Category Archives: Beauty Products

Time to Talk About Hair Gel!

I know, how terribly exciting!

I freaking LOVE my hair gel. About 4 years ago I discovered the genius of working WITH my hair and with it, an exciting train of fewer chemicals. Which eventually led me here.

If you’ve never heard of the Curly Girl method or the No-poo Movement, it’s essentially a way of removing harsh chemicals and treatments from your hair routine in order to allow your hair to do what it was made to do. Extra moisture, less brushing, and natural curl separation are part of the seemingly simple but entirely individual points along the way.

Although I still use a curly-hair-approved commercial shampoo and conditioner (after a disastrous few months experimenting with raw egg, lemon juice, and puréed avocado, among other food items), I make my own hair gel and LOVE it.

When I wash my hair, I apply generous amounts of hair gel while it’s still dripping wet. Once it’s dry, I scrunch my hair to break the gel cast and watch my hair grow in volume. The awesome thing about this is when I refresh my curly hair over the few days before the next wash, that gel helps to keep the waves and curls in place. Unless my activities are wild or involve a lot of activity, it usually keeps the frizz down.

On top of that amazingness, it’s super cheap and absolutely non-toxic. Free of unpronounceable chemicals. And easy to whip up.

My Favorite Hair Gel

1/4 cup of whole flax seeds
1 cup of water
Essential oil of choice (I love lavender)
Grapefruit seed extract (optional)

Heat water in a small saucepan and add flax seeds. Simmer and stir until the seeds remain suspended in water once the pan is removed from heat. (This doesn’t take long.)

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Strain into a small bowl. Whisk flax water to break it up.

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When cooler, add essential oil (I use about 5-7 drops but you may prefer more or less). Add grapefruit seed extract if desired (5 drops is good; this prevents spoiling).

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This hair gel lasts about a week and a half unrefrigerated before it starts to smell funky. In the fridge it lasts much longer. Before I starting adding grapefruit seed extract it would grow mold after about two weeks, which was a little sooner than I could finish a full batch.

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Little At A Time

I’m making a schedule for next year so I can focus on one detoxing arena at a time. So far I want to do them all at once, which is so typical for me that part of my game plan is to make myself feel like I’m doing them all at once while actually…not.

Meanwhile, guess what I did right before Christmas?

I had noticed over the last few months that some of my perfumes made me nauseated. As more of my usual scents were affecting me, I decided to get rid of them…

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…and since I was down there, I went through everything else in my cabinets as well.

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I already had a moderately nice supply of essential oils (thanks to an addiction to lavender, a love of tea tree, and a donation of random oils from  my Mom a few months back).

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I added a few others and invested in a perfume oil (rose–it smells like heaven).

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I also decided, because it was all in the same category (do you sense my heavy sarcasm?), to ditch my cleaning products and make my own natural ones. I used a recipe from this site to make an all-purpose cleaner. I’ll let you know how it works.

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My Favorite…Deodorant. Yes.

One of my favorite things since I went vegan (aside from delicious food, my favorite lip balm, and the feeling of aligning more closely with my ideals), has been my deodorant.

Odd thing to say, but there it is.

If you check labels on conventional deodorants, they’re full of questionable things. Experts are quick to assure us that aluminum doesn’t cause cancer, that there is no risk with parabens, and that propylene glycol is safe. So there’s really no hard evidence from the scientific community (aside from the problems with perfumes), but I disagree. Where there is smoke, there is likely fire.

And if you’re going vegan, you’re going to want to avoid ingredients like non-vegetable glycerine and gelatin. When my friend first went vegan, she tried a whole shelf of products to find one which worked for her.

When I went vegan, I didn’t have that kind of time. Ever since I was a teenager, my body odor had been…problematic. I had to switch between deodorants every eight months as my body adjusted to them. I had to throw away tops which had collected BO to the point where it would not wash out.  I had rejoiced when the whole “clinical strength” thing hit the stores. There was NO WAY I could test out vegan deodorant and merely hope to find something which worked.

So I held on to my precious clinical strength, non-vegan deodorant while I whipped up a batch of my own.

And I never went back.

Partly it’s because being vegan radically altered my body odor for the positive. But partly…was because my new deodorant WORKED.

My favorite  deodorant recipe:

1/4 cup cornstarch
1/4 cup baking soda
1/4 cup coconut oila few drops of essential oil (lavender, ylang ylang, etc)

Melt the coconut oil and stir the cornstarch and baking soda into it. Once they’re combined (add another spoonful of coconut oil if needed), stir in the essential oil. It should be fairly loose, like a thick pancake dough, until the coconut oil solidifies.

To use, pinch a pea-sized amount (more or less depending on your needs) and apply with your fingers.

Some suggestions for sensitive skin include trading arrowroot powder for cornstarch, upping the starch-to-baking powder ratio, and substituting diatomaceous earth for baking soda. For some people, it may take a few weeks for your body to get used to the difference from your old chemical deodorant.

Best stuff ever!
I use an old jam jar for mine

It may sound like a lot of work when you can just go to the store and buy it, but it takes less time to make than it does to run an errand. It’s also pretty damn cheap. Chances are you already have the primary ingredients in your kitchen (and if you don’t have coconut oil as a pantry staple, fix that right now!).

Any deodorant success stories? Favorite natural store brands?

Love of Color (Nail Polish Edition)

My first, randomly-selected area of improvement: nail polish.

I know, it’s such a First World Problem. Painting my nails is something I have time to do, energy to do, money to do, and a lifestyle which allows them to stay nice. (My toes, anyway. My fingernails don’t last more than three days before getting horrendous. I call this “actively living my life” instead of “being too lazy to use gloves”.)

But painting my toes gives me a very big mood lift. I love seeing a pop of color when I go barefoot in the winter. I love coordinating my color with clothes and sandals in the summer.

But chemicals…

Like most people, I didn’t give a thought to what my nail polish was made of. If it’s sold in a store, it’s probably safe, right?

Yeah, no.

A lot of our beauty products have chemicals shown to cause cancer or disrupt our endocrine systems. Some may have links to Autism.

Right now, nail polish is not something I’m ready to give up entirely. But I am ready to be safer and smarter.

This is my box of out-going products:

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So many pretty colors which have been cheery companions…

And rebuilding my polish collection with new, safer products will take a while. Toxic is cheap. Safe is expensive.

I got these from Pacifica earlier this summer when they first debuted their line of “7 Free” nail polish.

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I put in another order today for a clear base/top coat and a red (because a girl needs red for the holidays!). It’ll take a while to get some variety, but I’m going to be patient. My goal is to set aside funds for one new color each month.

For now: blue toenails!

 

Other resources:

Environmental Working Group’s Skin Deep database (they also have a free app)

Care2 has a list of 12 nail polish brands