Guest guest Posted April 28, 2004 Report Share Posted April 28, 2004 HELLO I'M NEW HERE AND DON'T REALLY KNOW HOW TO DO THIS. BUT HERE GOES ON ONE OF THERE NOTES THEY SAY E.O'S IS NOT GOOD AND WHO DO YOU BELIEVE I ALWAYS LEARN SO MUCH FROM THE GROUP BE BLESSED GALE.GLOVER@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 29, 2004 Report Share Posted April 29, 2004 <<HERE GOES ON ONE OF THERE NOTES THEY SAY E.O'S IS NOT GOOD AND WHO DO YOU BELIEVE >> ----------------------------------------------------------------------- My interpretation (<--and thre's the rub <g>) of EO/FO posts was not that EO's are " not good " ...but that they deserve to be used with exercised caution, JUST as much as any ingredient. Too much of a good thing can be bad. People tend to focus on the documented benefits of EO's, but neglect to place concern on questioning the growing conditions of and everything else that makes that EO come into it's distilled existence. We trust the end safety issue with EO manufacturers, just like we trust the safety factor of FO manufacturers who are selling a legal substance with recommendations for safe usage. Granted, there are a wealth of reputable organic suppliers...but how pure is pure? With so much focus here on what constitutes FO's, what chemicals go into them, etc....is it not fair to question all constituents of EO's? The actual EO may not have chemical additives, but if the plant used in distillation was sprayed with, for example, pesticides/herbacides, etc., which makes their way into the plant, is THAT chemical not of just as much concern, if not MORE, as any pthalate-containing chemical??? Growing/weather/air conditons of plants used in EO distillation can vary in strength or weakness as to alter therapeutic or hazardous effects. These issues all make EO's more " less consistent " than their FO counterparts. Most BIG EO distillaries test their EO's for consistency, have their own farms or buy from the same farms or growers and have as reputable conditions as they can find--but many if not most of these BIG GROWERS still use pesticides " as allowed " by current farming standards, approved by the Department of Agriculture. And with so many people purchasing and using their own distillary equipment, and wild-harvesting their own herbs, etc....the variables for safe and consistent end product really has the potential to get skewed. Even " organically-grown " plants can still be exposed to the environment: polluted air, water tables, acid rain, and factors beyond their control. Anyway.....my only concern is...analyze and dissect EO's as thoroughly as you analyze and dissect FO's and trace back orgins of all that goes into EACH. << What has largely been ignored by home toiletries makers is that THEY often use these perfumes at 100 fold higher than the commercial world. There is a huge difference between using say rose oil in a soap at half a percent and using a synthetic rose perfume designed for use at maybe one part in a thousand or less. You cannot simply substitute a synthetic with a natural at the same volume of use.>> So would you recommend attaining recommendations for each individual synthetic or a general rule-of-thumb for the general category of " synthetics " ? Also, would not the issue of the end product being a wash-off VS. stay-on skin product figure into this overall concern??? This is an aside, but worth mentioning, I think, because it illustrates the diversity of info. floating around and influencing people. I have two cancer patient customers who purchase my most bare-bones basic plain soap. They are of particular interest to me in that they've both shared some interesting info. that their physicians imparted to them. Random theories, or what basis for truth? With both, their doctors told them that what they bathe with/or NOT bathe with is important ..... but they also recommended that they bathe with NON-tap water--due to all the chemicals (particular emphasis on chorine) in tap water. One patient went so far as to say his doctor told him the human body can absorb up to a quart of water in one average bath session of approx. 15-20 minutes. This man is of unlimited financial resources, or so it seems, and so he bathes daily with bottled water he has imported from Switzerland (that HE seems to think is pure) and he heats it through a special tankless water heating unit he had installed in his bathroom. The other patient is not of unlimited financial resources, knows his doctor recommends non-tap water bathing, but can't afford it. His attitude is--- " Everyone has to die of SOMETHING! " At what point do you have to or choose to draw the line of what you can control in your environment? It's totally a personal choice subject to the education/awareness or drive to know more by each individual . But I think what is pointed out over all is the disparity of theories and the lack of trust we, as a whole, are developing about our national regulatory agencies who we rely on to indentify toxins and keep them out of use. HOW MUCH reputed/suggested/suspected/verified pollution can we control? ~Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 29, 2004 Report Share Posted April 29, 2004 Thanks alot for your interpretation you have cleared my thoughts on e.o's i prefer them for what i know and tryed thanks gale SimplySoap@... wrote: <BELIEVE >> ----------------------------------------------------------------------- My interpretation (<--and thre's the rub ) of EO/FO posts was not that EO's are " not good " ...but that they deserve to be used with exercised caution, JUST as much as any ingredient. Too much of a good thing can be bad. People tend to focus on the documented benefits of EO's, but neglect to place concern on questioning the growing conditions of and everything else that makes that EO come into it's distilled existence. We trust the end safety issue with EO manufacturers, just like we trust the safety factor of FO manufacturers who are selling a legal substance with recommendations for safe usage. Granted, there are a wealth of reputable organic suppliers...but how pure is pure? With so much focus here on what constitutes FO's, what chemicals go into them, etc....is it not fair to question all constituents of EO's? The actual EO may not have chemical additives, but if the plant used in distillation was sprayed with, for example, pesticides/herbacides, etc., which makes their way into the plant, is THAT chemical not of just as much concern, if not MORE, as any pthalate-containing chemical??? Growing/weather/air conditons of plants used in EO distillation can vary in strength or weakness as to alter therapeutic or hazardous effects. These issues all make EO's more " less consistent " than their FO counterparts. Most BIG EO distillaries test their EO's for consistency, have their own farms or buy from the same farms or growers and have as reputable conditions as they can find--but many if not most of these BIG GROWERS still use pesticides " as allowed " by current farming standards, approved by the Department of Agriculture. And with so many people purchasing and using their own distillary equipment, and wild-harvesting their own herbs, etc....the variables for safe and consistent end product really has the potential to get skewed. Even " organically-grown " plants can still be exposed to the environment: polluted air, water tables, acid rain, and factors beyond their control. Anyway.....my only concern is...analyze and dissect EO's as thoroughly as you analyze and dissect FO's and trace back orgins of all that goes into EACH. << What has largely been ignored by home toiletries makers is that THEY often use these perfumes at 100 fold higher than the commercial world. There is a huge difference between using say rose oil in a soap at half a percent and using a synthetic rose perfume designed for use at maybe one part in a thousand or less. You cannot simply substitute a synthetic with a natural at the same volume of use.>> So would you recommend attaining recommendations for each individual synthetic or a general rule-of-thumb for the general category of " synthetics " ? Also, would not the issue of the end product being a wash-off VS. stay-on skin product figure into this overall concern??? This is an aside, but worth mentioning, I think, because it illustrates the diversity of info. floating around and influencing people. I have two cancer patient customers who purchase my most bare-bones basic plain soap. They are of particular interest to me in that they've both shared some interesting info. that their physicians imparted to them. Random theories, or what basis for truth? With both, their doctors told them that what they bathe with/or NOT bathe with is important ..... but they also recommended that they bathe with NON-tap water--due to all the chemicals (particular emphasis on chorine) in tap water. One patient went so far as to say his doctor told him the human body can absorb up to a quart of water in one average bath session of approx. 15-20 minutes. This man is of unlimited financial resources, or so it seems, and so he bathes daily with bottled water he has imported from Switzerland (that HE seems to think is pure) and he heats it through a special tankless water heating unit he had installed in his bathroom. The other patient is not of unlimited financial resources, knows his doctor recommends non-tap water bathing, but can't afford it. His attitude is--- " Everyone has to die of SOMETHING! " At what point do you have to or choose to draw the line of what you can control in your environment? It's totally a personal choice subject to the education/awareness or drive to know more by each individual . But I think what is pointed out over all is the disparity of theories and the lack of trust we, as a whole, are developing about our national regulatory agencies who we rely on to indentify toxins and keep them out of use. HOW MUCH reputed/suggested/suspected/verified pollution can we control? ~Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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