Art | Resources
Eco Wool or Organic Wool for Mattress?
Question from Stacey
I need to purchase bedding and am trying to keep costs down. I have bedding from Lifekind (latex mattress), and Shepherds Dream (wool mattress). I am happy with both, and will most likely purchase from whoever offers the best deal. I did just discover White Lotus (from your site) and like the prices; however, to choose organic wool adds to the cost significantly (otherwise I would choose White Lotus this time).
I’ve read that you have an organic wool comforter from Shepherds Dream, but I thought they did not have organic wool. Shepherds Dream states they use “Eco Wool” which seems just as good to me. So did you specifically request organic wool from Shepherds Dream?
I see White Lotus uses virgin wool from New Zealand, but not sure if I am comfortable with this. I’ve read of arsenic detected in this wool…
Can you tell me if you still prefer organic wool over New Zealand wool, or even “Eco Wool?” Thanks!
Debra’s Answer
First, here is the description of EcoWool from the Shepherd’s Dream website:
Eco Wool Batting
All of our products are filled entirely with our Premium Eco Wool Batting. Eco Wool is entirely derived from local flocks of sheep that are raised following specific criteria that ensures top quality wool. Our Oregon grown, Eco Wool batting is produced at the Woolgatherer Carding Mill, located down the road from Shepherd’s Dream.
And here’s what they say about organic wool on the same page:
Is Eco Wool Organic?
This is a question many people ask. Eco Wool is not certified organic. At this time very little organic wool is available on the market; almost no organic wool is grown in the United States. We find that Eco Wool is actually cleaner and of higher quality than the organic wool currently available. Eco Wool is produced to the highest standards; some of these standards are beyond those specified for organic materials. We have access to organic wool from New Zealand that is pure and clean, though due to it being only one type of wool, it doesn’t offer the kind of resilience or bounce that our Premium Eco Wool does. Our Eco Wool is a blend of about 7 different types of wool varying from fine to coarse in order to create the most ideal wool fiber for use in bedding. We prefer the quality, loft and sustainability of our Premium Eco Wool, though if you require certified organic wool, you may call our office to put in a special order.
Now let me tell you from my own personal experience. I was actually there many years ago when the Eco Wool standards were written. I helped write them. Certified organic or not, the intent and practice is as good if not better than certified organic.
Concrete Paint and Sealer
Question from Joshua
My brother has a project where he simply wants to paint the concrete floor in his bedroom with white/off-white, then color, then a seal/finish. Can you recommend a paint that can be used on concrete?
Debra’s Answer
Here’s a link where you can find nontoxic paint and sealer for concrete: Green Building Supply: Concrete & Masonry Sealers.
I love painted concrete floors. I think it can be a beautiful and creative solution.
How to Choose and Find a Holistic Vet for Your Pet
My guest is Linda Ferguson, Managing Director of VetLocator, an online directory of more than 40,000 veterinary and pet health care professionals including Emergency, Holistic and House Call specialty directories. VetLocator also helps pet owners get immediate dialogue with both pet professionals and other pet owners in the community in their very popular Q&A section called Ask A Pet Pro, which has 100s of pet owner questions and answers covering a wide variety of topics related to pets. Raised from an early age by a mother who embraced holistic solutions and a natural lifestyle, Linda knows the negative impact industrialized living has on the health of all living things, which is why having holistic alternatives for pet owners while serving all pet owners is important to her. In 2002, she used her skills as an internet marketing maven to to help launch VetLocator after seeing the need for pet owners to have choices on who to choose to take their pets to. We’ll be talking about holistic choices for pet care, why choose a holistic vet, how to choose the best holistic vet for your pet, and more. www.debralynndadd.com/debras-list/vet-locator
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
How to Choose and Find a Holistic Vet for Your Pet
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Linda Ferguson
Date of Broadcast: June 27, 2014
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world even though there are toxic chemicals in everyday consumer products and in the environment and in the air we breathe and the food we eat. It seems like, every day, we turn on the news and find out about yet another toxic chemical.
There are some places in the world where there are not toxic chemicals. And there are a lot of things that we can do to remove them from our homes and from our bodies and be happy and well and productive and do whatever we want to do with our lives.
So, today is Thursday, June 27th 2013. And I’m here in Clearwater, Florida. And we’re not having a thunderstorm. But I think we will later. Yesterday, oh, my God, we had a thunderstorm. I think this is actually one of the most extreme weather places in the world. We had a thunderstorm yesterday. I was in the middle of it. The wind was blowing so hard that the rain was horizontal. I was driving, and I couldn’t see two inches in front of me. The rain was really coming down. We’ve even had this week some tornadoes and water spouts. So it’s been a lively week for weather in Clearwater, Florida.
Today, we’re going to talk about how to choose and find a holistic vet for your pet. And my cats must know that’s what we’re talking about today because they’re romping all around and making a lot of noise in the background. I don’t know if you can hear it or not, but they’re here right with us. I got kittens a couple of months ago, and now they’ve already turned into cats.
But before I introduce my guest, I want to just talk for a moment about sweat. Now, this is the hottest time of the year—or I should say the sun is at its peak. And it’s hot (though it might not be the hottest). But what happens when we’re out in the heat is we sweat. And it’s a natural thing for our bodies to do to remove waste.
Sweat does two things. it removes waste. And it cools your body off. And in pre-industrial times, our bodies went through this natural cycle of not sweating in the winter, and then sweating in the summer. So it was like your body is like giving itself its own sauna.
And nowadays what we do is that we wear antiperspirants and go sit in air-conditioned buildings. And so our bodies don’t have the opportunity to do that seasonal sweat. And so then we need to go sit on a sauna or a steam room. But it’s absolutely free to go outside and sweat!
So, I want to encourage all of you to become accustomed to being a little warmer than maybe you’re comfortable with and get your body sweating. Have a little moderate exercise so that you get hot. And make sure that you drink some pure water and take a little full spectrum salt to replace the liquids and the minerals that gets lost in the sweat.
This is the ideal time to gently be removing toxic chemicals from your body by a vey natural process. And if you want to read more about that, you can go to my website, ToxicFreeNutrition.com. And there’s a blog post that I just put up there today. You could read more about it.
So, my guest today is Linda Ferguson. She is the managing director of Vet Locator, an online directory of more than 40,000 veterinary and pet healthcare professionals including emergency, holistic—which is what we’re interested in—and house calls specialty directories.
Hi Linda.
LINDA FERGUSON: Hi Debra! Thanks so much for having me on.
DEBRA: Well, thank you for being here. Tell us how you got interested in making, of all things, a pet directory, and why holistic.
LINDA FERGUSON: Well, it’s interesting. I was raised by a mother who embraced health foods and healthy living early on.
And in our household, we had a lot of animals. So I experienced eating health foods, doing regular cleanses and sharing that experience with our animals.
Then as I grew up, I got interested in the Internet. I married someone who is a programmer. And we put together a website for veterinarians when we moved to a new area and discovered that there was no easy way to find a holistic vet.
So, VetLocator.com is a directory. It actually has over 67,000 different veterinarians. But a lot of them will be two or more to a practice. And we divided those into specialties so it would make it easy for a pet owner to find just what they were looking for because when I looked—it’s been over 12 years now—I couldn’t find what I was looking for.
DEBRA: I think that’s the way a lot of people get started doing what they’re doing. I started doing what I was doing because there was no place for me to find non-toxic products.
And today, I think I am the leading directory of non-toxic products. If you want to find something non-toxic, I’m the person to come to—not that nobody else is doing it, but I think that I have more than anybody else. And I think you have more than anybody else too. If somebody is looking for a holistic vet in your area, they’re likely to find it on your website.
LINDA FERGUSON: Well, it’s interesting. There are different sites that have holistic vets. And there’s an association of holistic vets. Sometimes, going to different sites, you’ll find that it’s either hard to find exactly what you’re looking for, or in the case of googling keywords, they’re usually location-specific, but you don’t get the variety that you might want when you’re looking for a specialty, which is you want everything. You want everything and everyone that’s around you wherever you’re sitting.
So, I’ve used your site before. And I have to say, one of the things that most impressed me about it was how aesthetic it is and how easy it was for me to find things.
DEBRA: Oh, thank you.
LINDA FERGUSON: And I’ve used other sites to look for holistic things for pet owners. One of the unique features about our website is, if we don’t have an answer for a pet owner, well, actually, one of our team members will try and find that answer because I know how important it is as a pet owner, when you’re stuck trying to figure out exactly what to do with an ill animal who may not be able to communicate to you well, and you need help now, where do you turn?
So, we try and have an answer. If we don’t have an answer, we’ll try and help you get that answer which is to find a professional that fits your needs.
DEBRA: I do that too. That’s why I have my Green Living Q&A, so that people can write in and people can call me for a consultation. But even people who don’t want to pay for a consultation or can’t afford it, they can still write in to my Q&A and get answers about all kinds of things—including pets actually.
Linda, do you have pets?
LINDA FERGUSON: I do! I happen to have two cats. They are office cats.
You know how sometimes, in the way of the universe, you get something that is life-teaching for you?
DEBRA: Yes, yes.
LINDA FERGUSON: So, we have two cats that are part of our office. And it’s a brother and sister that looked nothing alike.
They’re both rescues. The sister is a runt, the runt of the litter. And so even though I had great experience helping other pet owners with pet issues, I’ve always had extremely healthy animals until now.
And so my approach to healthcare has always been a very simple one which is, if at all possible, don’t go to a doctor. Most things can be handled by diet, exercise, staying away from toxins, and a lot of liquids. And it left me a little less sensitive to people who really arrive with problems.
So, the cats, I have two cats. One is healthy, big and does great. And the little one has an immune deficiency. And so she’s extremely sensitive to fleas or anything that bites her. And she’ll get a histamine reaction that just drives her insane.
DEBRA: Well, you can tell us more about that after the break. We’re talking with Linda Ferguson. She’s the managing director of Vet Locator at VetLocator.com. And after we come back, she’s going to tell us more about the different resources that Vet Locator has to offer as well as what’s going on with her cat. And we’ll probably talk about my kittens too.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio.
And in order to give you full disclosure, Linda and I actually both live in Clearwater, Florida, and we’re friends. We know each other. And during the break, we were talking about Linda going for a walk in the beach this morning and how beautiful that was.
Linda, why don’t you tell everybody about what you saw this morning? And then, I want to say something about that.
LINDA FERGUSON: Alright. We had dramatic storms yesterday (which Debra alluded to). Our sky would go from blue sky, maybe a few scattered clouds, to a raging thunderstorm, black with tornado warnings within literally 10 minutes or something.
So, this morning, after all that drama, it was very nice and cool. This time of year in Florida, it’s usually really hot, over 80° (80° to 85° when you first wake up). I went to the beach with my husband this morning. And it was very cool up because of the storm. It was beautiful. And we saw just a few feet offshore pods of dolphins. There were lots of new babies and they were jumping and frolicking, literally clearing the water which is unusual. And a lot of birds…
And it’s the time of year when sea turtles come in from the gulf and they nest. So there are areas that get roped off so nobody disturbs the nest. So it was just this strolling, cool air with lots of frolicking birds and dolphins and fish jumping out of the water and sea turtles nest dotting the sand for an incredibly beautiful morning stroll.
DEBRA: That sounds so wonderful! And I know the beach. I go walk on the same beach that Linda walks on. And so I can imagine everything that she’s saying. I’ve seen the dolphins. It’s wonderful to live in a place where dolphins are just jumping out of the water when you go to the beach. It’s not something that I ever saw in California. So, Florida is its own interesting paradise.
But what I was thinking when she was talking to me about that is that we have our pets that are domesticated animals, but we also have our own relationships with the environment, the wild animals. You may not feed them. And they may not come purr in our hands like my cats do. But we have a responsibility for them in the same way as we have a responsibility for our pets in that we have a responsibility to have a good, healthy environment, and that they can live and grow and flourish and be happy and healthy just like anything else.
When we use toxic chemicals in our homes, they go into the environment, and they cause damage to the animals that are in the environment.
A couple of days ago, I was talking about that they measured levels of lead in songbirds and found this ever dangerously high levels of lead in songbirds. They’re picking it up from a lead mine. There’s many things you can look up on the Internet about animals being affected by toxic chemicals in the environment, not the least of which is Silent Spring by Rachel Carson where she talks about the death of songbirds from pesticide exposure.
So, Linda, tell us the difference between holistic and traditional vets?
LINDA FERGUSON: Holistic and traditional. Well, traditional veterinary care is the same as traditional medical care where the veterinarian has been trained in a protocol that involves the use of a lot of drugs and vaccinations and so on as well as how to fix and set bones and other things. If the veterinarian is a surgeon, then how to perform surgery and so on.
And it really does pattern and align itself to the choices that we have for our own health all the way down to—traditional vets, very often, do not get along with holistic vets.
DEBRA: In the same way doctors don’t get along with alternative doctors.
LINDA FERGUSON: Uh-huh, exactly the same. But what I’ve seen over time—
Oh, one of the features on our site is called Ask a Pet Pro. It allows pet owners to do like your Q&A. They’ll ask a question.
And I used to have regular vets answering questions. And some would be very free with their advice. And others would say, “You know, you’re going to get sued if you give any advice to a pet owner. They’ll just come back and sue you if it doesn’t work out.” So, I saw that and thought, “Okay, that’s pretty interesting.”
But if a holistic vet would give advice and a regular vet saw that advice, it started this controversy. And I learned early on our website deals with both sides. And there are a lot more traditional veterinarians than there are holistic vets. And the training can be different.
So, what I did was I always just take that non-controversial point. And over time, I found that there is a way that both those things exist together, and that many traditional veterinarians were bringing holistic or complementary veterinary care into their office because it has a place.
DEBRA: I think that it does. I think it does. And I’ve seen that. I’ve been in this field for more than 30 years in also dealing with my own healthcare. I’ve seen, over time, from the point where complementary healthcare was just considered something that an MD wouldn’t touch to now there being much more integration.
I have an MD who tells me to take vitamins before he’ll give me a drug. And I think that that was not the case not too long ago.
So, there was something I wanted to ask you. And now I forgot what it is. But I’m sure I’ll remember.
LINDA FERGUSON: I do have something to say if that’s okay.
DEBRA: Oh, go ahead.
LINDA FERGUSON: I started talking about two cats. Animals teach us lessons. We just need to listen to them. So the youngest cat has an immune deficiency…
DEBRA: And now we have to go to break again. I promise, Linda, when we come back from the break, we’re going to talk about your two cats. I won’t talk about anything else until we talk about your two cats.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. And my guest today is Linda Ferguson, managing director of VetLocator.com where you could find a holistic vet near you.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is my friend, Linda Ferguson, managing director of VetLocator.com where you can find holistic vets.
And I had promised Linda that she can tell us about her two cats…
LINDA FERGUSON: Well, I’m just going to finish this story on the two cats. The youngest cat has an immune deficiency. She was born with it being the runt. And the lesson that I learned from owning this particular cat is that pet owners who have a challenged animal, an animal that has a health issue, have choices. The choices can be all drug, all natural or a combination of both.
I’ve always leaned towards all natural, as I’ve said before. But in this instance, it did not help this cat. And she suffered. The alternative was all drug which is primarily Prednisone and other things that handle histamines and that I knew would shorten her life. So, what I opted to do was a blend.
Now, for this particular cat—and for all animals—she also have the choice of keeping them indoors 100% of the time (which just limits their exposure to things that might trigger problems), keeping them outdoors 100% of the time (which exposes them to a lot) or a blend of in and out.
I tried keeping her indoors, and she spiritually started to die. She started to waste away—and not because she wasn’t receiving adequate care, but because her soul needed to be outside.
DEBRA: I agree.
LINDA FERGUSON: Yes. And it was just remarkable. She was skin and bones and was losing fur. And then, I let her go in and out. She immediately put on weight. She started itching more. Her furs grew back quickly because she was in her natural environment. And what I need to do today is blend drugs—which I keep that at a minimum because drugs typically will shorten your animal’s life when they depend on them, but they can suffer too much otherwise.
And I keep pests off of her by dusting her with diatomaceous earth which she will lick off. It keeps the fleas off. I have to do it every couple of days. And she looks like [unclear 20:24] because she’s dusty. But then, that as a solution also is very good for internal and intestinal parasites as well. And so she’s doing well. She’s doing very, very well. So it’s a good thing.
DEBRA: Yes, I also use diatomaceous earth on my cats. And when we got these two kittens, they actually had a little bit of a flea problem. But I put on the diatomaceous earth, and it quit right up. They aren’t scratching or itching. No fleas around. It works very, very well.
I remember what I wanted to say. Well, I want to say two things. Now, I want to say about six things. Okay, let’s do this.
The other day, I had a guest on, Nathanael Johnson, where we were talking about his book, All Natural, which the conversation was about the difference between the industrial viewpoint of doing things versus the all-natural viewpoint. And our whole hour was devoted to that. I think that we live in a time where we want to be all-natural. But even if we wanted to do it 100%, we often can’t for two reasons.
One is that we’re tied to the industrial complex, most of us, in order to get things like food and water (although we could go off the grid. I mean, there are ways to do it). But if you want to have things like the Internet and the life that we have now, movies and cars and things, then that’s an industrial life. And you can’t do it 100%.
But there are many, many things that we can do to be moving in the direction of being more natural. And it’s really important that we do that because our bodies really are of nature. And I think that pets even more so.
They’re animals. They’re not thinking in the same way that we’re thinking as human beings. And they need those cues from nature. They get excited, the cats get excited by seeing the birds and the lizards or the grasshoppers. It’s like they belong with them. And I think that animals need to have a natural environment. They need to be able to go in and out. That’s my viewpoint.
But I also think that there’s a problem today with—this goes to the holistic vets. There’s a problem today with animals getting illnesses that they didn’t use to get that are human illnesses like cancer and thyroid problems and things like that. And I think it’s because of the toxic chemical exposure.
I don’t think that there’s been a lot of studies done. I know that there’s one book that used to be on print that I don’t think is any longer. But I don’t think there’s a lot of studies on what are the effects of toxic chemicals on the home on household pets.
There are studies on how household toxics will affect humans, but not pets. And pets are much, much smaller. We get into this when we’re talking about children and their exposures to household toxics versus adults in that their bodies are smaller. So the concentration of the amount of toxic chemicals compared to the ratio of their body size is much, much greater than an adult would have. And if you compare the size of an adult human body with the size of say a cat, it’s just so many times. I can’t even calculate how much more they’re getting in relation to their body size.
So if, for no other reason, people who love their pets should have a non-toxic home.
LINDA FERGUSON: I agree with you. There are a lot of regulations that require a pet owner to apply toxics and poisons to their pets.
DEBRA: What kind of regulations? Tell us about that.
LINDA FERGUSON: Vaccinations, vaccinations in the immune system.
In most city living areas where there are cities, you’ll find that there are requirements that you have your pet vaccinated for a particular stretch of time. And those vaccinations are toxic to your animal. And most animals will build up a level of vaccine in their system that doesn’t disperse. It just continues to build up.
So, one thing that pet owners do is they do—I think the term is “titer.” But it’s drawing blood to see what the levels of vaccine are as to whether they need a new one.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. We’re here with Linda Ferguson, managing director of VetLocator.com. And we’re talking about toxic chemical exposures that affect your pet and finding a holistic vet. And we’ll talk more of these subjects when we come back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. And my guest today is Linda Ferguson, managing director of VetLocator.com where you can find a holistic vet, ask a question and get connected with the right professional.
Linda, in the last segment, we were talking about your choices with your cats about being part drug and part natural. And before we go on with another subject, I want a second thought. For me, personally, as a human body, I am always looking to be as natural as possible—and also with my pets. I think that’s the right thing to do because that’s our nature. Our bodies come from nature.
But we also live in an industrial world. There are illnesses that our bodies have that are industrial. And I think sometimes I find it necessary in my own life or with my pets to—where the natural thing doesn’t work.
And sometimes, the natural thing doesn’t work. And it’s not because nature fails in my opinion. It’s because we’re being exposed to all these toxic chemicals that are out of the realm of nature, and we can’t always use natural thing to handle the problem.
So, I just want to say that I’m totally in agreement with you, that if there comes a time where it’s a life-saving thing, or not even waiting until there’s a question about it being life-saving, there may come a time when we’re very grateful that those things are there. But we don’t want to take the risks of using them unless it’s absolutely necessary.
So, Linda, tell us some of the services that a holistic vet would offer.
LINDA FERGUSON: Here’s a list of things that you can search by on our website. You can search by acupuncture, aromatherapy, chiropractic, Bach flower essences, Gold Bead implants, herbal treatments, straight holistic (just a generalized term), homeopathy, hydrotherapy, massage therapy, NAET allergy treatment (which is a very extensive treatment using the allergen to cause someone to not be so allergic by a gradient approach), oxygen therapy, physical therapy, prolotherapy, reflexology, Reiki, T-touch or therapeutic touch, and then holistic pet workshops so that the owners learn how to apply some of the treatments to their pets, as well as a pet communicator (you can look up a pet communicator on our website).
DEBRA: Like the horse whisperer.
LINDA FERGUSON: Like a horse whisperer, yes.
DEBRA: Yes, yes. Well, I think you probably communicate with your pets really well.
LINDA FERGUSON: I do!
DEBRA: I do too. And my cats, I’ve had cats—all my pets. I’ve never had a pet that wasn’t a cat. But I noticed in the past that there are certain ways that my cats would communicate with me. If they wanted food, they’d kind of herd me over to the food bowl.
But these cats that I have now, they communicate with me with pictures. And so, all of a sudden, I’ve got a picture in my mind that “Oh, I better go feed them.” And I think that’s pretty cool. I like that.
LINDA FERGUSON: That’s interesting.
DEBRA: I just get an idea. There was one night—we have a cat door, so they can go in and out. And there was one night that one cat was inside, and the other cat was still outside. And this one inside just came and got me and brought me over to the cat door. And she was just really broadcasting to me “You need to find the other cat.” And it was very interesting to see how clearly I could get that intuitive message from her.
Okay, so what are the most popular treatments?
LINDA FERGUSON: It’s a blend. But I wanted to bring up something here because my experience in working with pet owners—and a lot of times, a pet owner will say, “Who do you recommend?” And just like working with a doctor, the very first thing that a pet owner needs to find is someone who has similar beliefs as they do, and yet knows a lot more.
DEBRA: I love that. Well, that would apply to choosing a practitioner as a human too.
LINDA FERGUSON: Sure!
DEBRA: Yeah.
LINDA FERGUSON: It’s challenging. And I have an interesting story again about the same cat, the same poor, little cat that I have. A friend was watching her. She got out over the holidays when we were gone. And both the cats got out. Someone took the brother and adopted him right away. And someone different turned the little one into the pound.
And so, we got both the cats back. But she was so traumatized that she immediately got very ill. It was still the holiday season.
And it was over the weekend. She started sneezing and wouldn’t eat. And I couldn’t find a regular vet that was open. But I did find one that was a homeopathist. I’ve never used that as a treatment, but I knew that this cat would die if she didn’t receive treatment.
And so, in she went. And the practitioner was formerly a veterinarian who chose to go a holistic route and voluntarily gave up his license to practice traditional veterinary medicine.
DEBRA: Wow!
LINDA FERGUSON: Yeah, that was pretty interesting. He tended to be somewhat of an angry man person to person. But person to animal, he was incredible. And I could tell, the energy that he gave to my cat saved her life. She had to take drops and do a variety of things. But she almost immediately responded to the treatment.
And my observation was that he was certain he could save her life. And because he was certain, I was certain it would work as well. And because of both of our certainties, the cat responded in that same way.
The end shot was she’s still alive and doing well today. I have a huge respect for people who learn a challenging thing.
Homeopathy is unlike anything I’ve experienced before. And it definitely has a very good place for people who want to try it to see if it works. It’s an interesting technology and interesting application. I don’t use it that often. But when I need it, I’m glad it’s there.
DEBRA: Yeah, I had some homeopathy done on my own body. It’s a very interesting thing. I used to live in Marin County, California. So I think I’ve tried all the natural remedies, alternative remedies that exists in Marin County, California. I think I’ve experienced them all.
LINDA FERGUSON: Yeah, I have to make a trip out there. I like that area a lot.
DEBRA: So you mentioned some treatments that I’m not familiar with in that list that you gave us earlier. Gold Bead implants?
LINDA FERGUSON: Yeah, again, it just depends on the pet owner’s belief and who they’re working with. It’s one of the treatments that they may be offered. It’s not something that I have a whole lot of familiarity with. I think that acupuncture and putting certain metals that create an energy around a certain area of the cat’s body is what that is. But I’m not 100% certain what it is. I know that a number of our practitioners have offered it. And they’re the ones who swing very far to the left of alternatives.
DEBRA: Yeah, yeah. Well, I think that there’s a lot of different practices out there, all of which can be appropriate at the right time for the right person and the right pet. It’s just a matter of making your choice and getting a good match, wouldn’t you agree?
LINDA FERGUSON: I would absolutely agree. I wanted to really just validate you for your work with toxins.
DEBRA: Thank you.
LINDA FERGUSON: I think what a lot of people miss is that if you start out in a very toxic-laden environment, if you surround yourself with things that are toxic to you, to your pets, in the space that you’re in, you start out already having to solve problem […] And maybe they don’t affect you directly, but as in the case of me inheriting a very fragile pet, it affects the pet. And it can affect your children.
And if you would just take steps in your life to eliminate those things, you’re already so far ahead of the curb that, should you become challenged later, it’s a lot easier to fix the problem.
DEBRA: Yes, it is, it is. It’s like why get up every morning and have your life start by bottling toxic chemicals when it’s so easy to remove them.
We’re almost at the end of our hour together. I so appreciate you having been here, Linda. I want to just close by saying that I talk a lot about humans taking liquid zeolite as an easy way to remove toxic chemicals from your body. I’d love for people to know that pets also can take liquid zeolite. You can just put it in their water bowl, a few drops, and it will remove toxic chemicals from their bodies too. And since they’re exposed even more than we are, that’s something that I think is a good thing to do.
So, if you just go to ToxicFreeTalkRadio.com, look for the magnet and click there. It’ll tell you all about using zeolite.
And I think that that’s about all the time we have today. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd.
LINDA FERGUSON: Thank you, Debra.
DEBRA: Thanks, Linda.
How To Remove Odors of Almost Any Kind From Almost Any Thing
My guest is Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven, who knows more about removing odors than anyone I know. Daliya became “a chemical injury statistic” while working as a realtor, viewing and showing toxic new homes or homes with new carpets, paints, and cabinets. After becoming extremely disabled in 1993 with multiple chemical sensitivities, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, and a broken thyroid, Daliya started educating others on the dangers of toxic chemicals and later began providing healing healthy solutions for a nontoxic environment. After 20 years Daliya is still providing solutions for surviving in a toxic world. We’ll talk about the products she sells that remove and control odors of various types and the thought process she uses to solve odor problems. www.debralynndadd.com/debras-list/nirvana-safe-haven
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
How to Remove Odors of Almost Any Kind From Almost Anything
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Daliya Robson
Date of Broadcast: June 26, 2013
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world. Even though there are toxic chemicals all around us, we can protect ourselves by choosing less toxic products for our homes and workplaces by removing toxic chemicals from our bodies and all kinds of other things so that we are in control, being healthy, happy, productive, and doing whatever it is we want to do in our lives instead of being sick from chemical exposures.
Today is Tuesday—well, it’s Wednesday. It’s Wednesday, June 26th 2014. And I’m here in Clearwater, Florida. And it’s getting to be a little cloudy, so there may be a little thunderstorm coming before the show is over. If you lose me because the power goes out, I’ll be right back. But I think it should probably be fine.
Today, my guest is Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven. And we’re going to be talking about removing odors of almost any kind from almost anything.
Daliya is my go-to girl for when somebody asks me a question about how do I remove this odor or that odor. She’s the one I ask. And you can ask her too.
But before we get to Daliya, I want to just read you a quote. I send out every day a little newsletter called Words of Wisdom that has my favorite quotes. And I’ve been collecting them for so many years. I have more than 2000 quotes. And the other day, I sent out one that said:
“When we are grateful for the abundance that is present in our lives—love, health, family, friends, work, the joys of nature and personal pursuits that bring us pleasure—we experience heaven on earth.”
And that was said by Sarah Ban Breathnach who has written a number of bestselling inspirational books. And I just want to remind us, I just want to keep mentioning, we’re talking about toxic chemicals and their dangers and things that are difficult in the world and making changes to protect ourselves, but there are so many things in life that the greatest pleasures in life are beyond physical things that may be toxic or that we need to find a safer alternative for.
Having love and family and friends and work that we enjoy and being out in nature and doing what we love, all those things are not toxic. And they’re the most important things in life.
So, I think it’s important to keep perspective that these are the important things. And in order to do those things, we need to have things in our life that are not toxic so that we have our health and we move forward with doing what we want to do.
So now, I’d like to introduce Daliya Robson. Hi Daliya. Thanks for being with me.
DALIYA ROBSON: Hello, hello. And thank you so much for your work. Thank you for your work.
DEBRA: You’re welcome.
DALIYA ROBSON: What are your questions? Oh, by the way, what we should do because I may not have all the scientific explanations, I’ve got flyers and brochures with details, give people my phone number and tell them to leave their address clearly, and I’ll send them a catalog like product use, guidelines. There’s four pages on zeolite. There are three pages on
Mystical. There’s TuTuff and all kinds of sprays. And I might not be able to go over the science of it very easily… .
DEBRA: Well, you probably won’t be able to because we won’t have time for all of that. But we will give your phone number.
It’s 1-800-968-9355. I’ll give it again, 1-800-968-9355. And Daliya’s website is simply NonToxic.com. So she’s very […]
DALIYA ROBSON: Oh, by the way, I must tell you, my website, I wanted to upload a new library, and it distorted the whole website.
DEBRA: I saw that.
DALIYA ROBSON: You saw that? It’s chaos! So, I’ve asked my expert to fix it. Actually, he was the cause of the chaos because he did something to make that go.
So, don’t rush to my website, but just write it down—or go down and forgive me for the mess.
DEBRA: Well, I just went there, and I saw it, but I could still read it.
DALIYA ROBSON: You can read it, but I still need to apologize. So don’t rush. And if I’m not in, leave your phone number or your address and details—and even message or whatever the issue is. I’ll get back to you with brochures and call you back.
Okay, let’s go!
DEBRA: Okay! My first question is—I know you’ve been on the show before, but I’m sure that there are people listening that didn’t hear your introduction before. So why don’t you tell us about how you got interested in toxic chemicals and handling odors and what your experience is in this.
DALIYA ROBSON: Oh, I got poisoned by chemicals. And I became another statistic for chemical injury—multiple chemical sensitivities, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, broken thyroid, brain fog from food. I was completely disabled.
I started a website to warn people about chemicals. And of course, the sentences were incoherent (and maybe they still are). And my daughter says, “How can you have a website with all these mistakes?” I said, “I’ve got brain damage!” She said, “Well, they don’t know that.” I said, “Anyone that’s been chemically injured will know that.”
But here’s the thing. That’s how I started. People ask me what to do. And I needed to know what to do. So I spent 20 years researching, I say, how to survive in a toxic world. And I kind of got it right, you know?
DEBRA: Yes, you did.
DALIYA ROBSON: …for my own protection.
And the first thing is to have absolutely nothing synthetic, toxic, in a bottle, or anything, in a tin. Don’t have it in your house.
Don’t even buy it.
DEBRA: I agree.
DALIYA ROBSON: A piece of soap that works as a hair shampoo, that’s all you need in a bathroom, simple things like that.
The first thing is to avoid it all.
But then, if you have a situation, you need a solution. So maybe you could ask what you need to ask.
DEBRA: Okay! So, what I really like to hear is about your different products that you have for removing odors. But before we go into each one of them, I know we were talking the other day, and you were saying, “Well, it really depends on what it is, what is the odor that you’re trying to remove. And then, you need to choose the right method. And it may or may not work.” But you’ve got a nice handful of tools that people can work with.
So, we only just have a couple of minutes before we need to go to the break. So why don’t we just take those couple of minutes for you to show us what is your thinking process if I were to say, “I have perfume.” You probably want to know what is the thing, the odor, you need to remove and what is the material you need to remove it from.
So, let’s say that somebody has perfume in a wood cabinet, how would that process go?
DALIYA ROBSON: Okay! Okay. Well, let’s say perfume in other people’s bathrooms, 20 years of detergents and perfumes and cleaning materials. Well, it depends how bad it is and how long. But what I would do is I would start with something simple like Mystical. It’s not going to do the whole lot. Mystical lifts of odors. Photocatalytic Spray lifts a lot of odors.
But if it’s a closet of 20 years, and you can’t change the wood, you can do the Mystical, then you could cover up with carbon fabric. If that isn’t enough, you could put in a few packets of zeolite. If that doesn’t work, you could seal it six times.
But if it’s just from one year, it will work very well. If it’s 20 years of odor, it might be best to change the wood in the closet. It just really depends.
But the zeolite helps. The Photocatalytic Spray changes odors into carbon dioxide and water.
DEBRA: Okay. So we’re going to take a break now. We’re going to explain what all those things are, Mystical and zeolite and Photocatalytic Spray. We’ll just go through one by one all the different things. You can explain it.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. And you can find out more about the show at ToxicFreeTalkRadio.com.
My guest here is Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven. And we’re talking about removing odors from almost any kind, from almost anything. We’ll be back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven. You can call her at 1-800-968-9355 or visit her website at NonToxic.com.
Okay, Daliya, let’s start with Photocatalytic Odor Control. Now, I’m looking at your website…
DALIYA ROBSON: Yes, this is a simple 2% titanium dioxide that works with the effective ultraviolent and sunshine and changes a chemical or a biological odor—tobacco, wood smoke, musty closets, urine, mold, blood, pet odors—it would change that to carbon dioxide and water.
For example, I had a situation where they put a new roof in my house, but they didn’t take away the old insulation. So I had a musty smell in my bathroom. So I paint—I can’t be bothered standing to spray, although if you have a very big area, you can buy a fogger. I just paint that particular ceiling and wall with Photocatalytic.
I have a UV light in my bathroom. And for at least two or three years, I don’t smell anything. Maybe next year, I won’t. But that’s how I would use it.
In a new car, if the dog peed on the carpet, you could use various things. You could use Mystical in the same way (which is a non-toxic carpet cleaner). You could spread zeolite and then vacuum it up after a day or two. Or you could use a Photocatalytic if things are very bad. You would spray it on, leave the lights on, and forget about it. And in a day or two or three, there would be no odor.
It depends. If you have a constant odor like in a basement or a crawl space, you could use the Photocatalytic as long as you have light there. Spray all the walls and the ceilings. You could use zeolite on the ground. And then, you would cover it with TuTuff which is a vapor barrier that’s completely inert. And that would stop mold smells coming from the ground.
DEBRA: Wait, wait, wait. Back up for a minute. What did you call that?
DALIYA ROBSON: TuTuff. TuTuff is a vapor barrier, which are—let’s say crawl spaces are really bad places. Or even if you just had a flood and you haven’t got time. The insurance hasn’t come yet, and the place is moldy, and you can’t fix it yet, you would spray or paint the wall or the ceiling with a Photocatalytic. You would put a UV light on. After a couple of days, you would put the TuTuff which is a vapor barrier over it. So the odors, if there’s anything coming through, you could block it. And you would do that in the basement as well.
DEBRA: Is that like T-O-O…?
DALIYA ROBSON: No, T-U-T-U-F-F. It’s a vapor barrier for building houses, but it’s inert. There’s no odor. And it’s absolutely indestructible. Now, here’s another…
DEBRA: Okay, I’ll have to look for that. Wow! I never heard of it.
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, I mean we’re just talking about basements and molds and different ways of blocking fumes.
Now, let’s say somebody has to go home to a hotel, and you’ve got toxic carpets. Well, if you’re there for a long time, you could send them a gallon of Mystical and ask them to spray the carpets and the furniture with Mystical. If you’re coming for two nights, you could cover the carpet with zeolite if you have it in the car, or you could cover it with carbon fabric, or you could even cover it with TuTuff. It’s a big piece of plastic. The only problem with that is you slip and slide around. But as an emergency, that would block the fumes for long enough.
If I had a serious problem in my house—like I have a very old home. And the condo people, the authorities, are not very good about fixing stuff. I could smell mold from the old insulation. They wouldn’t do anything about it. So I took TuTuff and plastered it against the wall and had another wall board put against it. So, my kitchen is a half an inch smaller than it was before. I’m going to block this 30-year old insulation from me because they won’t do it.
So, I put the TuTuff against the wall, put a new wall board, and then of course put my new kitchen against that.
DEBRA: What about using foil?
DALIYA ROBSON: I don’t know much about foil. I hear a lot of people do it. But I don’t know how long it lasts. I mean the TuTuff is indestructible.
DEBRA: Well, foil, I’ve been recommending for years to people because this is what I learned to do 30 years ago. You could use regular aluminum foil, like heavy-duty aluminum foil. And the weight I don’t think matters in terms of blocking the toxics. It’s just that it holds up longer. So, I use heavy duty.
And you could also get aluminum tape. I’ve heard of people wrapping their entire telephone in aluminum tape.
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, that sounds good. I’ve had a lot of people doing that. I’ve never done it myself.
DEBRA: And then, there’s foil-backed building paper which gives you the blocking of the foil, but it holds the foil together because it’s got paper.
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, that sounds good.
DEBRA: Yeah, I think that between TuTuff and the foil, that somebody could block anything if you have a whole wall that needs to be done—or the inside of a closet or something.
DALIYA ROBSON: Yeah, sounds good, sounds good.
DEBRA: We need to take another break. We’ll be back after the break and talk more with my guest, Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven about the different ways that she handles different types of odors. She’s got a lot of information, so stay tuned.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven. Her phone number is 1-800-968-9355. And her website is NonToxic.com.
And if you have an odor problem of any kind, she’s the person to talk to because she has a lot of experience and unusual product—I would say her products are unusual in the sense that you don’t see them everywhere. You’re not going to go to your local store and find these kinds of odor removers. They work! And she has experience with them.
So Daliya, tell us now about Mystical because you’ve been mentioning that.
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, Mystical was originally a carpet cleaner and a spot cleaner. But the manufacturer found that it lifted odors from everywhere even vinyl. This is very important in a new car with vinyl dashboards and ceilings, and children’s toys.
Everything that a child uses—their little chair in the car—everything is vinyl or plastic.
Now, I don’t think it works so well on plastic, but it’s fabulous on vinyl. So if you have new equipment, and it’s got those vinyl hoses, if you have…
DEBRA: Well, people ask me about hoses in the washing machine.
DALIYA ROBSON: No, no, not in the washing machine. No, no. It’s too expensive. What you do with new clothes with formaldehyde or odors, you soak them in a basin overnight. I’ve even left it two days. Then you hang it out in the sun. The sun helps lift the fumes. And then you wash it. I find that it does not work on nylon and synthetic stuff, but it works very well on cottons—so new sheets, new clothing.
If you have a jacket, for instance, or a suit, you can’t soak that, but you can spray the outside and hang it out in the sun for days. And then, you turn it inside-out, and you spray the inside and hang it out.
I’ve managed to do that with clothing that a very good friend insisted on giving me. I said, “Oh, my God! I can’t handle the Downy.” So I said, “Okay, I’ll hang it outside with Mystical and whatever will be will be.” I gave most of them away, but I have to keep a few of them, so my friend sees that I’m wearing her clothes. And I would say that they’re 90% effective.
But they were out in the sun for about a week—inside and outside, and inside again.
DEBRA: Do you know what the active ingredient is?
DALIYA ROBSON: No, it’s a trade secret. And I have material safety datasheet here for people. You could drink it. It’s so safe.
I’m suspecting that it works like photocatalytic, but he’s not prepared to tell us.
If there’s nothing toxic in it, they can do a trade secret thing. People who are afraid to use it end up not having the advantage.
I’ve had people who’ve said, “I react to the Mystical,” and that is not correct. The Mystical smells like water. But you react to the odors it’s lifting out.
So, if you have a toxic carpet, and you spray it—not a new carpet, but just one that’s been contaminated with Febreze or other cleaning—then the odor is worse before it’s better because the Mystical is lifting out the fumes. And then, you would shampoo again. That’s for a carpet.
For vinyl, it’s fabulous. I bought a cheap $180 sauna. So I put Mystical on the outside of it, left it outside for two days, and Mystical on the inside, and now my little plastic sauna works with no odors. You know those infrared saunas where your head sticks out?
DEBRA: Yeah!
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, you can pay $2000 or $3000 or you can pay $180 and a bottle of Mystical.
So, that’s how it works. It lifts vinyl smells. If you have a vinyl floor…
DEBRA: So, do you think that it’s actually changing the chemicals in some ways so that it isn’t there like in the Photocatalytic.
You said that it changes it to carbon dioxide and water. Is it just removing the odor or is it actually removing the chemical exposure?
DALIYA ROBSON: It’s removing the fumes. I mean if there was blood there, it will remove the bloodstain eventually. If there was urine, it would remove the urine. If there’s chemicals, it removes the chemicals.
DEBRA: That’s pretty amazing.
DALIYA ROBSON: It changes it to carbon dioxide and water. But it has to have sunlight—either sunlight or a UV light.
DEBRA: That’s for the Photocatalytic.
DALIYA ROBSON: Yes. But for the Mystical, it works the same. And that’s why I’m suspecting it might be a photocatalytic process, but it’s not admitting it. It’s a trade secret, so it’s not telling us.
DEBRA: But on the Photocatalytic, what that does is—well, photocatalytic means that you need to have light in order to make the catalyst happen.
DALIYA ROBSON: That’s right. And Mystical doesn’t work without light either. That’s what makes me think it’s very similar.
DEBRA: Oh, okay, okay. That was the part that I didn’t understand.
DALIYA ROBSON: Yeah, I think it’s the same, but he won’t tell me. He says, “You can make it in the kitchen, and I’m not going to tell you because then I’ve lost my business.” But everybody asks me. And the people who don’t trust me end up still living with their mold and their formaldehyde on their clothes. I keep saying, “Look, you’re living in a house full of formaldehyde. Isn’t that worse than trusting this safe product?”
DEBRA: Well, yeah, I think it’s worth trying things. But if you have a situation where you have toxic chemicals and you need to do something about it, why not try something…
DALIYA ROBSON: People are scared, people are scared, especially if they’ve tried things and they got worse.
But anyway, that’s the Mystical. That’s the Photocatalytic. You use it anywhere, everywhere. It doesn’t always work 100%.
DEBRA: Why would you chose one over the other?
DALIYA ROBSON: Because one is cheaper. For instance, if you go into a house, and you have an enormous house, and it’s something that you’re just about to buy, but there’s something wrong with it. What I would do is get 10 gallons of Mystical and a fogger, spray absolutely every corner from top to bottom, put in a half a dozen UV light, spray the carpet, the closets, the walls, spray everything, wait a few days, come in, and then, if you need to, you seal the walls (if not, it’s better).
DEBRA: Okay! So, we need to take another break. This is fascinating. You’re giving me a lot of good ideas. People do ask me these questions. You have a lot of great solutions.
DALIYA ROBSON: Right! Now, the Photocatalytic…
DEBRA: Wait, wait, wait. We need to go to break.
DALIYA ROBSON: Okay, okay.
DEBRA: We can continue after.
This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. We’re here with Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven. And we’ll be right back to talk more about how to remove odors of almost any kind from almost anything. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And we’re here today with Daliya Robson from Nirvana Safe Haven. Her phone number is 1-800-968-9355. And her website is NonToxic.com.
So Daliya, we’re in our last segment here.
DALIYA ROBSON: Oh, Debra, I have to tell you how to use the Photocatalytic in a very, very important manner.
DEBRA: Alright!
DALIYA ROBSON: Let’s say somebody’s got two little children, always sniveling, always with colds. You take every single toy they have, and you spray it with Photocatalytic. Preferably, get a fogger because you use so much less. You spray all the toys, and you put them out in the sun. And there will be no germs there for two years.
And you spray the handles of the bathrooms. You spray the toilets perhaps. And you have a UV light on in the bathroom.
You’re free of bacteria for many years as long as there’s the light on. I would use that.
DEBRA: That is very important because people use some very toxic antibacterials. And if you can use that to kill germs, that’s amazing and something that everybody should be doing.
DALIYA ROBSON: And I have to tell you this because we have to understand how cynical our government is. There was a company selling Photocatalytic to me. And they were put out of business because they called it a pesticide. They’re not allow to say that. They’re not allowed to claim that it will kill the SARS virus. They’re not allowed to say anything like that.
But here’s another place that I would use it. And I did it a few years ago. When I went into surgery, I was scared of re-infection.
So I sprayed all the things in my room—the bed, the table, the handles of the bathroom, the rail in the bathroom, even the little remote that they give you for the TV. And I put a UV light of my own in the room. And I thought, “I at least have to protect myself from some other infection.”
DEBRA: I think that’s so important to know. I was just thinking…
DALIYA ROBSON: Yeah, something like that, yes.
DEBRA: Yeah, yeah. Okay, good.
So, I want to make sure that in the time that we have left that we mention activated carbon salt, zeolite. And you mentioned sealing, using something to seal for six times.
So, let’s start. I just want you to explain these other three options so that people can see the wide variety of things they have to work with. So, if you were going to seal something, what products would you use to seal?
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, it depends if it’s particle board or what. There’s AFM products for sealing particle boards.
DEBRA: Yes, I’ve used those.
DALIYA ROBSON: The AFM products have seals to seal walls, painted walls. If you have a new floor or you have an old floor, you want to reseal it with Polyureseal. So AFM has many products that are much safer.
But I want to warn everybody never to put two or three coats on in one day. You have to have a thin coat and wait a whole day for it to cure before you put another coat on. If you don’t do that, you smell the first coat and the second coat through the third coat. So, even though it says up to 1 ½ hours, you can do another coat, never do it. Wait a day. And then, it works.
DEBRA: That’s very good advice.
DALIYA ROBSON: And the carbon fabric, carbon absorbs toxic chemicals in water purifiers and air purifiers. So if you had a fabric with trillions of little particles, it’s going to absorb the chemicals on a shelf, on a drawer, in a hotel room over furniture, over mattresses.
The zeolite that you provide people with for removing toxins in the liver also removes fumes from the closet. But of course, it’s not…
DEBRA: Yeah, the zeolite is wonderful stuff. It removes no matter where you put it. It will absorb toxic chemicals.
DALIYA ROBSON: It will absorb. And moisture, and moisture.
Now, it’s rather heavy. I mean if you have a musty basement, and you have to put 12 or 24 packets of that, they will work. But in this case, like a musty closet or a basement, I would use the Photocatalytic on the walls and the ceiling, put a UV light on, and it’s more effective. But not everybody has heard about that, but they have heard of zeolite. And zeolite will do that too. It will absorb fumes and moisture.
And let me think what else. This little booklets, I have four or eight pages on all these things. So if anybody wants to know more on how to use it—
Like in a refrigerator, if you put zeolite in there, you’re going to absorb the moisture. The vegetables are not going to rot. It will absorb the ethylene gas from the fruits. So that’s not going to rot. And things last longer. Very, very healthy stuff to have around.
DEBRA: People are accustomed to putting in baking soda in our refrigerators for odors. But this will also absorb the moisture and the ethylene gas, you’re saying?
DALIYA ROBSON: No, using zeolite is more effective. You can buy it in bulk. I mean if you have some old socks that you’re not using, you can put some zeolite sand or chips in the socks, sew up the edge, and put them all over the place. Children, adolescent’s running shoes, I mean what could be worse?
So, they have zeolite powders that the children can do their feet with—or the husband […] And they have zeolite powder for feet, for deodorant. They even have carbon soap for deodorants.
DEBRA: Wow! I never heard of that.
DALIYA ROBSON: You absorb the bacteria under your armpits, and there’s no odor.
Anybody can call me. I mean if I’m not in (because I do tend to have lots of medical doctor appointments at my age), leave a message of any length. Leave your phone number. Leave the issues. And I’ll get back to you.
DEBRA: Tell us more about how somebody might use the carbon [felt]. There’s a picture on the website. When I first heard about this, I had a hard time visualizing its design. It’s like a blanket. It’s like a big blanket.
DALIYA ROBSON: It is. But you use it mainly for a toxic mattress. Now, there’s no additives in the felt. So it’s very soft. It’s just compressed carbon, so it’s very effective. It’s what they make good masks off of. So someone buys some of this. They cover their toxic mattress. They’ll buy a toxic bed. But if you have done it, you cover it up, and then you need to put two or three sheets on the mattress pad over it, so your body doesn’t sweat into the carb and the movement doesn’t ruin it. So that’s a disadvantage.
If you go into a hotel room, the fabric is cheaper and sturdier, but it has 1% adhesive. That’s why it lasts longer. But if you had three sheets over there and the mattress pad (or two sheets and the mattress pad), you wouldn’t be bothered by the adhesive.
The fumes on the bed are much worse than the 1% adhesive.
DEBRA: So, why would somebody use a carbon blanket rather than TuTuff?
DALIYA ROBSON: TuTuff is plastic, and it crankles. It’s not really…
DEBRA: It does, it does. So the carbon […]
DALIYA ROBSON: I mean the carbon, you forget about. But the TuTuff is not absorbing anything. It’s just blocking. Eventually, if you use the carbon, you won’t have the fumes in the bed. After a few years, you take it off and you realize, oh, it’s absorbed the fumes.
DEBRA: Can you put the carbon blanket out in the sun or something to release the chemicals?
DALIYA ROBSON: Yes, [cross-talking 35:07]. Yeah, about once a year, twice a year, like at the beginning of the summer or the end of the summer.
And if you’re asthmatic, you have to be careful because there’s no adhesive. And so there’ll be little particles. So you have to vacuum the bed. And you have to make sure you’re not absorbing the particles. So if you’re asthmatic, you’re probably better off with a fabric (though it doesn’t work quite as well).
DEBRA: Okay. So there’s a fabric, and there’s a blanket?
DALIYA ROBSON: There’s a fabric, and there’s a felt.
DEBRA: Okay, felt.
DALIYA ROBSON: The felt is very pure. The fabric has 1% adhesive.
Now, we use the fabric for things like blocking the fire smoke, blocking the neighbor’s Downy smells, inside the drawers and the shelves. Let’s say you’ve cleaned with Mystical, you’ve put zeolite in, it still smells. So you would line it with fabric, double it up with…
DEBRA: Oh, I see.
DALIYA ROBSON: And that fabric is safe enough to put in a drawer. I mean you’re not making a mask out of it.
DEBRA: Right, right. I see. This is how you can take things and salvage cabinets and furniture and things that have odors.
DALIYA ROBSON: Yes. But as I’ve said, I live in a very old house. And my closets are 35 years old or 40 years old. And they still had a formaldehyde smell when I came—not severe, but enough to irritate me.
And when I washed the shelves, I got contact dermatitis at the bottom of my arm. You know how you put your arm down to reach? So, even after 40 years…
DEBRA: So, I need to stop you because we’re coming to the end of our time, and I just want to give your phone number again, 1-800-968-9355. And you can go to NonToxic.com. Thank you so much for being with us. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio.
DALIYA ROBSON: Well, thank you for the work you’re doing. I can’t thank you enough.
DEBRA: You’re welcome.
DALIYA ROBSON: Alright! Thank you. And bye bye.
DEBRA: Bye!
Does the Natural Approach to Life Really Make Us Healthier and Happier?
My guest is Nathanael Johnson, author of All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover if the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps Us Healthier and Happier. A journalist who lives in San Francisco, Daniel has contributed to magazines such as Harper’s, New York, and Conservation, and to National Public Radio, and This American Life. He worked at a small-town newspaper in Idaho before going to study with Michael Pollan at the UC Berkeley School of Journalism. We’ll be talking about how living naturally in our industrial world contributes to our well-being (or not?). www.allnaturalbook.com (no longer in business)
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
Does the Natural Approach to Life Really Makes Us Healthier & Happier
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Nathanael Johnson
Date of Broadcast: June 25, 2013
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world.
Yes, there are toxic chemicals all around. And we encounter them every day, but there’s something we can do about it. We can eliminate toxic exposures in our own homes. We can remove toxic chemicals from our bodies. We can support legislation that limits toxic exposures in consumer products and choose to have a toxic-free life where we can think clearly, our bodies will feel good, we can feel good, and we can be productive and happy and do whatever we want.
That’s the point of this show, is to get to those solutions and find out what we need to be doing in order to have a toxic free world.
My guest today is Nathanael Johnson. He’s the author of a book called All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover if the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps us Healthier and Happier.
But before we talk to him, I want to tell you about a summer vacation I had a few years ago. I went to Concorde, Massachusetts, home of Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson and Louisa May Alcott. And for those of you who don’t know who these people are—I have discovered that some people in the world don’t know these people—I grew up with them and that probably ages me.
Louisa May Alcott is the author of a very famous book called Little Women which has been a movie also. Her father was a big mover and shaker in social change going on at that time. And Henry David Thoreau wrote a very famous book called Walden, which he—well, I’ll tell you about him in a minute.
Ralph Waldo Emerson was one of the greatest philosophers of all America ever. And he wrote a number of philosophic books about the importance of nature and the importance of spirituality. And all of these people were living at a time in the late 1800s when industrialism was coming to America and getting established and the whole American scene was changing from being agricultural and having lots of open spaces and lots of wild land to being more industrialized. And instead of having artisans making things, they were being made by machines and factories.
Henry David Thoreau was one of the most outspoken people on this. And his book, Walden was about his experience living for a period of time—I don’t remember how long he lived. But he built a house with his own house on the shores of the lake there which is still there (the lake is there, the house is no longer there). He built the house and Walden is the story of him living there and what he spent his money on and how he went for walks and how he grew his food and all these different things.
What he was trying to do was keep connected with nature at a time when we were fast losing nature to industrialism.
There’s a wonderful museum there in Concorde that addresses this very issue. I learned a lot by going there. I highly recommend a visit to Concorde, Massachusetts to anybody who would like to go on a nice vacation, an instructional vacation.
Right near Concorde is also Lexington where the Revolutionary War started. So there’s a lot you can learn about the founding of our country going to that area.
So, that’s essentially what we’re going to be talking about today, the struggle between nature and industrialism.
Nathanael, thank you for being here with me.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Oh, it’s my pleasure. Thank you, Debra.
DEBRA: I took a look at your book, and I thought, “Oh, this is going to be an interesting conversation.”
So, I’ve read part of your book. I haven’t read all of it, but I’ve read enough of it to get the idea of what you’re going to be talking about. So first, let’s start by having you tell our listening audience about your childhood and how you came to write this book. What motivated you to write this book?
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Well, I had parents who were really influenced by those transcedentalist philosophers that you were just talking about. And they really believed that it was healthier to embrace nature rather than trying to protect ourselves from nature using technology.
And so, this meant that I had this childhood where you grew up in a small town up in the hills of the Nevada mountains. We ate a lot of natural foods. There’s a lot of kale and brown rice. We’re backpacking in the mountains every summer. It was really an idyllic childhood in many ways.
My father went so far as to ban diapers even because that was unnatural. The idea was that here are the kids in the fastest period of growth wearing these big, bulk things between their legs, it would warp the bones. And so, this is yet another example of technology causing problems with nature.
I mean, I really had this wonderful childhood. In some ways, I also got a front row seat from which to observe the ways in which it failed. The diaper thing, as I checked that out as an adult, there’s really no evidence that diapers deform bones. And 99.9% of Olympians, pretty much everybody, had some form of diapers and they’re fine.
So, I really became conflicted in some ways. This idea that what’s natural is good is deeply wedded to my sense of childhood innocence and purity. But at the same time, I thought these ways in which it kind of went to crazy places.
And so, as an adult, as I was trying to make decisions for my own children—my wife and I just had our first daughter—it’s no coincidence that the daughter and the book came around the same time. I started doing all these research to try and figure out if there was a way to logically pick through the wisdom and separate it from the craziness.
DEBRA: Well, my background, just so you know, is kind of the opposite in that I grew up in a very technological childhood—on TV dinners and television. And then, I got to a point in my adulthood where I got pretty sick pretty early in my adult life. At age 24, I was disabled. And it turned out to be from exposure to toxic chemicals. And I had no idea there were toxic chemicals in my home. I thought that manufacturers were ethical and wouldn’t give us anything that was bad for us, and that the government was watching out for us. And yet, here, my ordinary American home was making me sick—very sick.
And I had to re-examine everything about the technological world because I had to take everything I owned and look at it and say, “Is this toxic? Or is it not toxic? Is it making me sick or not sick?” And the answer for me was to look to nature and see that my body belonged to nature.
It came from nature like any other species. And things more natural would make more sense.
And as I made my life more natural, my health improved and I did become healthier and happier.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: There’s a certain logic to that, right?
DEBRA: Yeah!
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: We came from this world. We spent thousands of years living in this world. Our bodies are adapted to this world. And now we’ve begun to change it very rapidly. And we changed it in some ways in which our bodies are not adapted.
DEBRA: Well, we’ll talk more about that after the break. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m here with Nathanael Johnson, author of All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover If the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps us Healthier and Happier. It’s the longest subtitled in the universe.
We’ll be right back.
= COMMERCIAL BREAK =
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Nathanael Johnson, author of author of All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover If the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps us Healthier and Happier. His website is AllNaturalBook.com (no longer in business).
And I thought that this would be a very interesting conversation to have since I’m very naturally oriented. And this is what I’m talking about on my show all the time, is to say “Let’s get closer to nature. Let’s get closer to nature.” But I also know that it’s very difficult to do that.
Again, Nathanael, I’d just like to tell you something that I’ve experienced and see how your experience corresponds or doesn’t.
When I first “discovered nature,” I had an experience where I said, “Oh, my God! Nature is there.” It’s like I didn’t see it before a certain point in time. And I said, “All the answers are in nature. All I need to do is look at nature and do what nature does because, after all, all the other species are doing fine. It’s the humans that don’t know what they’re doing.”
And so, I started to try to pursue that path and very quickly found that it actually couldn’t be done, that I couldn’t completely leave the industrial world. And so I had to have one foot in nature and one foot in the industrial world.
And at the time, I didn’t know how true that was. But now I know that there really isn’t a place on earth that we can go where nature actually exists in its pre-industrial state.
I know that a lot of your book is about looking at the pros and cons. So tell me what your experience was in that dichotomy of having these two worlds of nature and industry.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Well, the question of finding all the answers in nature is a tricky one. I mean, obviously, we don’t want to completely go back to nature. There’s a lot of bad things. I think that sometimes people who are very technology-oriented use this kind of facile argument where they say, “Well, hurricanes are natural. Tornadoes are natural. Nature isn’t good.” And I think that that’s not what we’re saying.
But there is a need to distinguish between what’s good in nature and what’s dangerous. There are a lot of toxic chemicals I read about in plants.
DEBRA: Yes, there are, there are.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: And that’s something that we’ve lived with and evolved with and adapted to. But there’s some evidence that, perhaps, we could make our lives longer if we started parsing out some of those and finding them. If we go back completely to nature, our lives would certainly be shorter.
So, I say that early in the book. I want to return to nature, but I’m not willing to give up antibiotics. I’m not willing to give up space travel or movies or all of these things that I love about technology at the same time.
DEBRA: Well, you know, honey has natural antibiotics. Why not just take honey?
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: I would say pretty much all antibiotics are natural. Penicillin comes from mold. So, all of these things—
The line between what’s natural and what’s technological gets very fuzzy when you look closely at it. Penicillin comes from mold, but it’s grown in petri dishes and it’s refined by giant corporations and turned into antibiotics. So then it feels less natural.
It gets harder to parse what’s natural and what’s not. And I really think that this division says more about us, that we divide the world into these two spheres than it says about a real division that actually exists out there.
DEBRA: Well, I think there could be the argument that—well, first, I would argue that we, as human beings, are part of nature.
And so, anything that we do is as natural as anything that a tree does—except that my observation has been (right or wrong) that other species don’t think as much as we do as human being and that we have our ability to change things, whereas…
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: We are environment-changers. That’s something that’s very different. The scale with which humans use technology—you can argue that there are some animals that’s very interesting. Crows use tools. Chimpanzees use tools.
We use technology that’s altering the planet […]
DEBRA: That’s right. So it’s not like when a tree grows, for example. It’s altering the environment, but it’s altering the environment in a way that is harmonious. And so it takes nutrients from the ground, but it also produces nutrients. And it produces shade and environment and food and all kinds of things. Whereas, a lot of what we’re doing as humans is destructive. And it’s not that we couldn’t make choices that are more life-sustaining. It’s that we haven’t been.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: I wouldn’t argue with that. The question if you’re trying to distinguish between what’s your natural antibiotics and which are unnatural antibiotics, it becomes very fuzzy very, very quickly. I just don’t think that’s a useful dividing line in choosing how to cure an illness.
DEBRA: Well, I would say yes and no. That’s a question that I can’t comment on in the next nine seconds.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: We’re coming up on the break.
DEBRA: Yeah. So let’s come up on the break, and we’ll be back. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And we’re here with Nathanael Johnson. He’s the author of All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover if the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps us Healthier and Happier. We’ll be back after this.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Nathanael Johnson, author of All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover if the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps us Healthier and Happier.
So, Nathanael, does the natural approach to all those things really keep us healthier and happier? What did you finally come to decide about that?
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Well, I wish that there was an easier answer. It certainly would be better for my book sale if I could say, “Just embrace nature in every way” or “Just chuck nature out the window and be space age.” But of course, like we were saying, you only have to think about for a few seconds to think of parts of nature that are dangerous and parts of technology that are truly harmful.
And so, the conclusion I ended up coming to is that you really have to go through and assess the evidence on a case by case basis.
DEBRA: I totally agree. For me, what I came to—I mean, I went through that same process of saying there’s good and bad things about each. But what I finally came to was that the whole point of life, what it’s trying to do is sustain itself. It’s trying to survive. And so, if you say “Does this contribute to survival or not contribute to survival?”, sometimes the natural thing is going to contribute to survival, and other times, it won’t. And the same for the industrial thing.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: I think there is that basic evolutionary wisdom, that there’s some logic to embracing nature because we come from nature. We figured things out over many, many years. And now we’re starting to experiment with all kinds of new substances.
And in doing that, I just want to do it in a systematic, thoughtful way rather than embracing all one side or all the other.
DEBRA: Well, I would agree with that. I could agree with that totally.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Okay! We have our platform to start with. Now maybe we can build out from here.
DEBRA: Okay, good. So now that we agree on that, tell me some examples of things that you decided that you wouldn’t do because they didn’t contribute to what you wanted to have happen that were of nature and some things that you decided to not include in your life from industry.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Okay, let’s see. What’s a good example? I mean I mentioned the issue with diapers. So that’s an industrial product—even cotton diapers are an industrial product—that I opted to us.
I think the bigger issue with nature, what I didn’t end up doing, when I was growing up, I really struggled with trying to improve my performance as a distance runner. I was an athlete in high school. I tried all different types of things and spent a lot of time in health food stores trying different things. And I came to the conclusion that I was kind of spinning my wheels.
There are all these people that were extremely committed to being healthy and were taking all kinds of different supplements, but didn’t seem healthy. They were just so nervous about their health and are kind of knocked down by any little thing that happen to them…
DEBRA: I know people like that.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: I didn’t want to be that way.
At the same time, I really come to this from the other direction, from wanting to make sure that I didn’t take industrial medications that were going to do more harm than good. There are thing like Vioxx as a good example, this heart medication that’s really done terrible things in worsening people. And so, I really wanted to be critical about the industrial medical complex.
And as I started looking into that deeply and developing the skills to figure out the science and where they were cheating and lying, I saw that I needed to apply that same science to natural cures as well and be just as critical.
So, I think the medical area is one where I’ve become much more—I think a lot of the things that we think of as “illnesses,” we immediately look for a fix, whether it’s a big pharmaceutical drug to make us feel better or numb the pain or a natural supplement. And often, our physical problems have to do with the way our lives and our emotions and the people that we surround ourselves with much more than any biophysical problem.
DEBRA: I would totally agree with that. And what I’ve come to after all of these years dealing with my own health problems has been that I think that most illness is caused by the things that you’ve just stated and also environment, lifestyle choices. I don’t think about how to solve almost anymore. I think about how to build health and create health. If I do things like get proper nutrition and get adequate rest and exercise and give my body the things that it needs, including social interaction—
And a big one for me, as you and all my listeners know, is stop beating ourselves over the head with toxic chemicals. And we’ll have a lot more health.
An example I like to give a lot is that there’s formaldehyde resins on bedsheets. And formaldehyde causes insomnia. People who are sleeping on those formaldehyde-soaked sheets every night over and over again are spending billions of dollars buying sleeping pills.
Now, if people would just change their sheets, then they wouldn’t need to have sleeping pills. It’s really that simple.
So, that’s where I see that people could make a change towards something more natural and that it would help all around.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: I didn’t know about that. I just want to point out—I don’t know how much formaldehyde is on the sheets, but formaldehyde is something that we manufacture in our liver. In small quantities, it’s something that’s necessary for life.
So, again, definitely, you don’t want so much of it on your sheets that it’s keeping you awake. It shouldn’t be a blanket fear.
DEBRA: It shouldn’t be a blanket fear. But I’ll just say very quickly (because we need to go to break) that there is a difference between a naturally produced chemical and the same chemical formula or the same molecule produced industrially. We’ll talk about that for a minute when we come back from the break because there is a difference in that.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio. And we’ll be back with Nathanael Johnson, author of All Natural—and a very long subtitle—when we get back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And we’re here with Nathanael Johnson, author of All Natural: A Skeptic’s Quest to Discover if the Natural Approach to Diet, Childbirth, Healing and the Environment Really Keeps us Healthier and Happier. I said it all in one breath.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: All Natural is a perfectly acceptable abbreviation.
DEBRA: Alright! So, before the break, I had said to Nathanael that, in fact, if you have two identical molecules and one is made in nature and that the other one is made from petroleum in a laboratory or a factory that they actually are physically different.
And there’s a lot of research on that that comes out of the natural supplement industry—and not just supplements, but I’ve read this in books that have nothing to do with nutrition. If you take these two molecules, and one is manufactured and one is made by nature, that they have a fundamental difference in that they will bend light differently, and that there are certain parts of the molecule where it turns right instead of left. And I don’t have it right in front of me to give you all the science all about it, but this is something that I’ve read widely in many different places.
And I think that that’s right because if there’s one thing that I know about nature is that nature has its own way of doing things.
And I don’t think that it can be duplicated in a factory. And as close as you might come, there’s always going to be something different, something missing.
And I know that if I take natural vitamins, like whole food vitamins that comes strictly from food instead of vitamins where those same nutrients are manufactured from petroleum, I feel completely different. My body responds to them in a completely different way.
So, I wouldn’t agree with you on the point that industry could duplicate nature. It might be a very fine line, but it’s enough of a line that I think our bodies can tell the difference. And that’s just my viewpoint on that. And I don’t want to take a lot of time…
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Yeah, I just want to respond very quickly.
DEBRA: Go ahead, yeah.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: I absolutely respect your personal experience. I think that that’s important. When it comes to science, I’m convinced by peer-reviewed substantial evidence. And the scientific consensus is different than what you just stated.
But I haven’t seen all the stuff that you have. And I’d be interested in learning more.
DEBRA: I can send it to you. I can send it to you. I look at all that science too. But my experience has been, over 30 years, that science doesn’t have a nature viewpoint and that there are a lot of assumptions that science make that I have a different assumption because I’ve learned some things from nature.
And I think it would be great for scientists to learn more about nature.
DEBRA: I think that you’re right at a fundamental level, but don’t tar all the science. There’s some wonderful, amazing…
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Oh, no, no, no. I’m not trying to tar all the science or industry. In fact, I just want to tell you—and I know some people are going to be horrified to hear me say this—that I’m so naturally oriented that I will go to great lengths to not do something industrial. And yet recently, I started taking an industrial drug to save my life.
DEBRA: And because I was doing everything natural, and I had done it for so long, and I was just at a crisis where I was going to end up in a hospital if I didn’t take this drug, I took it. And all my symptoms started subsiding.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Oh, my gosh!
DEBRA: And I think that it’s something that I need to say because I think that people do become too extreme, as you say, one way or the other. They won’t do something industrial if they have an all-natural viewpoint or the industrialists won’t do something natural. But it comes down to what’s the right thing to do.
We live in a world right now where, as I think I said earlier, there’s no place to go on earth where we can be pristine natural—there isn’t. And so we need to do some industrial things to correct industrial problems. If my body is sick because of industrial reasons, I might need to use an industrial solution in order for it to get well. And it may be that the traditional, natural things just don’t work.
I’ve heard from doctors who do things like chiropractic adjustments, for example, where they’re now saying those natural remedies aren’t working because our bodies are so full of toxic chemicals that they need to do something to rid our bodies of toxic chemicals before the natural thing can work.
And so, we really are in this state of push-me/pull-you between these two extremes.
So, I appreciate your saying that we need to be considering both.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: The point is there are some lovely, lovely scientists who do have a truly natural perspective and just have this wonderful balance.
DEBRA: I agree. I agree with that. I agree.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: And it is true that there is a type of science that focuses very narrowly on individual molecules. It tends to sometimes miss the bigger picture. And I think that is maybe what you’re getting at. Because you’re so focused tightly on how this one molecule acts just the same as this other molecule, that you miss the big picture that one comes from an organic farm that makes the world a more lovely place and one comes from this awful, industrial [unclear 33:10]. The bigger picture is really worth looking at.
DEBRA: Yeah. And just during the break, I checked my email. And I got an email with a story in it from the Environmental News Network called The Lead In a Songbird. And it was talking about that there’s dangers for people who work with lead, but there’s also dangers for birds who live near lead mining district. They said “about half of ground-feeding songbirds collected from a historic lead mining district in Southern Missouri contained toxic levels of lead in their blood and internal organs.”
If we weren’t digging up these things that belong underground and turning them into industrial products, then the songbirds would not be exposed to them.
So, this is where it just would be nice if everybody had a bigger viewpoint. And I don’t want to be making generalities about all scientists or all people with a natural viewpoint because I can see people who have strange ideas on both sides. But I think there are laws of nature that can be applied, there is commonsense that can be applied and that there is an inherent desire to survive in everybody and wanting to do the right thing that leads to health and happiness.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: There’s an interesting article just recently looking at obesity. We know the obesity epidemic is rampant. But the interesting thing is that we’re seeing weight gain across the board in other species as well.
DEBRA: Oh, I didn’t know that.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: So there seems to be an indication that there’s something else going on. I mean, obviously, our food system has big problems with it. But perhaps there’s something environmental that’s really intrinsic across the board.
DEBRA: Well, it could be endocrine-disrupting toxic chemicals being in the environment.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Yeah, that’s one theory.
DEBRA: Yeah, because they affect our human weight gain and other animals are being affected by them too in the same way.
Or it could be sun spots or it could be all kinds of things.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Yeah, there’s lots of theories. But that’s certainly one of the leading ones.
DEBRA: Well, Nathanael, we’re getting to the end of our hour, is there anything that you’d like to say that you haven’t said?
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Well, I think there are some things out there like bisphenol-A which is something that we don’t have proof-positive that it’s hurting us yet, but I think the evidence is sufficient that we really should be getting rid of it. And in America, much more than Europe, we’ve opted to make ourselves guinea pigs. And that has some benefits in terms of we all have fancier iPhones and stuff. But we also—
This is one area where if you go through and look at the evidence, I think enough is compiled that we really should be getting rid of it.
DEBRA: I agree, I agree. And I think that there are some other chemicals as well that we can do that.
I read the last line, the last paragraph from your book, so I know what your conclusion is. But I don’t want to give it away if you don’t want me to.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: It’s fine. Either way, either way.
DEBRA: Okay, then I’ll just say that Nathanael’s conclusion, what he was looking for, the idyllic-ness of the natural picture that he had in his mind really had to do with his childhood and his experience of family. It all came down to that […] So, it’s a very interesting book to read.
Thank you so much for being with us.
NATHANAEL JOHNSON: Oh, it’s such a pleasure.
DEBRA: Thank you. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio.
Waterproof Mattress Pad
Question from Heavens
I am in the market to buy a waterproof mattress pad.
The first company that came to mind is Naturepedic because I have a couple of their mattresses and they use food grade polyethelene to waterproof them. I just checked your website here and found a similar question and a reference to the waterproofing on the Naturepedic mattress pads as being done with polyethelene.
I have heard otherwise so called Naturepedic to confirm: The waterproof layer in the mattress pads is a polyurethane film, not polyethelene. It took a lot of questioning as the rep didn’t know. They call it something like “dryguard” without specifying exactly what that is. After insisting that I needed specifics, he was able to come back and tell me that it was, in fact, a polyurethane film.
That being said, the cotton is organic and they are GOTS certified and Greenguard certified regarding outgassing. Polyurethane is a very dirty word in my house. Can you please clarify the safety of sleeping on this?
Debra’s Answer
I actually recently did HOURS of research on polyurethane. Polyurethane itself, as in a film is actually pretty nontoxic. It’s when you combine polyurethane with other toxic chemicals that it gets a bad name, such as combined with chemicals to make polyurethane foam or combined with solvents to make polyurethane wood finish. But polyurethane itself is not the problem.
I have known the owners of Naturepedic for years and have had many discussions with them about the toxicity of various materials. The founder, Barry Cik is an very experienced Environmental Engineer. They have a “no compromise” policy about toxic chemicals. So if Naturepedic is using a material, I feel confident that it is safe for babies.
Organic Clothing for Women, Handmade in the USA
My guest is Lucretia Bohnsack, Executive Director of Esperanza Threads, an organic, sustainable fiber clothing manufacturer that combines comfort and fashion with socially environmental values. Located in Cleveland, Ohio they make products for adults, youths, babies (and people with multiple chemical sensitivities) as well as bed and bath items. Founded by Ursuline Sister Mary Eileen Boyle in 2000, Esperanza Threads is a non-profit training facility teaching those needing skills for employment how to sew on industrial machines. . Currently Esperanza Threads is collaborating with the Cleveland Catholic Charities Migrant Refugee Services to train newly arrived people from around the world. Other agencies in the area such as El Barrio Workforce Development Center, and neighboring Churches refer individuals who are in need of skills for employment. Esperanza Threads also helps with job placement at sewing facilities in the Greater Cleveland area as well as currently expanding a new apprenticeship program for promising sewers in their manufacturing facility. Lucretia Bohnsack accepted the role of Executive Director in October, 2012 after serving on the Board of Directors from the beginning. We’ll be talking about how they make organic clothing and why choosing organic clothing is an important toxic-free choice for our health and the environment. www.debralynndadd.com/debras-list/esperanza-threads
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
Organic Clothing for Women, Handmade in the USA
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Lucretia Bohnsack
Date of Broadcast: June 24, 2013
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world.
And there are toxic chemicals all around us in consumer products that we use every day, in all kinds of things that may be in our homes, out in the environment, and the air we’re breathing, and the food that’s on the store shelves. But there’s something we can do about it.
We can make better choices about the products that we choose to put in our homes. We can remove toxic chemicals from our bodies. We don’t have to drink water with toxic chemicals or eat food with toxic chemicals because there’s a toxic-free alternative to everything that’s toxic. We have a lot of control and choice over this in our lives. And that’s what we talk about here on this show.
It’s Monday, June 24th 2003. And I’m here in Clearwater, Florida where it’s a beautiful, sunny day. We have no thunderstorms—at least not until around this afternoon.
My guest today is from a wonderful website where they make beautiful, beautiful clothes out of organic fabrics. And they’re made right here in the USA. So we’re going to talk to her in a minute.
But first, I want to talk about something that I saw at a supermarket I happened to be wandering through—not buying anything, but just walking through. It was a headline on the cover of Real Simple Magazine. It said, “Is your house making you fat?”
Now, I know something about houses making people fat. What happens is there are certain types of chemicals called endocrine disruptors. And they are all over your house unless you’ve chosen products that don’t have them.
One of the endocrine disruptors is bisphenol A, also known as BPA. And what these endocrine disruptors do is they can make you fat. And because your ability to lose weight or retain weight is governed by certain hormones in your endocrine system, when your endocrine system gets disrupted, then it makes it really difficult for your body to lose weight, and people gain weight.
There’s actually a word for these types of chemicals. And it is obesogenic.
And so, I bought this magazine, Real Simple because I thought, “Oh, this would be a great article to talk about on my radio show.” Real Simple Magazine is showing where the toxic chemicals are in your home that make you fat.
But sadly, it had a big headline that said Is Your Home Obesogenic? Then they had a little asterisk, and they said that the definition of this word is that it’s something that causes obesity.
And when you turn the page, it says, “re-arrange the food, stock your food choices smarter, ditch the giant containers, vinyl salad plates…”
Now, none of these things have to do with toxic chemicals. These are all good habits that you should change. But here, they used the headline like Is Your House Making You Fat? like being exposed to something in your home make you fat. Then they used the word obesogenic which is often used in the world of toxic chemicals to refer to chemicals that are endocrine disruptors. And then, instead of talking about using those terms and phrases to talk about toxic chemicals, they’re talking about changing your eating habits.
So, I think it would’ve been great had Real Simple Magazine actually wrote an article about the subject. But I’m also concerned about people using phrases and terms that relate to toxic chemicals and using them incorrectly. And that’s actually a whole different subject of people being able to read and understand words and having vocabulary.
But I just wanted to make the point here that there are toxic chemicals in your home that can make you fat. In fact, there’s a whole article on my website about this. And you could find it by going to ToxicFreeTalkRadio.com. Across the top, there’s a menu bar that says Health Effects. If you click on there, and then scroll down the page, under Health Effects, it says “obesity.”
And if you click on that, there’s a whole article about how toxic chemical can be making you fat. If you’re having trouble losing weight or you’re gaining weight, then that’s a great article to read.
So now, I want to introduce my guest. Lucretia Bohnsack, she’s the executive director of Esperanza Threads. Lucretia, are you there?
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: I am! And thank you for inviting me on your show today. In Cleveland where we are located, it’s bright and sunny too. We’re having a wonderful day.
DEBRA: Oh, good! Good, good, good. I drove through Cleveland once, but I’ve never spent any time there. But I have to! I see Cleveland on television sometimes, and I think, “That was like a nice place to live.”
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Yeah, it’s a beautiful area. We’re right on the Lake Shore. I can probably look out the window and see the lake right now. So it’s a great place to live. I’ve lived here my whole life, so I love it!
DEBRA: Well, tell us about Esperanza Threads. Tell us what you do just in a nutshell because we’ll talk about the details of it later. But just give us a general description and how it came to be.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Okay! Well, it’s a long story. We started in 2000. And an Ursuline sister by the name of Sister Mary Aileen Boyle began this process. She had connected with some people in New England who were making organic clothing, but their main focus was to help people become entrepreneurs—learn how to sew, learn how to manufacture, learn how to market clothing, healthy clothing, and make it into a home industry or even expand it.
And so, Sister took that idea and brought it to Cleveland and started Esperanza Threads. What we did is exactly what she said. We started little, having people, gathering people to be with us and to learn how to sew. We were doing a lot of sewing in people’s sewing rooms, in their homes, in basements, teaching people to sew and hopefully sending people on to become entrepreneurs.
Well, two things happened. The first was some of the husbands said, “You got to move this out of our house. We want our houses back.”
And so, we did just that. At the same time, the Vincentian Sisters of Charity offered a space on some property they owned in Bedford, Ohio which is a suburb of Cleveland. And we moved our business over there.
Sister also began to realize most of the people she was training were not entrepreneur-minded. They wanted to learn how to sew. They wanted to manufacture. They loved the idea of creating. But they also wanted to move on into businesses where they could get jobs.
And so, we kind of morphed our whole process into more of a training facility. And so we do two things here. We train people how to sew. And then we help them, along the way, to get jobs. We also help them to actually create and make clothing that we are selling which helps us to further our ministry and our mission of teaching about organics and why organic clothing is so important to our society—
Also, helping those people to get jobs who, otherwise, are lacking jobs many times because they don’t have skills, they’re out of work. We have a whole myriad of people we work with. We talk with charities that gives us people. They refer people to us.
They’re refugees. And we also have people who are from the neighborhood who are unemployed. Churches send us people. We have a couple of agencies that are working with the welfare-to-work programs to help us to get that moving forward. Really exciting!
DEBRA: Yeah, I am very excited about it. And after we come back from the break, we’re going to hear more about why it’s so important to wear organic clothing and why it’s so important that you’re teaching people to sew it.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. My guest is Lucretia Bohnsack from Esperanza Threads. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio.
DEBRA: This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest is Lucretia Bohnsack, executive director of Esperanza Threads. And before we go any further, I want to just tell you that you can go directly to their website at EsperanzaThreads.com where you’ll see their beautiful clothes. Oh, my God, are they beautiful. You know, when I went to the site, it’s just the kind of clothes that I wear. I just wanted to buy everything.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Well, I’m glad to hear that.
DEBRA: So, tell us why it’s important to wear organic clothes. Why is what you do important to your organization?
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Okay! One of the things that I don’t think people realize is how much—well, specifically, our main product is cotton fibers. We do use wool. We also use silk hemp. But our main product is cotton. And the amount of chemicals that are used to process a simple pound of raw cotton, the one pound of raw cotton, it’s going to take one-third pounds of chemical fertilizers. And that’s not counting the insecticides that are spayed on them and things such as that.
And in the processing, we add more chemicals because the raw cotton isn’t pure white. And of course, people like pure white.
And even for dying purposes, they need to get to a pure white color. Well, they’re using heavy metal dyes to dye these items.
And many of those chemicals are being washed into the soil. They’re being flushed into our sewer systems and things such as that.
All of that, first of all, it’s impacting our natural water and pure soil resources. But then we’re taking all those chemicals because it’s impossible to get them totally out of the fabrics. And we’re putting those against our bodies.
We know how many people have chemical reactions and people who don’t understand where their rashes coming from. “Why am I itchy?” And many times, it’s the very clothing we’re wearing that is causing us to have reactions.
DEBRA: I agree. And there are so many chemicals too that are used in finishes, things like formaldehyde-based resins that are used on permanent pressed cotton. It’s just a joy to go to your website and see all these things that are so hard to find.
I’m looking at a page right now that has organic cotton sweat clothes. You could get a hoodie. You could get drawstring sweatpants, [elastic] sweatpants. There are two kinds of sweat shirts. I mean you just can’t find these in stores. And even if you find them online, a lot of times, they’re mixed with a certain amount of synthetics or lycra or something to make it more stretchy.
I can’t tell you how many sites I go to where they come up as organic cotton in say a Google search. But then you go there, and it’s 87% organic cotton or whatever. I know that those people think that they’re doing by having it go in the right direction because they’re using a lot of organic cotton. But then they use these other synthetics which some people react badly to those synthetics or they are uncomfortable.
I just have to commend you for putting together a line of clothing that is so attractive and so pure. It’s very unusual. It’s very unusual.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Yeah, we try to keep our workshop isolated from any of those other kinds of chemicals and things, insofar as we’ve even asked our employees not to wear perfumes to work, so that none of those things are actually getting on to the fabrics—and it’s healthier for our employees as well, to be not exposed to all these different chemicals.
And that kind of flows into the environment we like to have here. It’s a peaceful environment. People are happy to work here.
We are hopefully fulfilling some of their needs and being responsive to their needs as well.
And part of what we also do—I am the executive director. Unfortunately, Sister had a heart attack about a year ago. And we realized at that point that she was way overextended. And so we took some of her roles away. I took on the business end of it.
But Sister still talks about fair trade.
We always think about fair trade coming from outside the country, but we are very firm here to make sure that our employees are being paid fairly, that they’re treated in a fair and kind manner. We also work at trying to educate people about all of these.
Sister Mary Aileen goes out on the weekends to churches and takes some of our products with them to share them with people and explain why is organic so important, why is fair trade so very, very important because nobody else is really talking about—and along with the product.
I think you hear it in the news. So what can I do about it? Well, we have a solution as far as purchasing things that are manufactured in the United States. The cotton we’re getting, most of it is from the United States.
Unfortunately, we’re running out of land that is pure. And that’s a very definite thing that, in order to get organic cotton, the soil has to be pure. And it takes an unbelievable amount of time for the chemicals to leave the soil.
DEBRA: Yes, yes. But it really does take people like you deciding that you’re going to do things in a certain way, offering products and educating the public and making a different choice available. We can educate and educate all we want. But if there aren’t then products that you can go buy that are actually doing these things, then it makes it a lot more difficult.
We’re going to talk more with Lucretia Bohnsack, executive director of Esperanza Threads after this break. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. This is Debra Lynn Dadd. And we’re here talking with Lucretia Bohnsack, executive director of Esperanza Threads, an organic, sustainable fiber clothing manufacturer that provides comfort and fashion with social and environmental values. They’re in Cleveland, Ohio. And you can go visit their website at EsperanzaThreads.com.
Lucretia, during the break, I was just looking at your website more because I just love looking at the clothes. I know I’ve been saying that over and over again. But I’m just so thrilled!
You have clothes available for women and men and children and babies. And people with multiple chemical sensitivity can wear them. And you have them in all kinds of sizes, everything from extra small to extra, extra large. I know that it’s difficult for larger women to find organic clothing, especially in styles that would look good on them.
So, I think that, for many, many reasons, your website really is a find.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: The points that you just made about the sizing and how difficult it is for some people, because we are manufacturing individual piece here on site, many times, we’re able to adapt to people’s special sizing needs. And we pride ourselves in that, that someone can call us and we are willing to work with them to try to get the sizing right for them.
It’s difficult! It’s difficult for a woman or a gentleman to get something that’s comfortable, looks nice, is nice fabric, but in a size that normally is not off-the-rack in the stores.
DEBRA: Yes, it is.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: And our prices, we really work hard to try to keep our prices competitive because, obviously, when you go into a store—it’s very difficult for us because things that are coming out from sweatshops out of the country are being priced hundreds of times their value where we can’t do that. We try very hard. The fabric is expensive. We try to be very aware of what the fabrics are and try to keep the cost within people’s budget. I think that’s a hard thing to do because of that.
So, sometimes, when somebody says, “Whoa! This is a little expensive,” not really when you consider the cost of the fabrics and the cost compared to things that are—I keep referring to this as sweatshops because that’s where many of the things—even to the finest clothes we’re wearing are made in sweatshops. That’s why the fair trade aspect of our business is so important.
One of the things we’re doing right now, and can hopefully make things more readily available to you, we are looking at going into a bit more of a wholesale model where we will actually be placing our products in stores. So, people can go to a website in the future, and there will be a link there that will tell them to go to—I’m trying to think. Revel is one of our area stores. Go to Revel, and they will have our products there. You can purchase that right on-site as well because people like to touch and feel and know what the fabrics are like.
DEBRA: Oh, yeah, yeah.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: And that’s really an important thing.
And also, along with the good quality organic fabric, we’re also working at teaching people how to sew, giving people the opportunity to have a future and have a skill that they can take to a manufacturer. We’re working with many of the companies in Cleveland. We have some major manufacturing companies in Cleveland who are hiring our people and helping them to get those jobs and to go on for further training. So they’re able to get insurance. They’re able to get a job where they can help their family and provide for their family without assistance. And that’s a very important thing.
DEBRA: That’s so wonderful, that you’re offering training for a job that exists in your community. And in the process of offering that training, you’re also producing a really excellent product that those trainees are making.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Mm-hmmm…
DEBRA: I want to go back and just talk about pricing again for a minute because I think that people are, in general, looking for the lowest priced thing. They’re going to stores that sell cheap products, and they say, “Well, that’s all I can afford” or whatever.
And I understand that. I’m not a wealth person. I have to budget my money and figure out how I’m going to spend it.
But a long time ago, I realized that it was better—even if I only had one shirt. It was better to have one shirt that was organic and well-made and that the people were paid fairly. I was participating in a real economy that is based on what things really cost instead of an economy that’s just a throwaway economy. It’s cheap goods, and people aren’t being paid enough and all those things.
What you’re doing is you’re looking at “Here’s the real cost of a good piece of fabric and has environmental benefits to it. And the person who’s making it is getting a wage that they can actually live on.”
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: That’s correct.
DEBRA: That’s such a different model. And we, as consumers, need to stop saying, “Well, I don’t have very much money. I’m going to buy this cheap thing,” and instead say, “I’m just going to buy less and buy something that’s good quality” or say, “I’m going to make more money.” And usually, what I do is I say, “I’m going to make more money.”
It’s just people don’t know how to budget for things anymore. They buy things on credit cards and stuff. Btu the way to do it is that you figure out what is the amount of money that you need to live, you budget for things of good quality that you want to buy, and that’s what you buy.
And I don’t think that your products are excessively priced.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Oh, no.
DEBRA: I think that your products are—we’re talking about all these, the quality and fair trade and stuff. But I think that your products are extremely reasonably priced. It’s not like going and buying something at a discount place, but it’s not expensive.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Right! And we find, without naming name brands, we’re probably much lower than many of the prestigious name brands that we’re going to see.
One of the things we were talking about costs—I don’t know if you saw our linens that are online. We have a towel…
DEBRA: Actually, we need to take another break.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Okay, great.
DEBRA: We’ll come right back, and then we’ll talk about your linens.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m talking to Lucretia Bohnsack, executive director of Esperanza Threads. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And we’re here with my guest, Lucretia Bohnsack, executive director of Esperanza Threads. And they make beautiful organic cotton clothing for men, women and children.
And Lucretia was just about to tell me about the linens before the break. So, go on with that.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Yes! One of the nicest things we have is energy-efficient towels and wash cloth. They’re a waffle weave fabric. They’re organic. We preshrink them. But what I love about them is, first of all, they’re a little bit rougher than a terry. And so they’re nice for exfoliating your skin. And also, the beauty of them, we call them energy-efficient because the waffle weave allows the water to leak off of them. So when I take my shower, and I hang my towel up, in a few minutes, it is dry. So we’re not getting that mildewy smell that so often you get.
And so I’m able to use my towels for several days without having to wash them (of course wasting a lot of water and soap or whatever I’m using to wash with). When I wash them, and I put them in my dryer, they’re going to dry even quicker. So we’re saving tons of energy that way, plus having a pure product next to our skin, especially when our skin is so vulnerable because it’s wet and the pores are open and everything. We have a pure product that we’re using on them.
And then, we actually do make bed linen on special request and for people that have some sensitivities. And most people rave about that. That’s not one of our bigger sellers. But when people do buy them, they love them.
DEBRA: Do you do custom work? If I wanted to send you some fabric, would you sew my fabric?
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: We would if it was organic. We do have an area that’s away from our main selling area that if somebody wanted something made that was non-organic, we would work with that away from everything else.
But if you had real organic fabric, we would definitely work with that and help you to get something that you would love to have and enjoy.
DEBRA: Because I know periodically people will write to me and ask me if I know anybody who can sew for people who are chemically sensitive. Particularly people with multiple chemical sensitivities have difficulty finding clothes. And I see on your website, you have a whole page devoted to talking about working with people with MCS.
And also, I just noticed that, on each product, it says sample swatches. So are those pictures or you’ll actually send physical swatches?
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Yes. And if someone were to call and ask us, we’d actually even send them samples of the fabric so that they could feel it and know what it’s like, what are we using, and find out if it’s something they would like.
Our t-shirts are a heavier fabric than you would normally get in most stores. So it’s a little bit different. It’s a little bit more luxurious to be honest.
DEBRA: Yeah, yeah. Absolutely, absolutely. Wow!
So, tell us more about some of the people who are actually sewing your clothes.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Okay! We have a number of different people from different areas. As I mentioned earlier, Catholic charities, migrant refugee services in Cleveland actually sends us people to work with. We’ve had people from Bhutan and Burma and Sudan, different areas in Africa. We’ve gotten a lot of people from the African nations who are refugees, and unfortunately, with some very sad tales to tell of abuse and things in those countries—Iran, a lot of the Hispanic areas, Cuba, Costa Rica.
We also work with an agency that happens to be about two blocks down from us that is actually—they’re called the Centers for Family & Children. And they work with the County Assistance Program. So they’re sending us trainees to work here to learn skills while they’re on assistance, so that when they get off the assistance, they have a skill to go and get jobs with. We also have many of the churches in the area sending us people.
We happen to be in a Hispanic neighborhood. So a lot of the people that are coming to us are Hispanic. They’re learning many skills because, many times, they don’t speak English. So we’re trying to work with them to emphasize the need to start learning English, beginning to speak English. So when they go out and apply for jobs, they’re more “marketable,” to use that word. So they’re able to get job.
A lot of people have never had jobs in the United States. And so we’re trying to teach them the culture. So to be a good employee, what do you need to do? Culturally, in many cases, we’re very different. Something as simple as, in many countries, lowering your eyes and looking at the floor when an authority is talking to you is a sign of respect. In our country, “What’s wrong with them? Why aren’t they looking me in the eye? What are they hiding?”, something as simple as that.
So, we’re teaching people how to work in an environment with multi-cultures. And we have some wonderful volunteers that come in and help us. I don’t know what we’d do without our volunteers. And so it really is making a difference for us to achieve what we want to achieve, training people.
We have people who are home seamstresses that volunteer. We have people that are retired professional seamstresses that come in and are sharing the skills that they learned for 30 or 40 years in the sewing industry. So it’s really a wonderful thing.
DEBRA: I want to ask you a question. And I think that probably some people are thinking this which is why I’m asking. I haven’t actually seen your clothing except see it in pictures, but I’m assuming that it looks professionally sewn when you receive a garment, that it’s professional quality.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Oh, definitely.
DEBRA: If I tried to sew something, it would like I was a home sew-er.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: No, we’re not teaching home sewing. We are actually teaching industrial sewing which is different than home sewing. And our head seamstress worked for years in the sewing industry throughout Ohio, throughout the Cleveland area. And as I said, we have women that are volunteering to teach people the skills.
Home sewing is very different. We always think of when our moms used to make us homemade—which is something not as professionally—it doesn’t have some of the little nuances that you need for the things to tuck down properly and things like that. But no, what we create—as I’ve said, we’re selling them professionally in stores right now. And so those people would not take something that look like it was something that the person who had one course in highschool is now sewing.
DEBRA: So what is your favorite item of clothing?
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Oh, I think probably my favorite is our t-shirts. They’re so soft and cuddly. They’re just comfortable.
When you put them on, and when you wash them, you’re going to get the same quality out of the shirt. It’s just a soft, luxurious kind of feel to it.
And we do them in all different styles, from camisoles to lady tees to high neck and short and long sleeves.
We also have a variety of imprints. We have a local transfer company that actually transfers on to our shirts. And we can even do shirts for a person. If somebody have a picture they just love—someone recently (around Christmas time) had all their grandchildren put on a shirt.
DEBRA: Oh, good idea.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: I mean, we use a different kind of dye process with those shirts. It’s really a direct print. So there’s no run-off. There’s no heavy metals. It’s a much more environmentally-friendly process.
DEBRA: One thing that I do want to mention about your products is the page with the jackets. I have had so much difficulty finding natural fiber jackets. I mean you might be able to get a linen jacket, but then it has this synthetic lining. And I really like jackets that are just loose and unlined. And you have some beautiful jackets.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Right!
DEBRA: And right now, they happen to be on sale.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: Yes, they are!
DEBRA: So, if anybody from XS to XXL needs a natural fiber jacket, I would suggest you hurry up and go over to EsperanzaThreads.com and look at their jackets. These are so difficult to find. The styles are so beautiful. I just think that anybody would enjoy wearing these.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: And a lot of those are our silk hemp jackets. So they’re soft and flowing. They’re very pretty.
DEBRA: Yeah. Well, we’ve come to the end of our time. It’s been such a pleasure to talk to you, Lucretia. You’re doing wonderful work. I so appreciate that you’ve been on with me today.
LUCRETIA BOHNSACK: And thank you so much for inviting us. We really appreciated it.
DEBRA: Thank you. You’ve been listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd.
Affordable, Basic Platform Bed Frames
Question from Stacey
I am searching for affordable, basic platform bed frames for my organic mattresses. I came across one that is “formaldehyde free” but uses an “oil based polyurethane” which “takes a few weeks to outgas,” according to the website (Lifekind). Would you recommend these as safe, or recommend something else… Thanks!
Debra’s Answer
I don’t recommend oil-based polyurethane. Water-based polyurethane would be OK.
I would suggest that you find your local unfinished furniture store and see what they have to offer. Buy an unfinished frame and finish it yourself with a finish from Vermont Natural Coatings.
Bee’s Wrap
Bees Wrap is a wonderful alternative to plastic wrap…made of organic cotton muslin, beeswax, jojoba oil, and tree resin. “This combination of ingredients creates a malleable food wrap that can be used again and again. Simply mold the Bee’s Wrap to the top of your dish by using the warmth and pressure of your hands to create a seal. When the Bee’s Wrap cools (within seconds) it holds its seal. Use the same method to wrap cheese, vegetables, bread, and baked goods. It is not recommended for meat…The beeswax and jojoba oil have antibacterial qualities that help to keep your food fresh.” Comes in four sizes.
Toxicity of Fiberglass Drywall?
Question from Dewbra
We are building a closet and finishing our laundry room, side by side in our basement. I react to the paper on sheetrock/drywall and want to us the Fiberglass drywall as it is recommended for basements and damp areas. Do you have any info on how it would be for a SEVERE MCS sufferer. We have a dry basement only through use of dehumidifiers. Debra
Debra’s Answer
I have no experience with this product. Readers? Any comments?