Being positive does amazing things for you not only mentally and emotionally, but physically as well. Google being positive and living longer, and you will find a host of research to support the theory. Remain positive in all matters today. 🙂
Monthly Archives: October 2013
Oct 18th – Wash your take-out packaging that can be reused and save for future use, today.
Inspired by my wonderful mommy friend, Linda :)… If you happen to get take out that comes in a plastic container that can be reused, wash and save it for future use. For example, when you are sending home goodie bags of leftovers for family and friends. I use some plastic containers for craft and art supplies as well.
Oct 16th – Be sure to keep your own reusable water bottle with you at all times, today.
Or at least simply having it with your in your travels throughout the day, so as to avoid the need to use a disposable cup for a drink.
Just yesterday, I had forgotten my water bottle in my bag while attending a meeting and ended up using a non-recycable cup for a few necessary sips of water. Imagine how many times that happens across the country every day. That brief moment to throw a cup into a landfill that will last there for a lifetime… what a good reminder to never forget it again!
Oct 15th – Get yourself a safe deodorant, today.
Our skin is our largest organ and it while it is a barrier for our bodies, it is also permeable, meaning things go OUT (sweat) AND IN (absorbs) through it.
Wonderful if you can go without deodorant, but we all have times you may desperately need it. So for the times you need a little more “fresh”, be sure to make sure you had a safe, non-toxic one so your skin is not absorbing those bad chemicals. I like Tom’s of Maine, but there are several from which to choose. Check out http://www.ewg.org/skindeep to see the best ones and/or how your current one rates.
Oct 14th – While shopping for Halloween treats, consider a little less junk, a little more healthy to hand out this year.
Halloween is a fun time of year, and of course it wouldn’t be the same if kids didn’t have some goodies. Consider helping out a parent (oh, and the kid’s health too!) by taking a little sugar and artificial dyes out of the Trick or Treat bag and consider a slightly healthier option.
Costco has awesome barrels of halloween pretzel packets, Tasty Brand makes cool Spooky Orangic (and non-GMO) Fruity Snacks, or consider a non food items such as pencils or little Halloween notepads (though try to skip the plastic items), or even money (small coins). Please share if you have any ideas as well!
Oct 8th – (Re-run) Take a 3 minute shower, today.
Go military style today and take a 3 minute shower to conserve water. Current standard shower heads use 2.5 gallons of water per minute. If you have a water efficient shower head, the amount will obviously be lower, possibly 2 gallons per minutes. With a standard shower head, taking a ten minute shower uses 25 gallons of water as opposed to 7.5 gallons for a 3 minute shower… or even a 5 minute shower that is 12.5 gallons.
The difference is an even greater difference if there are several of you under one roof. For a family of four, if each person took a 10 minute shower, it adds up to 100 gallons of water to bath 4 bodies, as opposed to 30 gallons. Imagine if a family did that for a full year? Four people at 10 minute showers adds up to 36,500 gal per yr. If those same four people took a 3 minute shower, it would only be 10,950 gallons… saving 25,000 gallons per yr. (to give you an idea, that is 5,000 more gallons than the amount of water than fits into a 30′ Round pool at 44″ water height).
Coming soon… take a cold shower to conserve energy… haha ;).
Oct 7th – (Re-run) Avoid food/soda cans with BPA today.
BPA, short for bisphenol A, is used to make certain plastics and epoxy resins. Articles on the health concerns associated to BPA are far from scarce, and it continues to be studied on the true effects it has on humans, but there is legitimate concern. It can be found in numerous items such as toys, sports equipment, industrial products, even in store receipts (who knew?.. and a lot of it!)…. and it is still found in the lining of many food cans… INCLUDING, shocking to me, almost all aluminum cans… you will need to skip your soda today ;).
I tend to stay away from canned foods since I am not always sure which do and do not have it. No longer…. Thanks to a fantastic list put together by InspirationGreen.com, below is a well-compiled list of cans that DO and DO NOT have BPA (updated Jan 2013), as well as some additional information on recent studies associated with BPA from their article:
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WITHOUT BPA:
- Eden Foods: All 33 of its organic beans, chili, rice & beans, refried, and flavored.
- Trader Joe’s Brand: Canned corn, tomatoes, beans (except baked beans), tunafish, anchovies, poultry, beef, coconut milk, fruit (except mandarins) and vegetables (except artichokes).
- Hunt’s Tomato Products: Only their plain tomatoes – but great first step!!!
- Whole Foods: 27% of its store-brand canned goods. No specifics given!*
- Amy’s: As of March, 2012 all products in non-bpa cans. Look for: NB, for Non-BPA on the bottom of each can.
- Bionaturae: Canned tomatoes.
- Campbell’s Soups: Announced March, 2012 that it will be phasing out BPA from its cans! They have yet to make clear when that will begin, or what they plan to use instead of BPA.
- Crowne Prince Natural: Tuna, Salmon, Kippers.
- Muir Glen: Canned tomato products only.
- Native Factor: Coconut Water.
- Native Forest: Organic coconut milk, artichokes, asparagus, mushrooms, hearts of palm and all of their canned fruits.
- Ocean Brands: Salmon, tuna, oyster, crab, snackit, snack n lunch and fish salads. (Not the shrimp, clams and food service size.)
- Oregon’s Choice: Canned Tuna.
- Vital Choice: Canned salmon, albacore tuna, sardines and mackerel.
- Wild Planet: Canned Sardines and 5 oz tuna.
- Ecofish (Henry & Lisa’s): Canned Tuna.
- Nature’s One: Organic powdered baby milks.
- Tetra-pak (aseptic containers) are lined with Polyethylene, not BPA. ‘Pomi‘ Brand and Hunt’s Chopped tomatoes in tetra-paks are becoming more widely available.
WITH BPA:
- Eden Foods: Canned tomato products (look for their new – glass jars)
- Trader Joe’s Brand: All soups, chilis and stews. Plus; Sardines, Crab, Cherrystone Clams & Oysters, Mandarins, Hatch Chilies, Artichokes, Organic Baked Beans.
- Whole Foods: 73% of its store-brand canned goods.
- Ocean Brands: Shrimp, clams and 4lb food service size.
- Annie’s, Brad’s, Muir Glen, Westbrae cans are lined with BPA.
- ALL food cans out there other than those listed above…
- Most all Aluminum Cans are lined with BPA.
- Polycarbonate plastic (grouped in #7) contains BPA and BPAF (worse!).
- Many shiny thermal receipts contain BPA.
- (ATM receipts, cash register receipts, prescription labels, lottery/airline tickets, etc)
- Don’t hand children receipts that might contain BPA!
- Don’t recycle receipts that might contain BPA!
Since 1999 Eden Foods has used steel cans coated with a ‘baked-on oleoresinous c-enamel’, which does not contain BPA. Oleoresin is a non-toxic mixture of oil and resin extracted from plants, such as pine or balsam fir.’(1) The cost is currently 2.2 cents more (14%) than cans with industry-standard BPA epoxy liners. Yet that natural liner is not approved by the FDA for acid foods, such as tomatoes. Hopefully in the very near future, alternative liners will be put on the market as more research is completed. But as of now, be aware that canned tomatoes, soups and pastas are your highest sources of BPA due to their acid consuming the lining of the can.
The Environmental Working Group estimates that BPA exposure is ‘unsafe’ in 11 percent of all canned food and an unbelievable one-third of all infant formula.(2) When BPA was detected, the EWG found a single serving contained enough BPA to expose a woman or infant to levels more than 200 times the government’s safe level of exposure for industrial chemicals. In the 2010 study, ‘No Silver Lining’, food from 50 cans collected from 19 US states and Ontario, Canada were tested for BPA contamination. Over 90% of the cans tested had detectable levels of BPA, and some at much higher levels than had been detected previously.(3) The study’s tests show that meals involving one or more cans of food can “cause a pregnant woman to ingest levels of BPA that have been shown to cause health effects in developing fetuses in laboratory animal studies.”(3) Consumer Reports’ latest tests of canned foods found that almost all of the 19 name-brand foods they tested contain some BPA. “A 165-pound adult eating one serving of canned green beans from their sample, could ingest about 0.2 micrograms of BPA per kilogram of body weight per day, about 80 times higher than the experts’ recommended daily upper limit.”(4)
The Breast Cancer Fund recently released a product testing report called “BPA in Thanksgiving Canned Food.” For the study canned goods were purchased in California, Massachusetts, New York and Minnesota. Four cans of each of the common Thanksgiving staples: Campbell’s Cream of Mushroom Soup, Campbell’s Turkey Gravy, Carnation Evaporated Milk (by Nestle), Del Monte Fresh Cut Sweet Corn (Cream Style), Green Giant Cut Green Beans (by General Mills), Libby’s Pumpkin (by Nestle) and Ocean Spray Jellied Cranberry Sauce were purchased. The results showed a tremendous variability in BPA levels in the canned foods tested, from non-detectable to 221 parts per billion. Variabily was extreme even among cans of the same product made by the same company, which means that consumers have no way of knowing how much BPA is in the canned food they’re buying and consuming. www.breastcancerfund.org
A 2011 study by Harvard University analysized the urine of seventy-five people for BPA. Each participant ate a 12-ounce serving of either fresh or canned soup for five days in a row. They were advised not to otherwise alter their regular eating habits. After a two-day break, the groups switched and ate the opposite type of soup. The study showed the canned soup eaters had 1,221 per cent higher levels of BPA in their urine than those who ate the fresh soup.5 Of other concern, a 2012 study out of New York, the first study of its kind to test for BPS, found 81% of the urine samples tested contained BPS (Bisphenol S)* in quantities just slightly below those of BPA.6
An August, 2012 study out of the University of Virginia, shows that low dose BPA is associated with decreased social activity in mice for up to four generations!7 And in September, 2012 a Washington State University researcher and colleagues have found that BPA disrupts female rhesus monkey’s reproductive systems, causing chromosome damage, miscarriages and birth defects. Again the research shows the effects to be generational. Patricia Hunt, the head researcher states that; “the really stunning thing about the effect is we’re dosing grandma, it’s crossing the placenta and hitting her developing eggs, and if that fetus is a female, it’s changing the likelihood that that female is going to ovulate normal eggs. It’s a three-for-one hit.” The rhesus’ reproductive system are most human-like of any mammal and were tested with BPA levels similar to those in humans.8
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My advice would be to find some wonderful food products packaged in glass, or even better, no packaging at all.
Oct 6th – Ditch your clock today, enjoy a free day without time constraints.
Have fun, and leave your stresses for another day. We all deserve a day off to clear our minds.
Oct 4th – Seek peace, today.
Every day we have so much stress and self conviction that it is easy to have feelings escalate to anger rather than reason. Stop, take a deep breath and make peace your top solution for resolving an issue.
You may enjoy watching the documentary, Gandhi … so much to learn from this man :).
Oct 3rd – Make a home-cooked meal from scratch, today.
Who has the time, right? But there are in fact, a lot of great simple recipes, or even just cook plain food without a lot of pizazz if you don’t have time. A home-cooked meal most likely means whole food without the processing, less additives and preservatives, less sodium and more nutrients.
🙂