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- beauty (6)
- chemical free beauty (6)
- chemical-free (4)
- green cleaning (6)
- healthy beauty (12)
- healthy cleaning (6)
- healthy home (4)
- home (6)
- house cleaning (6)
- nontoxic cleaning (6)
- Recipe (7)
- May 20, 2008: New Wen Haircare
- May 14, 2008: Recipes for a Chemical Free Home
- April 25, 2008: Natural Household Cleaners and Why Use Natural Cleaning Products?
- April 24, 2008: FACIAL GLOW MASQUE
- March 19, 2008: Happy Easter
- February 21, 2008: Seven Words that can Change the World
- February 19, 2008: 20 Websites That Can Change Your Life
- February 18, 2008: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
- February 10, 2008: Baby Shampoo Awash in Chemicals
- February 9, 2008: My Mother the Aspara Dancer
New Wen Haircare
May 20, 2008 by sdelia.
Posted in chemical free beauty | Print | No Comments »
Recipes for a Chemical Free Home
May 14, 2008 by sdelia.
Recipes for a Chemical Free HomeHealthy Beauty RecipesNail & Hand Care For dry nails Dill And Horsetail Nail Bath For weak nails Dill & Horsetail Nail Soak Lady’s Mantle Hand Mask Cornmeal Hands Mask Lady’s Mantle Hand Lotion Heavy Duty Barrier Cream Heavy Duty Gardeners Hand Cream Banana Hand & Foot Cream Wheat germ Hot Oil Fingernail Treatment For More Information About Natural Healthy Home Click Here
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Posted in Recipe | Print | 1 Comment »
Natural Household Cleaners and Why Use Natural Cleaning Products?
April 25, 2008 by sdelia.
Natural Household Cleaners and Why Use Natural Cleaning Products?
by davidleebuster
You may know that by using natural cleaning products, doing so is safer both for you, your family and the environment. Many of the cleaners used every day in the home are made of toxic substances such as petrochemicals. Anyone who is health conscious is wise to use natural cleaning products. You should do some comparison research on natural household cleaners versus the chemical cleaners.
Thousands of synthetic chemicals have found creation in the past five decades. Many of them were fashioned from coal tar and petroleum to function as chemical weapons in a warfare situation. Sadly, many of the substances do not undergo any safety testing for their effect on humans. Rather, without our consent, they become additives to our water, food and daily products such as chemical cleaning products.
These unnatural things are included without alerting us of the risks they pose. There is a yearly process of thousands of new chemicals being introduced while crucial information is suppressed by the industry.
Do you know that there is little available information on the majority of these daily use chemicals? Less than one out of ten have been tested for reproductive, chronic or mutagenic effects while less than one in five have been tested for acute health effects. Many have not undergone testing for long-term health risks or for the influence on the unborn or even the combined effects on the health of humans.
Cleaning products that you pour out of a container expose you to toxins from the fumes you breathe and through skin contact. When spraying petroleum-based toxic cleaners, the chemicals become airborne which in turn introduces particles of the air-born chemical into your lungs when you breath. You can reduce these types of exposure when you and your family use health-friendly natural cleaning products.
Many laundry detergents do not even list the ingredients on their containers. However, ammonia, phosphorus, phenol and naphthalene along with other chemicals are commonly included in laundry detergents. Petrochemicals and other ingredients in detergents may cause such reactions as itching, sneezing and allergy problems as well as rashes and other health problems. Petroleum-based chemicals have the ability to be absorbed into the skin and enter the body from the residue that remains in your sheets, towels, clothing and other fabrics after washing.
Chlorine bleach is a widely used chemical, however, it is also a very strong corrosive. It irritates and burns the eyes, the respiratory tract and skin. When ingested, it can cause vomiting, coma or pulmonary edema. You should never combine bleach with ammonia or any type of acid toilet bowl cleaner since these mixtures produce toxic fumes.
Since many toxic cleaners are substances that cannot be properly processed by septic systems or sewage, they pollute our rivers and oceans as well as underground streams. Do you know that leftover cleaning supplies discarded into the trash turns refuse sites into toxic-waste dumps? This endangers the health of sanitation workers while producing pollution to the earth and its underground water workings.
Natural household cleaners and natural cleaning products do not have this serious environmental effect. You can help improve your health and better the environment by using natural household cleaners such as soap, laundry detergent and dishwashing liquid.
Petrochemical products use up much more energy by their creation from such chemicals while natural cleaning products are environmentally friendly. Do you know that if every American household would replace one bottle of 50-ounce petroleum-based liquid laundry detergent with a natural cleaning product, we could save 280,000 barrels of oil? That is enough to cool and heat as many as 16,000 homes in America each year.
We can enjoy cleaning our homes without toxins by using natural cleaning products since they only cost slightly more than non-natural products. There are essential and major health benefits for those who use natural cleaning products since they do not have exposure to the toxins and health hazards posed by using commercial household cleaners.
Can you protect yourself and your loved ones from the toxic exposure or injury of poisoning from non-natural products? To some extent you can, by storing all chemicals in the original containers well out of reach of children. Always read, follow and use the instructions as given on any product you use, especially on the amounts you should use.
Pay attention not to combine substances that cause fumes that are even more toxic. Read all labels before a recommended use and follow every precaution of safety. And if you have questions, be sure to contact the manufacturer.
Research and educate yourself as much as possible. Keep in mind that it is always safer to use natural cleaning products daily. Many of these natural household cleaners are competitively priced and available since they are truly natural cleaning products.
Petrochemical additives in products are hazardous to your health and there is no need to expose yourself or your family to them when you can use environmentally friendly natural cleaning products. You will find that they are friendly to you as well as friendly to those you love.
Copyright 2008 InfoSearch Publishing
About the Author
Find safe natural cleaning products online for a more clean and healthier home - David Lee Buster researches and writes for http://www.safemenopausesolutions.com - a popular website with articles on natural living.
Article Source: Content for Reprint
Posted in healthy cleaning | Print | 1 Comment »
FACIAL GLOW MASQUE
April 24, 2008 by sdelia.
Posted in beauty | Print | No Comments »
Seven Words that can Change the World
February 21, 2008 by sdelia.
Seven Words that can Change the World
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20 Websites That Can Change Your Life
February 19, 2008 by sdelia.
The internet has changed all of our lives, hopefully in a more positive direction. You can use these sites just for entertainment or you can use them to change your life. Many of them you visit all the time but it
’s time to look at them another way and harness their power.
read more | digg story
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Somewhere Over the Rainbow
February 18, 2008 by sdelia.
This little girl’s voice is so beautiful, I had to share it with you.
glumbert - Connie’s Got Talent
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Baby Shampoo Awash in Chemicals
February 10, 2008 by sdelia.
Baby Shampoo Awash in Chemicals?
Use of Some Infant Products Linked to Higher Levels of Phthalates in Babies, but Health Risks Disputed
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
Feb. 4, 2008 — New research suggests a link between the use of baby lotions, powders, and shampoos and higher levels of potentially harmful manmade chemicals known as phthalates in infants.
Researchers reported that babies exposed to all three products had levels of three different phthalate metabolites that were five times higher than babies whose mothers reported using none of the products.
All the infants in the study had evidence of at least one phthalate metabolite in their urine, even if they had no exposure to baby lotions, powders, or shampoos.
And the baby products were not tested, so it was not clear if they actually contained phthalates or if their use contributed to the phthalate levels seen in the babies.
But researcher Sheela Sathyanarayana, MD, MPH, of the University of Washington, Seattle tells WebMD that the strong association between use of the baby products and higher phthalate levels suggests that the products may be an important source of exposure. 
Posted in chemical free beauty | Print | 1 Comment »
My Mother the Aspara Dancer
February 9, 2008 by sdelia.
This woman made me realize that even though I’m 53 with many health issues, that if I lost my passion for life, it’s nobody’s fault but my own. I’m going to get healthy and start Karate lessons.
read more | digg story
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