The much-debated love hate relationship with your vacuum cleaner – is this you?

This is a fabulous blog written some years ago by a frazzled American housewife who had a love hate relationship with her vacuum cleaner.

These days things have changed as vacuum cleaners are much more efficient, technology has moved on hugely and with regular servicing and repair most of these issues can be easily avoided.

It makes for entertaining reading though. If you’d like to avoid the challenges this nice lady faces then give us a call on 0333 533 7220 and am sure we can help.

On the other hand, have a read anyway as you can almost feel like you’re in the room.

“What can I do? I mean seriously, what can I do to avoid the situation that is facing me? Weekly at best, every other day sometimes, it’s hideous.

The vacuum cleaner is sitting there waiting for me. I hate hoovering or using the vacuum as we also say these days. It is one of the best “bad” inventions ever. I’ve tried all kinds of vacuum cleaners, but it doesn’t seem to matter what kind I have, they are all basically the same. They suck. No pun intended.

Vacuums seem to have a mind of their own about what they will eat. Oh, sure, as long as the floors do not have any loose objects on them, things go well. The vacuum cleaner will hum along, pick up the loose dust and deposit it inside its belly. But anything more and the two of us fall out.

What about the occasional tiny piece of cotton, fluff, toast etc that’s sitting there on the rug? No matter how many times you run the vacuum over it, nothing happens. It just sits there until you finally have to bend over and pick it up. It seems the vacuum cleaner is selective about what it eats and doesn’t eat anything other than dust.

There are some things that it definitely should leave alone – but at this point it then turns into a demon machine and sucks up all manner of objects that it knows will become stuck in its filter or fan, make burping, whirring or dinging noises, and simply refuse to go into the bag or canister. It’s just one of those rules of life. And not one that I like very much.

Take paper clips, safety pins, or hair pins. Ever hit one of those beauties whilst vacuuming? Inevitably the cleaner will suck it up before you can stop pushing the machine. The noise is deafening. It would be okay if it would just go on into the bag and then shut up about it. But it sticks in the fan.

By the time you finish taking out the roller, breaking all your finger nails, and retrieving the hateful object, you don’t care whether the rug gets cleaned or not. And where does all that thread wound around the roller and brushes come from? Is it collecting string?

I don’t get it. It can suck up a throw rug or plastic grocery bag in two seconds flat. It can eat the draperies from across the room. It can terrorize the cat, drown out the football game on TV, blow a fuse, and set off a round of sneezing that all the allergy pills in the medicine cabinet can’t cure. But it can’t pick up dust that is too close to the baseboard in the hall.

 There are all kinds of these machines. I’ve never looked it up, but I’m sure the variety is overwhelming. In my lifetime, I’ve probably owned half of them. The one I have now cost a small fortune. The more the horsepower, the better it is supposed to suck. The only difference I’ve seen is that it can find the pennies and marbles quicker.

Yes, I’ve tried the canister style as well. I used to swear by them. However, after using a wire coat hanger to pull out wads of dust stuck in the hose, I finally decided I could no longer deal with it and went to an upright style. I still use the canister once in a while as it gets into cracks and hard to reach places. Not only do you need one of the monsters to clean your house, you really need two.

And there are those paper bags to empty. Now that’s a job for a sanitation worker, not a woman.  You can’t believe all that grey stuff came out of your house. You have to resist any urge to look inside for stray coins or diamond rings and deposit the entire mess in the closest trash bag.

Did you ever have a bag come loose inside the vacuum cleaner letting the dust accumulate? Oh, my gosh, that’s another whole story. On a day like that, I simply want to retire from house cleaning forever.

What did they do before the vacuum cleaner was invented? No wonder wall-to-wall carpeting is going out and hardwood floors are making a comeback.”

To avoid all these situations and many more, read any of our helpful PHC Vacuum Service blogs and tips on our website and remember, we’re only a call away if your vacuum cleaner is giving you the runaround.

Note to self, this was written before the invention of the Dyson, cordless machines and bagless hoovers!