Articles tagged with: Phthalates
Caring for the Planet, Health & Safety, Living Your Values »
by Sarah Lane
The Natural Defenses Resource Council, in its article “Bottled Water: Pure Drink or Pure Hype,” reports that more than half of all Americans drink bottled water and about one-third of the population drinks it regularly. So Americans are thirsty. Why is this a problem?
1. What’s in the Bottles
One problem has to do with what’s in the bottles themselves. The Earth Policy Institute reports that 1.5 million barrels of oil per year, which is enough to fuel 100,000 cars for that same year, are required to satisfy …
Caring for the Planet, Food & Cooking, Good Stuff, Health & Safety, Living Your Values, Products for Kids, Smart Market, Waste-Free Lunch »
What follows are resources to help you provide a healthier (toxin-free), zero-waste lunch for your child. If you’re just beginning this process, don’t get discouraged. Even by changing a few things you do, you are taking worthwhile steps. As Voltaire says, don’t allow the perfect to be the enemy of the good!
Specifically, you want to avoid the following:
1. Toxins
For the health of your family
Lead. Lead affects the brain and behavior and is especially dangerous to young children still in early developmental stages. Read about lead in children’s …
Caring for the Planet, Cooking Tips, Food & Cooking, Living Your Values »
by Julie Hall
We all need to find ways to make our lives greener, for our own health, the ecological health of our world, and energy conservation. Your kitchen is one of the most important and effective places to go green or greener, as the case may be. Here is a sure-fire twelve-step-program toward a greener kitchen lifestyle:
12 Steps to a Greener Kitchen
Don’t eat your pot. Use nonreactive (inert) or moderately reactive cookware, such as Enamel, Earthenware, stainless steel, or cast iron. Avoid Teflon and aluminum. The jury is still out …
Health & Safety, Living Your Values »
by Sarah Lane
The Natural Defenses Resource Council, in its article “Bottled Water: Pure Drink or Pure Hype,” reports that more than half of all Americans drink bottled water and about one-third of the population drinks it regularly. So Americans are thirsty. Why is this a problem?
1. What’s in the Bottles
One problem has to do with what’s in the bottles themselves. The Earth Policy Institute reports that 1.5 million barrels of oil per year, which is enough to fuel 100,000 cars for that same year, are required to satisfy Americans’ demand …





























