This article is special and does not talk about science, but only about the results of my own personal tests for your reference.
Disclaimer: Individual differences may exist and may not be useful for everyone.
Every winter, my whole body is full of static electricity, and this guy always unexpectedly elects you when you are not paying attention. Sometimes when you're careful, it doesn't move. It makes people very nervous about anything.
If you grab a doorknob or something, you have to take a deep breath and hold it violently when the doorknob is not paying attention, and then you can relax.
It's annoying, look up the solution on the Internet. A total of three were found, and here are the test results.
Method 1: Touch the battery. Carry a size 5 battery with you. Before touching something, take out the battery, rub it with your thumb against the positive electrode, and then start it.
It turned out to be of little use. When the doorknob wants to call me, keep calling.
The next day, change to the negative electrode. The results are still the same.
On the third day, the positive and negative electrodes were started at the same time, and the results were still the same.
Abandon. Method 2: Wash your hands before you start.
Result: Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
When it was useful, I was "electrified" by water first.
When I was electrified, it was when my fingertips first touched the water.
In other words, washing your hands has the same effect as touching other things, and when your fingertips touch it first, it discharges, which is the phenomenon of "tip discharge" of static electricity.
Abandon. After the water experiment, each time I used water, I became cautious, and there was another layer of psychological shadow.
Method 3: Touch the wall.
The method is very simple: just stick the palm of your hand on the wall first, and stick it for a second.
My test results were very rare.
Description: The walls of my house are wall coverings and the bathrooms are tiled. I didn't feel any difference in the effect.
For the sake of my own test, do you have to "call" me?