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Home » Article » Health-and-Fitness Tired Of Chemicals? Look to Organic
Barbara Hodal, DC filed under "Health-and-Fitness"
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The organic movement, if you will, is growing steadily in
popularity and recognition. Not too long ago, it was a rare site
to see organic anything. In the past 10-15 years it has been
making its way into our homes little by little, until now.
Organic cotton companies alone are reporting product sales
growing at more than 40 percent a year.
No too bad considering organic products used to be considered
the proverbial “red-headed step child“. Now, consumers are more
aware and savvy as information about chemical toxins used in the
growing and processing of our foods and clothing is more easily
accessible. With the explosion of the internet in the past 10
years, information is a mere click away, and people are clicking.
As shoppers see articles filled with staggering statistics on
chemicals used in growing and processing crops, they are
starting to pay attention. The harmful effects on our bodies as
well as the detrimental effects on our Mother Earth can be mind
blowing when researched.
Chemically laden, commercially grown foods are considered to
have a fraction of the nutritional value due to soil nutrient
deficiencies. There are many studies, with research of more than
200 papers published on the subject, differing outcomes,
differing opinions. Regardless, the fact remains, crops grown in
the absence of pesticides, herbicides and chemical fertilizers
are going to be healthier for our bodies and our environment.
While conventional farming dumps millions of pounds of
fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides per year into our soil,
air and water ways, organic farming enhances soil fertility and
biodiversity, according to findings from a 21-year field trial
initiated by the Research Institute of Organic Agriculture
(FiBL) in Switzerland.
The wave of organic foods has been hitting for sometime, seeing
produce in the conglomerate shopping chains, not merely
specialty shops, is more commonplace . But in the most recent
years, organic growing practices have moved into our clothing
and home furnishings. Ranging from organic clothes for adults
through babies, to sheets, towels and even mattresses. Cotton
may be leading the way, but say hello to hemp, linen and
organically raised sheep for wool.
Clothing and bedding embedded with chemical toxins from growing
to processing to finishing are now unacceptable to many. In the
child and baby arena, it is getting even more so. As concerned
consumers (and parents) start to research or happen by an
article with vital information on poison exposure, they are
finding that children and infants are uniquely at risk from
pesticides because of physiological susceptibility and greater
relative exposure. Three major factors are particularly
important:
* Chewing on clothing, crawling outside or on floors, make
children more exposed to chemical toxins.
* Children's bodies and brains still developing and maturing.
* Per unit of body weight , children consume more food and
fluids than adults, which may contribute to increased toxic
exposure.
Thus environmental poisons can have more serious effects on
children.
According to Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA),
conventionally grown cotton uses more insecticides than any
other single crop and epitomizes the worst effects of chemically
dependent agriculture. Each year cotton producers around the
world use nearly $2.6 billion worth of pesticides -- more than
10% of the world's pesticides and nearly 25% of the world's
insecticides.
Cotton growers typically use many of the most hazardous
pesticides on the market including aldicarb, phorate,
methamidophos and endosulfan. Cotton pesticides are often broad
spectrum organophosphates--pesticides originally developed as
toxic nerve agents during World War II--and carbamate pesticides.
Pesticides used on cotton–even when used according to
instructions–harm people, wildlife and the environment. These
pesticides can poison farm workers, drift into neighboring
communities, contaminate ground and surface water and kill
beneficial insects and soil micro-organisms. The fabric of our
lives may be more accurately coined the fabric of our illnesses.
Considering the susceptibility of our babies, is it any wonder
that organic cotton would be a health saving choice. Consider
how many hours a baby sleeps, about 60 percent of the time,
imagine the amount of poisons breathed in, absorbed or ingested
just from crib sheets. Examine also the clothing they wear, now
we are talking over 95 percent of the day. Ever see how enamored
they can be with a sleeve, chewing away….
As consumers we need to be aware of what is out there, embedded
in every fiber of our clothing, sheets or home furnishings.
Organic products, including baby organic, are becoming more
easily available and affordable. Don’t you and your children
deserve the health benefits of pure organic cotton?
This article only brings the subject to your attention, there
are some fabulous resources out there with an abundance of
statistics and information. http://www.panna.org/ , one of these
magnificent resources has a whole library to further investigate
the effects of conventional growing practices. Take the time to
review some of these informative articles and reports, you will
be glad you did.
About the author:
Barbara Hodal is a chiropractor and owner of Crystal Baby
Organics, an online organic baby boutique. Visit us at
www.crystalbabyorganics.com for more information on how you and
your children can benefit from organic.
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