Category Archives: Prevention

4 Ways to Remove Toxins From Your Diet

Spring is in the air, and many people use this season to detox and cleanse. This is a great idea, since we have dozens of toxins hanging around in our bodies.

These toxic chemicals most often arrive through food, so it is important to reduce consumption of the toxins in the first place.

Here are five ways to reduce toxins in your diet.

1. Go organic! The most important organically grown foods to consume are meat and dairy. Toxins are stored in fat, and when you drink milk from cows that are doused in chemicals (through food, antibiotics, growth hormone, etc) you are getting a concentrated dose of all of these. When you eat organically grown foods of all types, you dramatically reduce your exposure to cancer causing pesticides. Your health is worth the extra money these items cost.

2. Avoid artificial colors, flavors and sweeteners. Did you know that Red 40, Blue 2 and yellow 5 are all banned in Europe? Why are those colors in so many packaged foods (especially for children!) on American supermarket shelves? Aspartame is another fake ingredient in lots of our food that is banned overseas. It is linked to cancer and diabetes.

3. Use glass. BPA- a hormone disrupting chemical- is found in plastic and lines cans. When you use glass to store your food, you avoid that toxin! Some ways to do this:

  • Buy beans and tomato sauce in glass jars
  • Use fresh, seasonal fruits and vegetables from a local farmer’s market or join a CSA.
  • When buying these items at the grocery store, skip the plastic produce bag! You don’t need it!
  • Drink filtered water from your tap. Do not drink water bottled in plastic. You can find it bottled in glass, and use a stainless steel reusable bottle for yourself and kids. If you do use plastic for children, do not microwave food in them, and never run them through the dishwasher. This can increase toxic leakage by 55%.

4. Drink more water! Here’s a fact that should make you reach for a glass: if you are dehydrated, your body pulls water from the large intestine to use, which in turn makes you constipated. Do you really want that toxic water that has been sitting in your bowels to be recirculated into your bloodstream and around your body? I don’t. Drinking more water flushes out toxins, keeps your skin radiant, curbs hunger, combats stress and fatigue, and the list goes on. Our bodies are 65% water. Our brains are 85% water. Drink more water!

What is your favorite way to detox?

Mahalo For Removing Your Shoes

My four year old has been asking me questions incessantly since he began stringing words together.

Only now they are usually about much heavier things.

Who is my wife going to be? When am I going to die? Are there playgrounds in heaven? How did I come out of your tummy? Why does Grandaddy know everything? How did the dinosaurs leave? If the earth is spinning, how am I standing still? How do baby giraffes nurse? How when we talk does sound come out? And these are all the questions that I can remember him asking  from today between 2:45pm and about 5:30.

I’ve been trying to keep my answers short and sweet, so as not to overwhelm him with ideas too complex for his 4 year old brain to comprehend. I add thin layers if he keeps pressing.

So this morning when he asked me “why do we take our shoes off when we go inside our house, but other people don’t take theirs off when they go inside their houses?” instead of giving him all of the reasons we do, I responded with, I guess because we’re part-Hawaiian.

To which he quickly replied, “but I’m not part-Hawaiian, I’m part New York!”

Yes, yes you are. Even more reason to leave your shoes at the door.

The truth is, we never wore shoes in our house growing up because my Hawaiian-Chinese mother never wore shoes in her house growing up. So it is simply a habit I’ve done all my life. Now, in retrospect, I am so thankful it is one that has stuck for many reasons.

I didn’t want to go into excruciating detail with my son about everything that he could possibly track inside our home if he wore his shoes inside, but I will do it here.

Reasons We  Don’t Wear Our Shoes In the House (other than being part-Hawaiian, part-new York, part- New Mexican, part-Tennesseean, part-Texan)

  • An EPA study showed that people (and  pets) who walk on pesticide-treated lawns can pick up the toxins for  up to a week after application. The amount of pesticides that are tracked in exceed pesticide residue from conventional (non-organic) produce. This is crazy! You could go out of your way to strictly buy organically grown fruits and veggies, then unwittingly traipse through your neighbor’s yard and into your house and your good intentions go out the window.

pesticides in grass

  • Lead is also tracked into homes on shoes. Even though lead has been removed from paint and gasoline, lead in soil and dust in the environment has been, and will continue to be, a source of lead poisoning. One study showed that 98% of lead dust found in homes is tracked in from outside. Young children absorb up to 50% of lead that is taken into their body, and even low levels of lead in the blood may harm them.
  • Allergens such as pollen and pet dander ride in on soles of shoes, then wreak havoc on allergic souls.

All this, and I haven’t even gotten into the two things most people would think about- dirt and germs. Walk down the street any day and at any given moment you can play a gross-out game of iSpy on the sidewalk: I spy with my little eye something disgusting that I don’t want inside my home!  Spit, dog poop, old food, gum, cigarette butts, ew.

An added thought- if we haven’t worn our outside shoes inside, and haven’t tracked dangerous pollutants into our home, I am not as likely to want to use a harsh, toxic, chemical product to clean the floors.

Children are more likely to be affected by these hazards because their bodies are still growing and they spend so much time playing and crawling on the floor. Plus they put ALL things in their mouths- many of which they have found on the floor.

Our children depend on us to make their homes safe.

This is in no way meant as a judgement on those who don’t remove their shoes, as I know how hard it is trying to juggle the kids and all the “stuff,” and getting in and out the door can be challenging. Adding one more item on the to-do list hardly seems to make sense. This is more of a reminder to me why we do it. Even though it’s another thing that is a huge effort with few tangible results, I believe it’s worth it.

 

Some Women Are Still Confused About Breastfeeding

Overheard conversation  today between two otherwise normal looking thirty-something women:

“She breast fed her first daughter for like one month, and her second one for like zero months.”
“I’m not going to breastfeed at all. I don’t like it.”
“Me either. I think it’s gross.”

My husband noticed my chin on the floor and told me not to stare.

I’m eavesdropping, I said.

“Well you don’t have to be so obvious.”

What century is this? It was all I could do not to grab my 19 month old and proudly start nursing him then and there, mere inches from these misguided souls!

In fact, the only thing that stopped me was the dress I was wearing- with no access whatsoever to my breasts.

I’m glad I was wearing that dress- it saved me from what was sure to turn into a public scene. (As if we weren’t already causing enough of one with 2 small wildly active boys in a restaurant!) I’m sure it would have only hurt the cause.

hand knit breast hat
Too bad it wasn’t cold enough for this hat!

But back to the question at hand. How can we reach these women? If hospitals are ceasing to give free formula samples, and news stories populate the airwaves claiming breastfeeding could save 900 babies a year, how can we convince these women that it is the furthest thing from gross you will endure as a parent?

I am here to tell you it is not easy. In fact I’m writing this from my bed as I have a random case of mastitis. With a 19 month old nursling I’m convinced this is some sort of record.

And I know there are very real reasons women can’t breast feed- breast reduction surgery, dehydration in childbirth, certain medications taken by mother, going back to work, etc.

But “I don’t like it” and “It’s gross” are not valid reasons.

Some people disagree with my stance, but I agree with the Surgeon General. Breastfeeding should not be considered a lifestyle choice.

It is a public health issue.

Recycle! Can You?

Activists and journalists perch in the big cities and lecture inform us about our responsibility to recycle, while laying on the guilt inducing statistics such as “only 80% of glass is recycled in the US,” and “even though 75 percent of solid waste is recyclable, only about 30 percent is actually recycled.”

So I study the articles and go to “green” rallies and dutifully recycle. I have often wondered why everyone doesn’t recycle, when I naively assumed it was as simple as designating a separate bin for recycling and tossing in our bottles and cans.

Well now my eyes have been opened.

While temporarily living in my hometown of 50000 people for two months, our family responsibly collected cans, rinsed out glass, broke down cardboard and set aside plastic so I could recycle it- the way I did when I was growing up there. Back then I would take all of our cans and sell them- and the recycling center always paid me in two dollar bills, which added an even more exciting element to the whole process.

Last month when there was no room to collect any more- as boxes and bags were spilling out the back door onto the patio- my husband sorted everything neatly and off I went to my old recycling stomping grounds.

Not only was it closed, but it was boarded up and cobwebs had formed.

Huh.

So I kept driving, and kept driving until I found lots of recycling centers and salvage yards, yet all of them only collected metal.

I found a place that would recycle cardboard boxes, but nothing with any paint on it and no plastic.

salvage yard
I asked the salvager why they didn’t recycle glass, and he said “we used to, but someone came in and upset the apple cart, and cut every one out of the middle.”

Ok.

So I pulled over and called my sister (master sleuther) and asked her to try to search on the internet for a place that took plastic and glass. She sent me to one place which was supposed to have recycle bins, but they were no where to be seen.

My sister called 3 places, including the state recycling board. No answer at any place. She finally called Target who said they did have a glass recycling receptacle and we were welcome to bring our bottles. At this point I’d been out driving around for an hour and a half, (how eco-friendly of me!) so I came home and sent my husband to Target with the glass.

He called me from inside the store-
“I’m a little embarrassed- I have a shopping cart full of glass and I have no idea where to take it.”

I told him to ask customer service. He was totally uncomfortable, but did it. A few minutes later I got this text:
“No glass. Heading to dumpster”

It is all so frustrating! It actually physically hurts me to throw away anything that I know can be recycled- I feel it in my stomach. But here we are, going out of our way to do our part to save the planet, and we are met by road blocks every step of the way.

This is in one small town in the US- a town filled with thoughtful and considerate citizens who love the planet.

Even a playscape at the local park is made from recycled material:

recycle go green

I can only assume it is equally as difficult to recycle in most of the other 19,000 towns of similar (if not smaller) size.

So I have to ask- why is it so hard, and what can we do about it?

Skin Deep

It’s February. AKA the month when new year’s resolutions become a distant memory.

I’ve been thinking a lot about lifestyle and how the little choices we make every minute of every day are what truly matter.

It’s exciting and grand to declare some big goals, and if they are reached, congratulations! Seeing progress or making noticeable change is the best way to stick to resolutions. It feels good, and no one wants to “go back.”

But even with tangible results, it’s easy to slip back into old habits. I think of Oprah wheeling out 67 pounds of fat in a wagon onto her stage and declaring- “I will not let this happen again!”

Most of us know how that story continues- she did in fact gain all that weight back, and lost it and gained it a few more times until she decided she was happy with her size.

It’s even more difficult to stick to practices that don’t offer any immediate results. This is true of many of the things we do as prevention- whether it’s avoiding certain toxins in the food supply such as trans fat or only eating organically grown food.

Recently I’ve been thinking specifically of personal care products. There are numerous studies that show the ingredients in lotions, shampoo, deodorant, tooth paste,  etc. on drug store shelves in the US contribute to everything from birth defects to cancer.   In fact, only 11% of the 10,000+ ingredients approved for use in our personal care products have been tested for toxicity.

That is not ok with me.

More than 60% of what is applied to our skin is absorbed into the bloodstream.

1 in 5 cosmetics or skin care products contain chemicals with a direct link to cancer.

Women are exposed to an average of 126 different ingredients on a daily basis.

 

Exactly NONE of those ingredients are required to be tested for safety under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act.

What’s more, there are 400 products on the market in the U.S. that contain chemicals prohibited for use in cosmetics in other countries.

Therefore, I make a huge effort to use only products that contain natural ingredients with a proven safety record. And I definitely use only natural products on my children. In fact, I went so far as to take my own products to the hospital so my baby’s first bath would not include soaking in toxic chemicals.

I can’t remember when I made this radical switch, but it’s been many years. This has not been easy- I spend more money on organic products, have to meticulously study labels, run the risk of sweating through clothes, have dishes that might not get as clean as they could with petroleum derived ingredients, and give up the smell of “fresh laundry”.

However, since I have no immediate, tangible results from the use of natural products, I occasionally ponder throwing in the towel to be “normal” again.

It seems like it would be easier.

But I can’t forget the studies I’ve read or the epidemic numbers of unexplainable cancers in our country and I am jolted back to reality.

There are so many things in life that are out of my control, so I control the things I can. This includes what I put on my body, and the products I use on my children.

To find out about your products, check out Skin Deep–  an invaluable website where you can find product and ingredient safety ratings, health information about cosmetics ingredients and smart shopping tips.

http://www.wholeliving.com/sites/files/wholeliving.com/ecl/images/content/pub/body_and_soul/2007Q4/ba_1007_natbeautyrub_l.jpg