract, and you have PM two point five, which is often more related to combustion or very fine mineral dust. When Daniel sees that PM two point five is seven point four times the World Health Organization guideline, that is a serious trigger for inflammation. If I were him, and I had to do that ten-minute walk at an AQI of one hundred five, I would be thinking about the cumulative load.
What do you mean by cumulative load? Is it like a radiation dose?
In a way, yes. Think of your lungs like a bucket. Every minute you spend in poor air, you are adding a little bit of grit and inflammation to that bucket. A ten-minute walk might not overflow the bucket on its own, but if you do that walk, then sit in a drafty office where the air is also poor, and then walk back, and then cook dinner over a gas stove, by the end of the day, your bucket is full and you are reaching for your rescue inhaler or experiencing a full-blown attack. The orange zone is about managing that bucket.
So the advice for the orange zone, that one hundred one to one hundred fifty range, is really about mitigation. It is about saying, if you can skip the walk, skip it. If you have to go, maybe do not power walk. Take it slow. But what happens when it hits one hundred fifty-one? Because Daniel mentioned he saw one hundred fifty-two on the map in South Jerusalem. That is a different color on the map.
That is the red zone. One hundred fifty-one to two hundred is officially unhealthy. At this point, even people without asthma might start to feel the sting in their eyes, a scratchy throat, or a slight headache. For an asthmatic, this is where the guidance shifts from reduce exertion to avoid exertion. If the AQI is over one hundred fifty, you really should not be walking to meetings if you can help it. That is the point where you call a taxi or see if you can join the meeting via video call. The risk of a sudden bronchospasm increases significantly once you cross that one hundred fifty threshold.
It is interesting that the map showed such a big difference within the same city. One hundred five in the center and one hundred fifty-two in the south. That is a fifty percent jump just a few kilometers away. Why is it so localized? Is the sensor just broken?
Air is a fluid, Corn. It flows around hills, it gets trapped in valleys, and it reacts to local sources. In Jerusalem, you have a lot of complex topography. South Jerusalem might be catching more of the direct wind coming up from the Judean Desert, or it might be in a pocket where the dust is settling due to a local pressure drop. This is why these apps are so useful, but also why they can be frustrating. If there is no sensor right next to your house, the app is interpolating, or guessing based on the nearest data points.
Right, and as Daniel pointed out, we only have a handful of official government stations here. If you are in a neighborhood that is downwind of a major construction site—and there are plenty of those in Jerusalem right now—or a busy highway junction, your personal AQI might be twenty or thirty points higher than what the official app says.
That is why I always tell people to use their eyes and their nose as the primary sensors. If the sky is orange and you can smell the metallic, earthy scent of the dust, trust that more than a green icon on an app that might be pulling data from a sensor five miles away that happens to be in a sheltered park. If you can see a haze, you are looking at particulates.
Let us talk about the mask. Daniel mentioned he was going to be brave and put on a KN ninety-five or an N ninety-five mask. He felt a bit self-conscious about it because, as he said, it is not a common sight here anymore now that the pandemic years are behind us. But from a purely technical standpoint, how much of a difference does that mask make for an asthmatic in a dust storm?
It makes a massive, measurable difference, but only if it is the right kind of mask and worn correctly. A standard surgical mask, those loose blue ones, they are designed to stop large droplets coming out of your mouth. They are not designed to filter out PM two point five. The air just leaks around the sides because it follows the path of least resistance. But an N ninety-five or a KN ninety-five, if fitted correctly to create a seal, is designed to filter out ninety-five percent of those tiny particles using a web of polypropylene fibers that often have an electrostatic charge to trap the dust.
So if he wears that mask on his ten-minute walk, he is effectively bringing the AQI of the air he is actually breathing down from one hundred five to something like five or ten. He is basically bringing the green zone with him.
Exactly. He is essentially creating a portable clean-air environment. It might feel socially awkward to some, but biologically, it is a brilliant move. I actually wish we had adopted the culture you see in cities like Tokyo or Seoul, where wearing a mask on a high-pollution day is just considered a sensible health choice, like wearing a coat when it is cold or sunglasses when it is bright. It is a tool for environmental management.
It is funny how we have this psychological barrier to it now. We associate masks with a very specific, stressful time in history, so wearing one for air quality feels like a statement. But if you have asthma, your lungs do not care about the social statement. They just care about the inflammation.
And that inflammation is not just an immediate wheeze. This is something people often miss. You might go for that walk in the orange AQI, feel fine while you are doing it, and then six hours later, or even the next morning, you wake up with a tight chest and a cough. The inflammatory response to those particulates can be delayed as the body tries to process the foreign matter that has reached the deep lung tissue.
That is a really important point. It is like a sunburn. You do not feel the burn while you are standing in the sun; you feel it later that night when the damage has already been done. So if Daniel is thinking, I feel okay right now, I will just risk it, he might be setting himself up for a very rough night or a ruined Tuesday.
Exactly. And for an asthmatic, that delayed response can lead to a flare-up that requires steroids or more aggressive treatment. It is much easier to prevent the inflammation with a mask than to calm it down once the immune system has gone into overdrive.
So let us give some very concrete takeaways here for the different levels. We have established that zero to fifty is the dream. Fifty to one hundred is the yellow zone where you keep an eye on things. One hundred to one hundred fifty is the orange zone. Herman, what is the hard rule for an asthmatic in the orange zone?
In the orange zone, which is one hundred one to one hundred fifty, the rule is: do not be a hero. If you have to go outside, do not run, do not cycle, and do not do anything that makes you breathe deeply or quickly. If you can move your activity indoors, do it. If you have an air purifier like Daniel does, make sure it is running on a higher setting than usual to account for the increased infiltration of dust through the window seals. And honestly, if you have an N ninety-five mask in the drawer, this is the time to use it for any walk longer than five minutes.
And then once we cross that one hundred fifty threshold into the red zone?
That is when you should actively avoid being outside. If the AQI is over one hundred fifty, your goal should be to stay in a filtered environment. This is not the day to walk to the grocery store or go to the gym. This is the day you order delivery or wait until the wind shifts. If you absolutely must go out, the mask is no longer optional in my book; it is a medical necessity for someone with reactive airways.
What about the levels above that? We sometimes see purple or even maroon on the maps during extreme events.
Once you hit two hundred or three hundred, we are talking about hazardous conditions for everyone, not just sensitive groups. At that point, the particulates are so thick that even healthy lungs are being damaged in real-time. For an asthmatic, an AQI of three hundred is an emergency. You should have your windows sealed with tape if necessary, your purifiers on max, and you should probably avoid any physical activity even inside the house if your indoor air quality isn't verified.
I want to go back to something Daniel mentioned about feeling refreshed after using the HEPA filter. He was wondering if it was his imagination. Why does clean air feel so different? Is it just the lack of irritants, or is there something more to it?
It is a combination of physiological factors. When you remove those fine particulates, your body stops having to produce as much mucus and inflammatory markers to trap and expel them. Your heart rate actually tends to drop slightly because your blood is better oxygenated and your system isn't under constant low-level stress. There is also a major psychological component. When you aren't subconsciously struggling for every breath, your nervous system can move out of that mild fight-or-flight state.
That is fascinating. So the HEPA filter is basically giving his parasympathetic nervous system a break. It is letting his body know it is safe to relax.
Precisely. And in a city like Jerusalem, where we have a lot of stone dust, construction, and vehicle emissions, most of us are living with a baseline level of air pollution that we just get used to. We think it is normal. When you finally experience truly clean air, like what a HEPA filter provides in a sealed room, it feels like a revelation. It is like turning off a loud hum in the background that you hadn't realized was giving you a headache until it stopped.
So, if Daniel is looking at his app and seeing one hundred five, and he has this meeting, what is the play? He has the HEPA filter at home. He has a ten-minute walk. He has a mask.
My advice to him would be this: Wear the mask. It is a ten-minute walk. If he wears a well-fitted KN ninety-five, he will be totally fine. But when he gets to the meeting, he should check the environment there. If the meeting is in a room with open windows or no air filtration, he might want to keep the mask on or ask to close the windows. There is no point in filtering your ten-minute walk only to sit in an orange-zone room for an hour. People often forget that indoor air is just outdoor air that has come inside.
That is a great point. Indoor air quality often mirrors outdoor air quality unless there is active filtration or a very modern HVAC system. If a building is old and drafty, the AQI inside might only be ten or twenty percent lower than it is outside.
Exactly. People have a false sense of security just because they are under a roof. But dust is tiny. It finds every crack in a window frame. It comes in on your clothes and in your hair. If you are in a high-pollution event, you have to think about your entire day, not just the time you spend on the sidewalk.
You know, we should probably talk about the different types of sensors too. Daniel mentioned the IQAir app, which is a popular one. There is also PurpleAir and various government sensors. Why do they sometimes give different readings? It can be confusing when one says one hundred and the other says one hundred forty.
This is where it gets nerdy, so bear with me. Government sensors are usually the gold standard. They use a method called gravimetric analysis, where they literally weigh the particles collected on a filter over a period of time. It is incredibly accurate but it is slow. The data you see on an app from a government station is often delayed by an hour or more because they have to process the reading.
And what about the consumer-grade sensors like PurpleAir that we see on the maps?
Those use laser counters. They shine a laser through a small chamber of air and count how the light scatters when it hits a particle. It is instantaneous, which is great for seeing real-time spikes, but they can be affected by humidity. If it is very humid, the sensor might mistake a tiny water droplet for a dust particle and give you a falsely high reading.
So in a dry dust storm like we have today, where the humidity is very low, the laser sensors are probably quite accurate?
Yes, they are usually very reliable for mineral dust. The problem is when people see a huge discrepancy between two apps and get confused. My rule of thumb is to look at the trend. If all the sensors in the city are trending up, it does not really matter if one says one hundred ten and the other says one hundred thirty. The message is the same: the air is getting worse, so take precautions now.
I think there is also a second-order effect here that we should mention. When the air is this bad, people tend to stay indoors, they close their windows, and they might turn on the air conditioning. But in many older buildings, that just means you are recirculating indoor pollutants like dust mites, pet dander, or even fumes from cooking.
That is such a good point, Corn. If you seal yourself in a room to escape the dust but then you fry up some onions on a gas stove without a vent, you might actually be creating a worse AQI inside your kitchen than what is happening outside. Cooking on a gas stove can easily push PM two point five levels into the hundreds in a small apartment within minutes.
So the advice is: escape the outdoors, but do not create a mini-pollution event in your own living room.
Right. Use your HEPA filter, use your range hood when cooking, and maybe skip the scented candles or incense on a day like today. Your lungs are already under stress from the ambient air; don't give them extra work to do at home. Also, when the storm passes, do not just open the windows and start vacuuming. The dust will have settled on every surface.
Oh, that is a good tip. What should we do instead?
Use a damp cloth to wipe down surfaces. If you use a vacuum without a HEPA filter, you are just picking up the dust and spraying it back into the air in a finer, more breathable form. Wet-dusting is the way to go after a Hamsin.
I am curious about the long-term aspect of this. We are seeing these dust storms happen more frequently, or at least they feel more frequent as the climate shifts. For someone with asthma, is there a cumulative effect over years of living in a place with these occasional spikes?
Unfortunately, the research suggests yes. Repeated exposure to high particulate levels can lead to what doctors call airway remodeling. That is a fancy way of saying your lungs develop micro-scar tissue or become permanently more reactive and sensitive. It is not just about surviving the day; it is about protecting your future lung function. This is why I am so adamant about the masks and the filters. It is not being over-sensitive; it is being proactive about your long-term health.
It is like wearing earplugs at a loud concert. You might not go deaf from one show, but if you do it every week for ten years, you are going to have a serious problem.
Exactly. It is all about the total dose over your lifetime. If you can reduce your total lifetime exposure to PM two point five by even twenty percent by using filters and masks on bad days, you are significantly lowering your risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, and other issues later in life.
So, for everyone listening, especially our fellow Jerusalemites staring at the orange sky today, let us recap the practical guidance. Herman, give us the final breakdown.
Okay, here is the cheat sheet. Zero to fifty, go for a run and enjoy the fresh air. Fifty-one to one hundred, enjoy the walk but maybe do not do a marathon if you have asthma. One hundred one to one hundred fifty, this is the orange zone. If you have asthma, reduce your outdoor time. Wear an N ninety-five or KN ninety-five mask for any walk longer than a few minutes. Move your exercise indoors to a filtered environment.
And the red zone?
One hundred fifty-one to two hundred, avoid being outside. If you must go, the mask is mandatory for your health. Close your windows and run your air purifiers on high. If you start feeling symptoms, do not wait; use your maintenance or rescue inhaler as prescribed by your doctor.
And above two hundred?
Stay inside. Seal the cracks. It is a health emergency for everyone, but especially for you.
That is really clear. And I think it takes the guesswork out of it. It turns a scary orange sky into a set of actionable steps. I also want to echo what Daniel said about the HEPA filters. If you live in a city with any kind of air quality issues, a good air purifier is one of the best investments you can make for your home. It is not just for the bad days; it is for the baseline health every single night while you sleep.
Absolutely. We spend about a third of our lives sleeping. If you can ensure that for those eight hours your lungs are breathing truly clean air, you are giving your body a massive advantage in recovering from whatever it encountered during the day. Look for a filter with an H thirteen or H fourteen rating, which means it catches ninety-nine point nine percent of particles.
Well, I feel like I have learned a lot today. I am definitely going to be a bit more diligent about checking the AQI before I head out for my evening walk. And Herman, thank you for breaking down the science of the masks. I think it helps to know that it is not just a piece of cloth; it is a sophisticated filter that actually works against these tiny particles.
My pleasure. It is one of those things where a little bit of technical knowledge can really empower you to make better choices for your health. And hey, if you are listening and you found this helpful, we would really appreciate it if you could leave us a review on your podcast app or on Spotify. It helps other people find the show and join our weird little community of curious minds.
It really does. We love seeing those reviews come in. Also, if you want to get in touch or see our archives, head over to myweirdprompts dot com. We have all five hundred forty-three episodes there, including this one.
Five hundred forty-three. We have been doing this a long time, Corn.
We have. And thanks to Daniel for the prompt today. It was very timely given the state of the sky right now. I think I am going to go make sure our HEPA filter is actually turned on and the filters are clean.
Good call. I will go check the one in the living room.
Alright everyone, thanks for listening to My Weird Prompts. Stay safe, breathe easy, and we will talk to you in the next one.
Goodbye everyone. Stay healthy out there.