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Firefighters Are Warning Homeowners About a Common Household Item—And Millions Use It Every Day

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Most house fires don’t start the way people imagine.

Not with dramatic explosions.

Not with sparks flying across the room.

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And not with obvious danger signs that give everyone time to react.

Instead, many begin with something far more unsettling:

A completely ordinary object sitting quietly inside the home.

An item so common that most people stop noticing it altogether.

Which is exactly why firefighters continue warning homeowners about it.

The Problem With Familiarity

Psychologists have identified a fascinating phenomenon known as the normalcy bias.

The more often we see something without experiencing a problem, the safer we assume it must be.

Think about that.

If you’ve plugged in the same device hundreds of times without incident, your brain automatically labels it as “safe.”

No further investigation required.

No concern necessary.

But reality doesn’t always work that way.

Some risks stay hidden until the exact wrong combination of circumstances occurs.

And by then, it may already be too late.

The Everyday Item That Deserves More Attention

Fire departments around the world frequently warn about overloaded power strips, extension cords, chargers, and lithium-ion battery devices. While incredibly convenient, these products can generate dangerous heat when damaged, overloaded, improperly used, or left charging for long periods without supervision.

The surprising part?

Most people don’t consider them dangerous at all.

They’re simply part of daily life.

Phones.

Tablets.

E-bikes.

Power tools.

Vacuums.

Portable electronics.

All quietly charging in the background.

Why Your Brain Underestimates the Risk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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