Oh interesting to know. I was just playing with a dish washing powder with coconut and citric acid vs. coconut and borax.... The citric acid did better in the rinse phase stripping that after left over soap residue! Its interesting to know you use it in your clothes too.
@ThermalMermaid well when they did his biopsy it had 47 heads and they all had given birth and all the babies spread Ed stage 4 DEand c. But everything he would use store bought soaps his cancer would increase and the Dr's. Would say it was the soap. Also when he ate starches and potatoes and rich any food that converted into sugars even the shelled fish and pork! Is why is important to use natural form keratin and plant based dehydrated colorings for the soaps and essential oils and natural lemon and orange rinds for aromas.
i wish you didn't use the term "chemical" as if it was a bad thing. borax is a chemical, washing soda is a chemical, and soap is a chemical. it's the product of a chemical reaction. and eveything in life is a chemical and a product of chemical reactions. what you mean to say is that industrial detergent like tide might contain dioxane as a contaminant, which happens all the time to all brands. the same contaminant and other contaminants might be present in the borax you're using, the washing soda, the coconut oil that you saponified, and the lye. it all depends on the supplier. all you can do is hope for good quality control, even better if the supplier discloses the quality control analysis for each batch of the raw material you're buying. any decent supplier does it. but brands don't. which is why sometimes there are checks and they find an over-the-limit amount of contaminants and recall some products.
I appreciate your point. I often make the same point to others when they argue the difference between fragrance oils and EOs being natural vs. chemical... They're all chemical, so I get what you're saying. I think the difference here is significant in that the items banned have been tested to be above the allowable levels and this would assume that the other products like borax and washing soda were also tested and found not to exceed the approved levels of any prohibited inclusion. In no way am I claiming that a combination or borax, washing soda, and soap is a 'natural' product... (despite that term being pretty ambigous)... but using a true soap in a laundry powder vs. the a product that has been adjudicated as not acceptable for well being, in my opinion, is a significant change.... enough so that I only wash my clothes this way now, and I'm not crunchy by any stretch. Thank you for taking the time to write your post. I understand your point of view and it's a breath of fresh air to hear from someone who thoughtfully knows what they're talking about.
That sounds so painful. Im glad to know you knew the cause and were able to rectify it. I had no idea tea trea could be the cause of ovarian cysts. Im grateful you made me aware about something that serious.
I made my laundry detergent using only coconut oil soap, washing soda and citric acid. Thank you for sharing
Oh interesting to know. I was just playing with a dish washing powder with coconut and citric acid vs. coconut and borax.... The citric acid did better in the rinse phase stripping that after left over soap residue! Its interesting to know you use it in your clothes too.
@@ThermalMermaid yes and no fabric softener is needed at all
Hi I need soap and how much your 5lt
how did you make the coconut oil soap?
How much of final laundry powder to use for a load of laundry?
Recipes on dish soaps and shampoo and conditioners and lotions❤
Yes my husband loved tide and he died of cancer❤
I'm so sorry for your loss. Did his drs. know what caused it or do you think you have any idea?
@ThermalMermaid well when they did his biopsy it had 47 heads and they all had given birth and all the babies spread Ed stage 4 DEand c. But everything he would use store bought soaps his cancer would increase and the Dr's. Would say it was the soap. Also when he ate starches and potatoes and rich any food that converted into sugars even the shelled fish and pork! Is why is important to use natural form keratin and plant based dehydrated colorings for the soaps and essential oils and natural lemon and orange rinds for aromas.
i wish you didn't use the term "chemical" as if it was a bad thing. borax is a chemical, washing soda is a chemical, and soap is a chemical. it's the product of a chemical reaction. and eveything in life is a chemical and a product of chemical reactions. what you mean to say is that industrial detergent like tide might contain dioxane as a contaminant, which happens all the time to all brands. the same contaminant and other contaminants might be present in the borax you're using, the washing soda, the coconut oil that you saponified, and the lye. it all depends on the supplier. all you can do is hope for good quality control, even better if the supplier discloses the quality control analysis for each batch of the raw material you're buying. any decent supplier does it. but brands don't. which is why sometimes there are checks and they find an over-the-limit amount of contaminants and recall some products.
I appreciate your point. I often make the same point to others when they argue the difference between fragrance oils and EOs being natural vs. chemical... They're all chemical, so I get what you're saying. I think the difference here is significant in that the items banned have been tested to be above the allowable levels and this would assume that the other products like borax and washing soda were also tested and found not to exceed the approved levels of any prohibited inclusion. In no way am I claiming that a combination or borax, washing soda, and soap is a 'natural' product... (despite that term being pretty ambigous)... but using a true soap in a laundry powder vs. the a product that has been adjudicated as not acceptable for well being, in my opinion, is a significant change.... enough so that I only wash my clothes this way now, and I'm not crunchy by any stretch. Thank you for taking the time to write your post. I understand your point of view and it's a breath of fresh air to hear from someone who thoughtfully knows what they're talking about.
@@ThermalMermaid it's so nice of you to say this
That sounds so painful. Im glad to know you knew the cause and were able to rectify it. I had no idea tea trea could be the cause of ovarian cysts. Im grateful you made me aware about something that serious.