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I'm a Nurse. I Missed It For Four Months.

"The headaches I blamed on long shifts. My son's fatigue I blamed on school. We'd been breathing it every night. The detector on the wall never made a sound."

Thu, March 14  ·  by Sarah M.

The Routine Visit That Undid Four Months

I've been a registered nurse for eleven years. I know what carbon monoxide poisoning looks like. Headache. Fatigue. Nausea. Cognitive slowdown.

 

I diagnosed it in a patient three years ago. I walked him through the symptoms, told him to get a detector, watched him go home.

 

I did not see it in myself.

 

November through February — my son Caleb, seven years old, was waking up with headaches three mornings a week. I blamed it on school, on growth, on winter air. My own headaches I blamed on twelve-hour shifts.

 

We had a carbon monoxide detector in the hallway. I'd bought it at Bunnings two years ago. Tested it every few months. It beeped. The green light came back on.

 

In March, our landlord sent an HVAC technician for the annual ducted gas heating heating check.

 

He was in the basement for eight minutes.

 

When he came back upstairs, he wasn't carrying his tools.

 

He was carrying his meter.

 

The numbers as he walked through my home:

 

18 Living room → 31 Hallway → 42 Caleb's bedroom

He walked to our CO detector on the wall. Green light. Blinking.

 

He unplugged it without saying anything and set it on the kitchen counter.

 

"Your son's bedroom is at 42 parts per million," he said. "Your detector is designed to alarm at 70. It's not broken. It's doing exactly what it was built to do."

 

I'm a nurse. I knew immediately what 43 PPM in a seven-year-old's bedroom for four months means.

I sat down on the kitchen floor.

 

"I was the person who taught a patient about carbon monoxide poisoning. I knew the symptoms. I was living them. And I didn't see it - because a green light on my wall told me every morning that we were safe."

— Sarah M., RN

What the Green Light Actually Means

After the technician left, I sat at my kitchen table and looked at that detector for a long time.

I'd been a nurse for eleven years. I'd trusted that device with my son's life. And I'd never once asked what the green light was actually telling me.

 

Here's what it was telling me:

 

The battery is charged. And a number set by a regulatory body in 1998 has not been crossed.

 

That's all. Nothing more.

 

The Consumer Product Safety Commission requires CO detectors to alarm at 70 parts per million — and gives them up to four hours to do it.

 

Below 70 PPM? No requirement. The device can stay silent for days, weeks, months.

"At your workplace, 50 PPM means mandatory evacuation. In your child's bedroom, 50 PPM means the green light keeps blinking."

Safe Work Australia standard vs. residential CO detector standard

The Thing That Made Me Furious

I spent the next week reading everything I could find.

 

HVAC forums. Safety studies. Homeowner communities on Reddit.

What I found wasn't just about the threshold.

 

It was about what happens because of the threshold.

 

Because these detectors are calibrated for one specific point — and anything below that point can still trigger them unpredictably — false alarms are rampant. Families jolted awake at 3 AM. Fire departments dispatched. Nothing found. Repeat.

 

And what do families do after the third false alarm in a month?

 

They stop trusting it. They silence it. Some remove the battery.

 

One Reddit thread I found had hundreds of replies. These are real comments:

"Ours has gone off 5 times this month for no reason. My kids are terrified to sleep."

- r/homeowners

"My husband disconnected ours after the 4th false alarm. We use the gas fireplace every night now and I'm trying not to think about it."

- r/homeowners

She disconnected the detector. Then used a gas appliance.

 

And the HVAC tech I spoke to afterward told me something I can't stop thinking about:

 

"The same detectors that stay silent at 50 PPM will scream at nothing at 3 AM. Families learn to ignore them. Or remove them. And then the Gas heater / ducted gas heating runs all night."

 

The detector teaches you to ignore the very thing it's supposed to warn you about.

What I Found That Changed Everything

My brother-in-law is an HVAC technician. Twenty-two years. He sees ducted gas heating failures every single week.

 

I called him the night after the inspection.

 

I asked him one question: "What do you have in YOUR house?"

 

He didn't hesitate.

 

"Something that shows me a number. Not a light, an actual number. So I know what Caleb's breathing — what MY kids are breathing - without waiting for a crisis to tell me."

 

He'd been using VIGIL PRO for two years.

 

He'd recommended it to every family he'd worked with since.

 

"The green-light detectors are liability boxes," he told me. "They protect the manufacturer from lawsuits. A display that shows you real numbers - that's something that actually protects your family."

 

I ordered four of them that night.

The First Time I Saw Zero

It arrived few days later. I plugged the first one in outside Caleb's bedroom.

 

Three-minute calibration. Then the display lit up.

"Not a green light that might mean something or might mean nothing. An actual zero. That I could read. That I could understand. That couldn't lie to me."

I put a second unit near the ducted gas heating in the basement. 0.

 

A third in the kitchen. 0.

 

A fourth in our garage. 0.

 

I stood in the middle of my living room and I cried.

 

Not because something was wrong. Because for the first time in however long I'd lived in that house, I knew something was right.

 

I didn't hope. I didn't trust a light. I didn't assume.

 

I knew.

What VIGIL PRO Does Differently

There's a screen. With a number. Updated every second.

 

When Caleb's bedroom was at 43 PPM — VIGIL PRO would have shown me 43 in October. Not in March, after four months.

 

I would have called the HVAC company in October. Caleb would have had a normal November, December, January, February.

 

He wouldn't have needed headache medicine on school mornings.

 

And I wouldn't have to live with knowing what I know now.

 

Beyond CO — VIGIL PRO has a second sensor your current detector doesn't have at all:

 

Combustible gas. Natural gas. Propane. LPG. Methane. The things that don't just make you sick — they explode. Your CO detector has no gas sensor. Zero. It was never designed to have one.

 

VIGIL PRO covers both. In one plug. With four numbers on one screen: CO · Gas · Temperature · Humidity.

Two Ways This Story Ends

❌ The way mine almost ended

You trust the green light. You test it every month. It beeps. You go back to bed. Your kids wake up with headaches you blame on school. You see three different doctors who run every test except the one that matters. You find out in March, when someone else finally brings a meter.

✅ The way it can end tonight

You plug in VIGIL PRO. The screen shows 0. Every morning you look at it. 0. You know what your children breathed last night. Not a guess. Not a light. A number. And the number is zero.

The difference between those two stories is one screen. One number. One device that shows you what's in your home's air instead of waiting for a crisis to announce itself.

 

I replaced four detectors with four VIGIL PROs. Every morning I do what I now call the four-second check.

 

Four screens. Four zeros.

 

That's what safe actually looks like. Not a light. A number.

You're still breathing whatever's in your air right now. For the next 48 hours, VIGIL PRO is 50% off.

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"Seven years. Green light. Every test it beeped. I ordered VIGIL PRO to prove we were fine. It showed 52 PPM in our bedroom the first night. Cracked heat exchanger. I don't say this lightly that screen saved my family."

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"30 years as an HVAC technician. I've seen what these detectors miss. When my daughter moved into her first home, I drove four hours and installed VIGIL PRO myself. It's the only one I recommend. To anyone."

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© 2026 Home Safety Weekly · This article contains affiliate links. The author receives compensation if you make a purchase through links above. The events described reflect real cases reported by HVAC professionals. The Reddit communities and comments referenced are real and publicly accessible.

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