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Bar Soap–Easy Greening

Posted on August 30th, 2007 in Uncategorized by Jonnie Wright

Karen’s Naturals

Welcome

Here at Karen’s Naturals we specialize in products made for people with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity and those needing fragrance free personal care products. These products have been developed through the valuable impute and testing of people who live with MCS every day. We hope that you find products that work for you but if not please feel free to ask for customized formulations.

contact us at 623-340-1852 or karensnaturals@hughes.net

http://www.care2.com/greenliving/bar-soap-easy-greening-.html

By Melissa Breyer, Producer, Care2 Green Living.

It is said that Cleopatra bathed in milk, honey, and essential oils followed by gentle abrasion with fine white sand. How did we get from such a wholesome and luxurious cleansing ritual to today’s bar soaps that bubble with toxic and irritating substances, including petroleum-based ingredients? I don’t know, I just can’t picture Cleopatra cleaning herself with crude oil. Find out here what to look for on bar soap labels to ensure safe and soothing suds.

SIMPLE SOLUTION: While ancient Egyptian-style peeled grapes and bare-chested men with palm fronds might make a positive contribution to our beauty routines, toxic and irritating bar soaps most certainly don’t. Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic (FD&C) Act, personal care products and their ingredients are not required to undergo approval before they are sold to the public. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has banned 11 ingredients—meanwhile the European Union has made a list of 1,100 ingredients deemed too hazardous for use in personal care products. It has become the American consumer’s responsibility to read the labels: to make sense of the gobbledygook listed there and make an informed choice.

Although there are plenty of lovely soaps available, the majority of commercial brands contain one or more of these three synthetic components that you should try to avoid.

Synthetic Fragrance
Prior to the 20th century, fragrance was made from natural ingredients derived from plants and animals. After World War II a chemical revolution occurred and synthetic fragrance bloomed. Natural fragrances are more expensive and more elusive than synthetic ones, and were quickly replaced. How does one capture the scent of ‘morning dew,’ after all, without some laboratory wizardry?

The National Academy of Sciences reports that 95 percent of the chemicals used in fragrances today are petroleum-based synthetic compounds, including known toxins capable of causing cancer, birth defects, central nervous system disorders and allergic reactions. So while our brain is registering ‘lavender’ our bodies are absorbing petroleum—isn’t that a nifty little trick?!

Manufacturers are only required to print “fragrance” on the label—it’s their free pass to tuck in some secret ingredients. As well, a product marked “unscented” might contain a masking fragrance, it must be marked “without perfume” or “fragrance free” to indicate no fragrance has been added.

Since fragrance is anonymous on most labels, the best thing to do is to buy soap made from responsible manufacturers. See our favorites below, also check out the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics for a list of companies that have signed a compact pledging not to use hazardous chemicals in their products.

Sodium Lauryl Sulfate (SLS)
SLS is used not only for products to clean hands and body, but in products used to clean garage floors, greasy auto engines, and for carwash soaps as well. Also regulated as a pesticide, SLS is a suspected gastrointestinal or liver toxicant, and according to the National Toxicology Program it has shown moderate reproductive effects in experiments.

SLS is not a recognized carcinogen. However, the chemical is frequently combined with other substances can cause the formation of the carcinogenic substances nitrosames. SLS is the predominant chemical used for clinical testing as a skin irritant—that is, they use it to hurt the skin to test healing solutions.

Triclosan
In the United States, 75 percent of liquid soaps and nearly 30 percent of bar soaps are antibacterial. The main ingredient used to make a product antibacterial is triclosan—a chlorophenol compound from a class of chemicals that is suspected of causing cancer in humans. The structure of triclosan is similar to that of some very poisonous chemicals such as dioxins and PCBs, and has been shown to both depress the central nervous system and be hypothermic. The EPA claims triclosan can be a risk to both human health and the environment.

The EPA has registered triclosan as a pesticide. (And last time I checked, my hands weren’t infested with insects.) But let’s face it, we are a highly germophobic country. Perhaps we suffer from a collective unconscious memory of the Black Plague—or maybe we just believe the ads and think that using antibacterial soap really will keep those insufferable cold germs at bay. Yet more than one study has shown that antibacterial soaps are not significantly more effective at combating germs than regular soaps. Cleanliness is incredibly important—and plain old soap wages an admirably potent fight against germs.

More than just ineffective, these products are dangerous—triclosan has been linked to a variety of health and environmental problems. When washed down residential drains (as 95 percent of it is) it is delivered to streams and rivers, where it destroys aquatic ecosystems by killing beneficial bacteria in soil and waterways. (Antimicrobials can’t differentiate between good and bad bacteria.) Triclosan is persistent in the environment– and has now even been found in 3 out of 5 women’s breast milk.

So as it turns out, the superhero antibacterial soap is actually bad for you, bad for the environment, and potentially bad for the population as a whole. Laboratory evidence suggests that if the widespread use of anti-bacterial soap continues, stronger strains of bacteria can emerge—and we could be introduced to antibiotic-resistant super germs. In fact, the World Health Organization has launched a global campaign against the overuse of antimicrobials. By trying to avoid a cold, we could be faced with something much worse. On that note, let’s follow Cleopatra’s lead and cleanse with natural, luxurious ingredients. In addition to being all-around healthier products, makers of natural soaps do not remove the glycerine (as is done with many commercial soaps), resulting in a much gentler and less drying soap.

Some of our favorite soaps:

All of the soaps from A Wild Soap Bar are humdingers—big chunks of natural, homemade, olive oil soap that are just yummy—but their Honey Oat Fragrance Free soap is rich with goat’s milk, has a subtle honey scent, and is gentle enough for small babies.

If you’ve never used the very perfect Pangea Organics bar soaps, I have three things to say to you:
1.Indian Green Tea with Mint and Rose Petals Soap
2.Italian White Sage, Geranium and Yarrow Soap
3.Tunisia Olive Oil and Coconut Soap
(And make sure to throw out the box…in your garden: the packaging is made of 100% post-consumer paper and organic flower seeds and is meant to be planted.)

The heavenly Lemon Calendula bar from Earth Dance is flecked with organic calendula petals infused in olive oil, with sweet almond oil and citrus essential oils of bergamot, lemon and Litsea Cubeba.

I know you had asked a question about soap earlier…maybe this post will be a good resource for sensitive types

You might try Tom’s of Maine Unscented Natural Moisturizing Body Bar
Soap. I am ultra-sensitive to fragrances, as well as many natural
scents, such as sweet almond oil (which may be ’safe’ but is extremely
repellant), but this soap has been like magic.

The scariest sounding of the ingredients are actual vitamin esters,
and I have not had a problem with them - no reaction of any kind, just
soft, clean skin:

Soaps of Coconut, Palm (for Cleansing) (coconut and palm oils & soda
ash), Glycerin (for Cleansing) (vegetable oil), Vitamin E (From
Soybeans - for Conditioning) (tocopherol acetate), Jojoba Seed Oil
(For Moisturizing) (simmondsia chinensis), Olive Oil (For
Moisturizing) (olea europaea), Rosemary Extract from Leaves (To Guard
Freshness) (rosmarinus officinalis), Ascorbyl Palmitate (To Guard
Freshness) (vitamin C & palm oil), Chamomile Oil from Roman Chamomile
Flowers -for Odor Balancing (chamaemelum nobile)

Here’s a link:
http://www.drugstore.com/products/prod.asp?pid=38626&catid=64336

3 Responses to 'Bar Soap–Easy Greening'

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  1. Sidney Gendin said,

    on October 21st, 2007 at 6:58 am

    I would like your opinion about castile soaps and Ivory soap. Thank you


  2. on October 25th, 2007 at 9:25 am

    I’m sorry it has taken a long time to respond about the soap issue. I think if one is chemically sensitive, one must only by fragrance FREE soaps…even some organic oils and herbs will be reactive for chemically sensitive people so each person has to experiment. For us the only one that works so far is Dr. Bronner’s Peppermint Liguid soap. Maybe there are some others but we haven’t tried them yet….This one looks good if you click on the link and look at the ingredients.
    I haven’t tried it but it looks good on paper.

    Hand soap: Paul’s USDA-certified organic soap ($10.60/bar; www.paulsorganic.com)

    I would never use Ivory again. Most conventional soaps use petro chemical products to save money…so most people are covering their skin in petro chemicals! YUCK! I haven’t read the back of Ivory but the fragrance alone will hurt us…even if it says baby safe… parabens should be avoided in soaps.If you don’t know what the ingredient is, don’t buy it, in my opinion. Other chemically injured people will also say that if you can’t ingest the product, don’t put it on your body. I don’t go that far…YET.


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