
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Erik Johnson, the pioneer of mold avoidance, coined the phrase "power curve" to describe how much mold people can tolerate before they experience a severe setback or relapse. And when we talk about this power curve, we can unpack a lot of other useful concepts and ideas, too. Today I am using a simple analogy to help explain what the power curve is, how it works, and even some little-known implications that come along with it.
By Bryan Rosner4.4
1414 ratings
Erik Johnson, the pioneer of mold avoidance, coined the phrase "power curve" to describe how much mold people can tolerate before they experience a severe setback or relapse. And when we talk about this power curve, we can unpack a lot of other useful concepts and ideas, too. Today I am using a simple analogy to help explain what the power curve is, how it works, and even some little-known implications that come along with it.