I'm almost 50 and have a body joint that went wonky and needs heat applied.

    yes I have stood in the shower and targeted hot water on it. That does the trick for the pain for maybe an hour.

    I thought I was a genius to heat up my electric kettle and pour boiling water on a towel, then wrap that hot wet towel with a dry towel. Then let my invention rest on my aching joint. But after spending some time with this invention, obviously I didn't wring out the original hot towel enough, because water was seeping everywhere. Total mess.

    My other idea is to use my clothes iron on a small towel to heat it up, then put that warm cloth on my aching spot.

    50 years old, never owned or needed a hot water bottle or heating pad. I''m not buying either of those for this one-time situation.

    [The tendon flipped over to the wrong side and I just need to relax it enough to flip back to the comfortable place]

    I have:
    -an electric kettle
    -a cltohes iron
    -a toaster oven
    -microwave
    -towels
    -ziploc bags
    -tin foil

    I do not have:
    -rice
    -a hot water bottle
    -a heating pad

    Throw me your ideas. Thanks guys. ETA – I have a mucrowave.

    DIY? Makeshift hot water bottle or heating pad.
    byu/GodsCasino inFrugal



    Posted by GodsCasino

    15 Comments

    1. I would be careful, you could end up burning yourself with anything makeshift.

      If you have a microwave, can you borrow some rice from a neighbor and sew it up into a pillowcase? If you can, heat it up for 80 seconds max.

    2. Just fill an empty bottle – plastic will do – with hot water, wrap a towel or pillowcase around it

    3. Do you have access to some gravel or small rocks from your yard? You could warm them up with hot water then wrap them in a towel. Or what about a ceramic mug? Fill it with water from the kettle, EDIT dump out the water, wrap in a towel, and apply to the injured area.

    4. You’re 50 Y.O. It won’t be a one time thing. Buy a heating pad or one of those things you can heat in the microwave. Cheeze, how cheap can you be. Put rice or beans (uncooked) in a clean sock, knot closed, heat in microwave. Dinner and relief.

    5. I would just get an electric heating pad. You can find pretty inexpensive ones. And they use very little electricity, less than heating up a kettle would, so it would probably actually be cheaper in the long term if you factor that in.

    6. You want something that will transfer heat.

      Do you have a kettle that you can feel the heat from the sides? Bring it to the boil, press it to the target area.

      Or take a metal pot, add hot water, cusion with a towel so you don’t burn yourself, press it to the target area.

    7. Honestly I agree with everyone saying just buy an electric heating pad or a hot water bottle from a pharmacy. My electric heating pad is about 8 years old, and I use it very often for aches and pains (I have arthritis rather going) plus cramps or anything else. Best $35 ever spent for 8 years of very consistent use. At 50 you’ll have more aches and pains.

    8. Just spend the $20 for a heating pad. It’s worth it. You are 50 now. In a few years, you’ll be even older. You’ll find plenty of times in your coming years that you enjoy having the heating pad.

    9. If you don’t want to buy something for a one off case, get an electric blanket. It’s a heating pad, but bigger and multi purpose. Winter is coming :p

    10. Rice in a sock and microwave. Works like a charm. Don’t microwave for too long through. Start with like 45 seconds and go from there

    11. Campers use Nalgene bottles for this all the time. Even a canning jar works. Anything that won’t leak

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