I Could Just Crawl into a Hole: My Bag Smelled Like Seirogan!
During my recent English conversation lesson, the room suddenly smelled strongly of Seirogan. I vaguely thought maybe someone had taken Seirogan just before class—but the culprit was me.
After I got home, I checked the pouch I carry in my backpack. To my disbelief, it was emitting an incredibly strong Seirogan odor. Inside the pouch, I keep painkillers, stomach medicine, band-aids, and some smartphone cables.
Upon closer inspection, I found that the aluminum sheet packaging of my Seirogan coated pills (not the classic black pills!) was partially torn, and the pills themselves were cracked. Maybe they got bumped somewhere, but I never expected the coated pills to smell so strongly—definitely caught me off guard.
Although I’m not a frequent user of Seirogan, I truly believe it works wonders when I have stomach pain, so I want to keep carrying it. This means I need to store it in a more airtight container to prevent this happening again.
By the way, I searched for ways to get rid of the smell from the pouch and found this interesting article. It seems many people face the same problem (haha).
How to Remove Seirogan Smell from Bags: 8 Methods Tested
In my case, simply leaving the pouch in the shade for about a week did the trick, and the smell finally disappeared.