Thursday, November 18, 2010

Howling at the Moon!

I have been thinking about taking yet another step in my eco-friendly mission. What is this step you may ask. Well, if you are a woman, you most likely use disposable pads, tampons and/or panty liners for about a week each month. I'm always trying to be green as I can be and encourage others to be as well. Goodness knows that this planet needs some help! So, I got to thinking about how much waste I create every month just from disposable menstrual products and it's a LOT when you consider how many years the average woman menstruates. I had heard about reusable cloth pads in a self sufficient magazine and I have since been researching the different companies that make them. Many of the products that I came across just didn't have the 'right' shape, some had plastic or nylon backing and some of the companies didn't have what I wanted in stock.

I finally discovered GladRags and I am so glad that I did. The shape is similar to disposables and they even have wings that snap together on the under side of the underwear. They come in several different super-cute prints as well as organic cotton. After reading almost everything on the website I finally went for it. I bought the Deluxe Pad Kit in the Zebra print, a few extra night pads and a set of the organic cotton panty liners. Of course I just had to get the beautiful Queen Bee carrying case and a few other items for carrying for my investment. (You can be eco-friendly and stylish!)

I have to say, that I was so excited to receive my order. I know, being excited over getting some pads in the mail may seem overboard but there's more... These pads are so darn cute and so unbelievably soft and comfortable. AND, to top it off, they are very easy to clean and they are extremely absorbent. What more could I ask for? The main reason that I decided to make the switch from disposables to reusables is to reduce the waste that I create but I didn't expect to actually look forward to my period (yes, GladRags are that comfy). I also just saved myself a ton of money by making a small investment now that will pay off again and again.

So, if you are considering or haven't yet considered, please think about making the switch from disposables to reusables. You will save so much waste and toxic chemicals from entering the environment and you'll save money doing it.

Below is an excerpt from the GladRag site with some interesting facts about conventional products.

Using a product one time is not enough.  Think of all the tampons and pads you use each time you menstruate and then think about how many times you will menstruate in your lifetime.
If you menstruate 340 times in your lifetime, using 20 disposables per period, that amounts to 6800 pads or tampons thrown away. Now consider all the women using disposables in the world. If 500 million women use disposables throughout their lifetime, that's 3.4 trillion pads or tampons thrown away! Not only is landfill space taken up, but these materials cannot be reused and are no longer part of the resources available to us.
Then, of course, there's all that packaging, (wrappers, boxes, applicators) that are also thrown away, all the garbage bags used, all the diesel fuel used to truck those products to the stores week in and week out. 

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Holly Lennon's,  Website
Independent Chartreuse Eco-Consultant

Hello and welcome to my blog!

I'm new at this, so please bare with me while I get the hang of this. As many people are, I am very passionate about the environment. Almost a year ago now, I joined the 'Green Revolution'. I was already recycling but there was so much more that I could do. In my quest for knowledge and understanding of environmental issues and how to help, I discovered a company with the same passion for green as myself. I became an Independent Chartreuse Consultant and have fallen in love with all the goodies the company offers. With the help of this company, I have learned that there are honest to goodness NATURAL alternatives to the chemically-laden, endocrine disrupting, harmful and polluting products that we use in our everyday lives.

While I am in business and of course wanting to sell my products, another goal of mine is to educate consumers. If I can get even one person to think about their choices and take a step toward a healthier life style, then I have been successful. Even if that one person isn't buying healthy alternatives from me, at least that is one more person in the world that knows they can make a difference too and I think that is pretty great.

Below is an excerpt from the resource section on my website about organic labeling in personal care products. I found it to be very helpful when I started my Eco mission. I hope you will enjoy it too.

Consumers often pick up shampoo or soap with the term “natural” or “organic” hoping for a guarantee that the product is free of harmful ingredients. Unfortunately in the personal care industry, it is not that simple. The term “natural” has no legal meaning. And natural does not necessarily mean safe, after all tobacco is a “natural” ingredient and many toxic chemicals are “derived” from naturally occurring substances. The term natural has been around for many years and most consumers have learned to ignore it, so the personal care industry has focused on the word “organic.”
Unlike the food industry, there are no regulations in the personal care industry around the term “organic”. You can name your company Suzie’s Organics without a single organic ingredient. So many in the industry has been clamoring for certification rules to separate the “real organics” from the “imposters”.
But the issue is extremely contentious. For one thing, organic does not necessarily mean healthy (as evidenced by the organic Poptarts at Costco.) Nor are organic compound necessarily nontoxic. “Organic" compounds are produced by living or formerly living things that contain carbon which means that petrochemicals, human waste, horse manure, compost and Mercury can also be considered "organic.” To confuse matters even more rules for organic certification were written for the food industry. Manufacturers are restricted to using food ingredients so most traditional emulsifiers and preservatives can not be called organic. But personal care products require preservatives to prevent contamination.
Cosmetic companies are responding differently. Some companies are sticking with their existing formulas insisting they are safe. Some are slapping organic on their labels hoping consumers don’t know any better. Others are creatively modifying ingredients, in some cases eliminating safe, effective ingredients in order to adhere to the ever changing certification standards. A few have come out with 100% organic, preservative-free products but these generally contain warnings to keep the products out of high heat and direct sunlight and avoid placing unclean fingers in the product. This can be a tough sell for lotions and soaps that are applied with fingers and get stored in gym bags.
Many companies have been lobbying to change or reduce standards to meet the needs of the industry. Products can now be certified organic if they contain 70% organic ingredients. Some companies have figured out how to manipulate the percentages by using organic “teas” or “juices” as their base instead of water (which can not legally be included in the percentage calculation.) Hopefully, all this upheaval will lead to genuinely safer products in the long run. In the mean time consumers are left confused, and often misled, by all of the marketing hype.
So if we can’t rely on terms like natural and organic, how can we determine the relative safety of our personal care products? Most consumers assume that the FDA provides some level of guarantee for our products. But the FDA does not regulate personal care products the way they regulate food and drugs. The FDA granted self-regulation to the cosmetics industry back in 1938. This ruling has never changes. Products can be marketed without testing or government approval of ingredients. The cosmetic industry will tell you that their ingredients have been used safely for years. But nobody has tested the long-term affects of our continuous exposure to an average of nine personal care products a day, with roughly 120 chemicals spread among them. Scientists have found many common cosmetic ingredients in human tissues, including industrial plasticizers called phthalates in urine, preservatives called parabens in breast tumor tissue, and persistent fragrance components like musk xylene in human fat. Do the levels at which they are found pose risks? For the most part, those studies have not been done. All we have to go on are animal studies or industry reports of workers with high-level exposure.
Europe, Canada, Japan and many other countries have taken a cautious approach in recent years, banning ingredients where the existing data was compelling enough for their panel of scientists. They have also recently passed a law that will force cosmetic companies eventually to prove the safety of their products. In the United States we have no such laws so several consumer advocacy groups such as the Environmental Working Group have tried to make the issue more transparent by compiling toxicity studies from publicly available databases around the world. They have rank ingredients, as well as some branded products by their perceived hazard based on existing studies.
What can you do to ensure the safety of your products for now? Unfortunately, there are no short cuts, no simple labeling words that ensure the safety of a product. Be informed and know the facts, however frustrating they may be. Ignore the marketing fluff and look at the ingredients list. Avoid products which don’t give a full listing of ingredients. Terms like fragrance and preservative are a cop out. We have compiled a list of ingredients to avoid in personal care products based on the Environmental Working Group database and other sources. We will continue to add to our personal care line as we identify high-quality, reasonably priced, effective products, with the safest ingredients possible.
Where do we stand on organics? We will advise you to buy as much organic food and cotton as your budget will allow. When it comes to personal care products, ignore the fluff and check the ingredients. We will seek out certified organic ingredients where ever possible, in balance with our goal of selling effective, reasonably price products. Though the majority of our organic ingredients are certified, as a manufacturer (read mixer, pourer, and bottler) we have to go through our own certification process in order to be able to sell our products as certified organic. We hope to be able to sell many of our products as certified organic by the end of the year.