7 Industry Lies That Only A Retired Chemist Will Admit
“You’re paying for the silhouette of the molecule, Pita, not the molecule itself,” Uncle Frank said, his fork poised over a roast potato like a conductor’s baton. “If they actually gave you enough of that ‘miracle’ peptide to change your skin, the jar would cost as much as your car, and it would smell like a damp basement.”
He spent behind the glass at one of the giants-the kind of company that buys up smaller brands just to bury their patents.
– Uncle Frank, Retired Formulator
Now that he’s retired to a small plot in the Hawke’s Bay, the NDAs seem to have lost their grip, or perhaps he just cares more about the truth than his pension’s fine print. He watched my cousin Pita apply a dab of a ‘diamond-infused’ serum and sighed. It was the sigh of a man who had spent three decades formulating the illusion of youth using little more than clever polymers and even cleverer ad copy.
I sat there, watching the steam rise from the vegetables, thinking about a twenty-dollar note I’d found in the pocket of some old jeans earlier that morning. It was a small, sharp jolt of reality-something tangible and valuable that had been hiding in plain sight. Listening to Frank felt the same way.