Personal Actions
Simple Steps
Simple steps toward a healthier lifestyle can really make a difference! Here are some examples of commitments you can make to reduce your (and your family’s) exposure to toxic substances. Most of these ideas will save money too!
Air Quality
- If you smoke anything or vape, quit
- If you are not yet ready to quit, smoke outside for the sake of your family
- Keep children and pregnant women away from renovations
- Contain reno. dust by sealing area with plastic or closing it off with wood
- Use less-toxic paint, finishes, and glues for crafts and renos
- Wash work clothes separately from other clothes
Cleaning
- Damp mop and dust
- Vacuum with a central vac. or one with a Hepa filter
- Keep vacuumed dust out of your compost
- Wash dusters separately from clothing
- Take your shoes off at the entrance door
- Minimize clutter
- Store books in closed bookcases, or vacuum them often
- Store toys in covered bins
- Wash your hands often using ordinary soap and water
- Use baking soda as a scouring powder
- Use vinegar for windows, surfaces, and floors
- Avoid bleach at home
- Use un-scented products
- Avoid air fresheners and plug-ins
- Avoid dry cleaning or ask the cleaner to NOT to use Perc. (Perchlorethylene)
- Use alternatives to pesticides in your home
Mould
- Repair cracks in the foundation
- Install a de-humidifier
- Install exhaust fans to the outdoors in the bathroom and kitchen
- Add insulation in cold, damp corners
- Hire a professional to clean mould that is bigger than one square meter
- Replace problem windows
- Do not store clothing and papers in cardboard boxes in a damp basement.
Pesticides
- Refuse to use: Find less toxic ways to avoid pests
- Keep food in closed containers
- Keep window screens in good repair
- Sprinkle cayenne pepper across where ants enter the house
- Mix baking soda with icing sugar and leave a little pile on the counter for a few days=for ants
- Set up a trap line with peanut butter as bait to catch mice in the spring and fall
- Use decoy nests to discourage hornets’ nests where you congregate outside
- Wear appropriate clothing when hiking to avoid ticks and other biting insects
Food
- Cook from scratch
- Avoid pop
- Avoid artificial sweeteners
- Reduce “white foods” sugar, flour, rice
- Buy local, in season, and then process it yourself
- Grow your own, without pesticides
- Buy in bulk
- Buy organic if you can.
- Avoid highly processed foods
- Resist preserved meats (Hot Dogs, Pastrami, balogna, etc.)
- Reduce your consumption of industrially-raised meat (eat lower on the food chain)
- Eat safer fish:
- Those low in mercury; mackerel, herring, rainbow trout, wild or canned wild salmon, tilapia
- “Light” varieties of Tuna, NOT albacore
- Check local information for safety of self-caught fish
Plastics
- Never put any kind of plastic into the microwave
- Store food in ceramic or glass containers
- Heat baby’s milk in glass container and put into a glass bottle when warm, not hot
- Use stainless steel or glass water bottles and sippy cups
- If you have a plastic sippy cup, NEVER put hot liquid into it
- Avoid BPA, BPF and BPS-lined cans by buying food frozen, fresh, or in jars
- Avoid teething toys, bath toys, or toys for small children that contain PVC (Vinyl)
- Use a shower curtain that does not contain PVC
Personal Care Products
- Use unscented products and as natural as possible
- Resist hair dye, especially if pregnant
- Try using the free, ”Think Dirty” (Shop Clean) app when selecting personal care products
- Audit your personal care and beauty products for items that may be harmful
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