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Non-Profit & For Profit Activism

  • Posted on October 25, 2008 at 8:07 pm

Natural Products Expo ’08 picture taken by New Hope Media

Non-Profit & For Profit Activism are interdependent to make real change. My first time in the headquarters of the New York Public Interest Research Group or NYPIRG was profound. I was amazed that there was a whole floor of working paid activists – passion with grounded feet making a difference daily on issues such as the environment, energy, consumer protection, homelessness, higher education, health, social justice and more. I thought “Oh! There is a place for people like me and it’s called NYPIRG“. Grateful and honored to have worked along side the best there.

An incredibly profound occurrence in light of the “economic situation” last week was the Natural Products Expo in Boston MA, seeing a convention center full of 1,300 natural product companies (Supplements, Personal Care, Clothes, to Renewable Dinnerware from fallen palm leaves) and 26,000 participants!

The Boston Convention Center is a wonderful facility; their staff helpful and pleasant and we packed it! This personal/planetary health conscious commerce convocation of products and people reinforced what the polls indicate: the natural products industry is growing, 9.8% in ’07 with $62 billion in sales.

To me this indicates that even in recession “the people” are willing to create what is needed – voting with dollars, another vital form of activism, we claim the future through life affirming purchases now.

Consumers want purchases that are also productive:
• Protect the planet renew raw materials; there is no overdraft protection for these
• Product quality and efficacy which means it is nutrient rich internally or topically
• Provide a fair wage to those putting their life energy into the creation of their purchase.
Gone are the days of ignorance is bliss – we have the knowledge that all of us from planet to person are connected and what is reaped is what is sown, no matter the distance.

Speaking of distance – conference organizers (Natural Products Association, New Hope Media) implemented a creative mass transit incentive with a reimbursement of $100.00. Rickshaws were a fun carbon-free mobility option and of course this method, and walking, were the quicker ways to navigate dense city traffic.

Other creative Green Efforts include: Recycling, One Site Paperless Press Room, Green Energy Tags, & The Green Exhibitor Program. The Massachusetts Convention Center Authority implement Green Practices daily!

Presenters & Workshops are such an important part of the coming together, there were so many that I can only share those I experienced:

  • An empowering Keynote Address on coming home to our essential goodness was given by Frances Moore Lappé, author of the best seller Diet for a Small Planet, her newest book Getting a Grip: Clarity, Creativity and Courage in a World Gone Mad.
  • Women in Naturals, a support for women in the natural products industry, sponsored Kris Carr, author/filmmaker/and cancer cowgirl, shared her moving experience of how lifestyle impacts our health for ill or good. Kris’s rare cancer is in remission using diet & alternative therapies.
  • Organic standards and personal care products are my passion so it is no surprise that I attended the workshop: The Future of Organic Standards for Personal Care Products. My colleague and Organic Beauty Expert, Mary Beth Janssen has written a very comprehensive piece on organic standards in Organic Spa Magazine great piece Mary Beth!

Looking up the word Recession I see a variety of meanings

  • Economics: a period of an economic contraction
  • Noun: a return of ownership to a former possessor
  • Or my own … Recess – time to play during the slump – have some fun. Fun never depends on money just taking time for it.
OH and SAVE THE DATE!!! Next year’s Natural Products Expo is September 23-26, 2009 also at Boston Convention & Exhibition Center! HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!
christine

Mundane Activism

  • Posted on August 4, 2008 at 5:29 pm

Slightly edited from my Post on Feminist.com

Having been on the front lines of environmental activism for nearly 2 decades, I know that the word activism describes the pace and urgency with which “activist” live. We are “called and compelled to act”. But often even activists don’t act out in the mundane what our lives demand of us on the front lines, sometimes we are constrained by monetary limits and sometimes we too are just overwhelmed by all the fronts we need to be vigilant on. A conversation some years ago with someone close to me on the spiritual path was frustrated with the demands of cleaning out her cans before putting them out for curbside recycling. Trying to relate this simple task to the spiritual, I commented that it was just an act of consciousness to which she exclaimed “Just how conscious do I have to be!?” A good question…

The tragic accident of a dear cosmetologist friend and the sighting of a regional landfill and incinerator in our small rural upstate NY village heightened my awareness to the fact that the cosmetic industry is one of the biggest polluters.

My goal of practicing, implementing and teaching non-toxic, non-invasive beauty methods will result in a difference made on the Beauty Industry and also its environmental impacts which impact people as well as the environment.

The skin is the body’s largest organ, our body’s first defense against disease and infection, and it protects our internal organs from injuries. Sixty percent of what is put on the skin is absorbed directly into the blood stream; digestion takes longer for absorption hence the development of nicotine and birth control patches. We are exposed to numerous toxins in multiple pathways from water, air, soil, food and product. It makes sense to control personal exposures where we can. The other side of this coin is the opportunity we have to create a just economy, a safe healthy environment and act from a space of compassion just through the purchase of clean, non-toxic health and beauty products.

Hurricane Katrina is being used as a litmus test for all “what ifs” and is a good lesson for the types of industries we as communities encourage living and growing among us. Personal Hygiene products such as shampoos, skin care, toothpastes, deodorants etc. may have “less than 1%” of a harsh preservative or “undesirable” ingredient, but we must learn to look at the accumulation levels in our homes on our bodies but as importantly in the manufacturing. What are the exposure levels to someone on the assembly line, or in the neighborhood where these chemical laden formulations are created finding their way into air, water and soil.

There are truly effective, all natural, safely preserved health and beauty products. They may cost a little more “up front” but a cost is borne somewhere in the equation – we just need to see the cost as it currently is – borne in contaminated water, soil, air, which comes back to ourselves in illness, disabilities, mutations, even higher health care costs.
Knowing that the “cost factor” is never nullified only misplaced, it becomes apparent that purchasing can be an easy act of expressing compassion! Just think of tithing, or donating towards “good works”. Most people see this as giving to places of worship or charities. When you see tithing as every act and purchase, you can see how purchasing a non-toxic shampoo not only benefits you directly but also others not able to move from toxic communities by building a demand for clean industries.

As I find myself today working in the retail world this very much overlooked, and equally important form of activism is revealed – the daily presence of “space holding”. Space holding is “being the change you wish to see in the world”. Be it maintaining peace and non-judgment, setting up an in store recycling program, or speaking truth to product reps. and/or customers, space holding is essential. It strengthens the power of awareness, as well as of the Self. We don’t need to change the world – just ourselves, and then the world changes.

Events That Changed A Life

  • Posted on July 15, 2008 at 6:43 am
Herbal Hair & Skin Care 1993
Herbal Hair & Skin Care 1993

As a stay at home mother to 6 children, natural herbal treatments were our first priority for healing and health, not to say we never used Allopathic (standard) medicine, it was used sparingly.

We choose the natural modality of healing because:
• being herbal it is food based
• with knowledge it is self empowering
• it’s environmental impact is less and more easily absorbed into nature from whence it came

Two occurrences forever changed and revealed who I am. The first incidence happened when a dear cosmetologist/construction worker friend met with an untimely demise shortly before our rural upstate NY community was sited for a regional landfill and incinerator.

Our friend would join us for dinner every few months to tame the unruly heads of our clan members, his skills kept us from being ragamuffins, as you can imagine, even if hair care cost a mere $5.00 a head, multiplied that is a significant investment for a young family; but Howard was more than keeper of the hair, he was laughter and family. What would we do with out his scissors, his smile?

Awaking one early morn at sunrise to deliver the morning news, our oldest son and I learned from the headlines, that our community was sited to become a “Host” for a regional landfill and incinerator. This situation brought our community together and it also catapulted me into a life of activism.

These two significant influences combined in my heart and psyche; “knowing” there were alternatives for beauty, I attended cosmetology school and after hours studied the natural methods for hair and skin care which included, but not limited to, herbs and foods used topically and internally.

After obtaining my license in cosmetology, my husband and I turned the side porch into a salon where I used and sold all natural products. The thought was that having a large family it would be ideal to have the salon at home; what I learned was rationally it seemed like a good match, realistically it was not.

Four years after opening shop I closed Herbal Hair & Skin Care, and took directorship of the multinational youth environmental organization, Kids Against Pollution (KAP) which did allow for an integrated family and work life. Together my children, their friends, and kids from all over traveled the country to youth environmental meetings, conferences, and summits; we explored and learned about local environmental issues, giving voice to the stakeholders of the future at the decision making table. We were the youngest official delegates to the World Summit on Sustainable Development Johannesburg South Africa, 2002.

Numerous and varied environmental Boards and Working Groups occupied my time and passion to create a habitable sustainable world for our children.
Now that the nest is empty I have found myself in the for profit sector with my passion intact for healing the future. I have learned there are multitudes in the for profit sector with this same passion and that there is a need for activism behind counters everywhere.

Returning to my roots of natural cosmetology after decades of collaborating with so many amazing individuals and organizations, I want to share what I have learned and experienced with others as part of our collective journey co-creating the future, with each purchase choice we make.

The Mission of Non -Toxic Beauty Blog is to Inform about the realities of main stream personal care products

Update on legislation pertaining to health and beauty products

Empower readers to make healthy purchasing choices for themselves, their families, and friends known and unknown, human or other.

www.Faces-of-Astarte.com