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Do You Know What's In Your Soap?
Handcrafted in small batches, natural
soap is gaining converts. Customers are snapping up product in record
numbers because it is not only pure, natural, and nontoxic; it is also good
for the skin. Evidence abounds of the healing
powers of handmade natural soap, particularly when essential oils are
included. Eczema and psoriasis sufferers, as well as people that have
sensitive skin or are hypoallergenic often find immediate relief by
switching to natural soap.
What is most important with handmade soap is what
is not included. As a rule, top quality handmade soaps, are devoid of
artificial colors, fragrances, and preservatives that can cause allergies,
irritation, and even cancer.
Handmade soaps also can have
"hand-lotion-in-soap" effect. Most good hand lotion is an emulsion of water
and glycerin with vegetable oils and waxes. All these ingredients are
present in handmade soap and comprise up to 40% of the bar. While the
"hand-lotion-in-soap" effect may reduce lathering, this is what makes
handmade soap extraordinarily mild and moisturizing for dry and sensitive
skin.
The
Secret to Creating a Top Notch Handmade Soap
Master soap makers create handmade
soaps with natural ingredients that are blended in small batches and poured
into wooden block molds. When ready, the soap is wire cut into bars, placed
on oak drying frames and aged in a special curing room, usually for up to a
month. This process removes excess alkali from the bar soap, a major cause
of dryness and irritation often found in conventional bar soaps.
Handmade natural soap can be made
from a number of renewable vegetable and botanical sources, such as
saponified oils of palm, coconut, and olive, as well as therapeutic-grade
essential oils. Rosemary extract can also be used as a natural preservative.
The result is a soap that does more than just cleanse the skin. It can also
act as a therapeutic skin treatment with powerful antioxidant and
skin-protecting properties that can be used to treat eczema, psoriasis,
dermatitis, pigmentation, inflammation, and more.
Many people complain that commercial
soaps make their skin feel dry and itchy, or worse. Trapped free alkali is
the most common irritant in soap. Soap is made from oils (an acid) mixed
with water and alkali (a base). Acids and bases neutralize each other to
form a salt?in this case soap with glycerin as a byproduct. Oils that did
not find the alkali are "free" or "superfatted" which makes soap milder
while reducing lather and shelf life. Alkali that does not find oils is
"free alkali", which makes soap harsh and drying. The handcrafting process
for natural soap removes the excess alkali that other soaps leave in.
"Natural"
Can be Unnatural
Unfortunately, the term "natural" can
be used in very deceptive ways. If an ingredient was a coconut "umpteen"
generations ago, some will claim it to be natural, even if you can't
pronounce the ingredient! Handmade soaps stick to a very strict definition
of "natural." Essential oils, organic, botanical, and vegetable wax sources
such as cocoa butter and shea nut butter are used to alter the
characteristics of the soap.
The main ingredient in many
mass-produced bar soaps is a mysterious substance known as "tallowate".
What
are these?
These are the fatty remains of
slaughtered cows, sheep, and horses. Brains, fatty tissues, other unwanted
parts of diseased or dead animals are collected into large vats and used to
create "tallow." This tallow is shipped off to commercial soap
makers where
it is processed into bars soaps.
The
Body?s Largest Organ: The Skin
With skin covering approximately 20
square feet of the human body, it is the largest human organ and is your
first line of defense against harmful substances, temperature, infection,
and dehydration. For adults, the skin is between 15 and 20 percent of total
body weight. Therefore, healthy skin is very important for overall
well-being.
The skin can also soak in many types
of toxins and petrochemicals due to its large surface area. This can result
in cancer-caused compounds slowing building up in the body and accumulating
in the fat.
Unfortunately, the U.S. Food & Drug
Administration does not regulate the ingredients in soap. Some ingredients
in mass-marketed soap including Isopropyl Alcohol, fragrances, DEA, FD&C
Colors, Propylene Glycol and Triclosan have been proven harmful to human
health. Isopropyl alcohol's drying effects can also remove protective oils
and create microscopic cracks in the skin, which can trap and harbor
bacteria and other pathogens. DEA (diethanolamine) are hormone disrupting
chemicals known to form cancer-causing nitrates and nitrosamines. Dr. Samuel
Epstein of the University of Illinois has found that repeated skin
applications of DEA-based detergents resulted in a major increase in the
incidence of liver and kidney cancers.
Regarding coal-tar derived FD&C
colors, A Consumer's Dictionary of Cosmetic Ingredients states "many
pigments cause skin sensitivity and irritation?and absorption (of certain
colors) can cause depletion of oxygen in the body and death." Do you really
want pretty colors when they could cause sensitivity, irritation or worse?
Instead of synthetic colors, German
chamomile can be used instead. Rich in chamazuline, an intense blue pigment,
chamomile actually has anti-inflammatory properties that accelerate skin
healing. Moreover, other compounds in chamomile and other essential oils
combine therapeutic action with delightful aromas. Peppermint oil imparts a
delightful fresh fragrance to a soap while containing compounds such as
menthol that act as a pain-reliever and anti-inflammatory.
Sadly, many of the compounds in the
commercial fragrances use in bath and body products are carcinogenic or
otherwise toxic. The word "fragrance" on a soap label can mean any of 4,000
different ingredients, most of which are synthetic. Not only are fragrances
potentially carcinogenic, according to Home Safe Home author Debra Lynn
Ladd, "Clinical observation by medical doctors has shown that exposure to
fragrances can affect the central nervous system, causing depression,
hyperactivity, irritability, inability to cope and other behavioral
changes." A surprising number of people experience a dry-skin reaction from
many common fragrances.
Propylene glycol, the main ingredient in automotive antifreeze,
is found in many soaps.
Because of its ability to quickly
penetrate the skin,
the Environmental Protection Agency in the US requires
workers to wear protective gloves and goggles
when working with this
substance. Material Safety Data Sheets required by OSHA warn against skin
contact because it can have systemic impacts such as brain, liver, and
kidney abnormalities.
Triclosan, an antibacterial chemical
found in some bar soap, is a chlorophenol, a class of chemicals suspected of
causing cancer in humans. It is also a chlorinated aromatic compound,
similar in molecular structure to some of the most toxic chemicals on earth:
dioxins, PCBs and Agent Orange. Do you really want these substances being
applied intentionally to your skin?
Selecting
The Right Soap
Carefully review the ingredients in the soap you
are currently using. If you can't pronounce the ingredients or your skin is
dry or irritated, identify a natural vegetable-based soap bar that addresses
the needs of your skin type. Another way to test for the right soap: wash
one forearm with the soap near the elbow joint. Skin tends to be very
sensitive in this location and potential irritation will be noticed quickly.
Young Living's natural essential oil soaps make wonderful gifts.
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