Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Homemade, All Natural 2-Step Deodorant

In the past year or so, I have gone on a rampage looking for a natural deodorant that actually works. To be honest, I haven't tried very many, because natural deodorant tends to be very expensive, and I even reverted back to terrible Lady Speed Stick for a while, because I got so fed up. I decided after Jaxson was born, though, that I really needed to find a good, natural alternative. I'm, unfortunately, not in a position to go gallivanting around buying up all the natural deodorants I can find. It's just not cost effective when nothing I have tried so far works.

I have, however, tried 4:

Tom's of Maine: I actually found that this stuff didn't work very well for me. I had to reapply it constantly, and it still didn't contend with my b.o by the end of the day!

JASON: This is the stuff I used for the longest time, and I like it, but I found I had to carry it with me to reapply throughout the day.

Me&You.: My husband uses this deodorant and absolutely loves it! It's actually one of the few that he doesn't react to (he has very sensitive skin). I, on the other hand, didn't like it at all. It actually managed to make me smell worse than if I was wearing nothing! I also reacted pretty badly too it.

Hugo Naturals: This has been my latest trial, and I liked it for a little over a week, though I did have to apply it a couple times a day. However, recently, it has just stopped working, no matter how often I wash and reapply.

So the other day, I just got fed up with this. I didn't want to buy any more and discover that they also do not work.

So as usual, I did some reading about what I could to, on a couple of my favourite blogs, and some random ones too. I started off by looking up some natural deodorant reviews and then from there decided the most cost effective thing for me to do would be to just try make my own. I could make a small amount and if it didn't work, i'd try something new!

Years ago, I tried making a basic coconut oil, essential oil, baking soda and cornstarch deodorant, but it didn't work for me at all, and I reacted pretty painfully to it too. Unfortunately, that put me off experimenting with this..... until now!

Crunchy Betty has a couple of recipes for homemade deodorant that look amazing, and she also links to a couple other recipes that she has found. That's where I started my search. I cruised around the blog and found another post about a more complicated deodorant that I just didn't want to get into (and can't, because I don't have all the ingredients).

On this page, she mentions that it's better to use arrowroot powder instead of cornstarch, so that there's less chance of a reaction. I stored this little nugget away, as I believe that that's what I reacted to in both my own attempt at making deodorant and the Me&You. deodorant.

It wasn't the recipe that Crunchy Betty uses on her blog that interested me, though. It was another link that she posted at the bottom of her post. A two-step deodorant that's supposed to really work!

Now, the reason I was attracted to this one, is that in my desperation to rid myself of b.o. for a day out with my family, I did some reading about things that could help and one girl said just straight up baking soda would! I tried it, and it actually did! Even the next morning, without a shower, i'm still relatively odour-less! I was pretty shocked, to be honest. I was not expecting that at all.

So when I saw this two-step recipe, I decided to give it a try.

What it is is a cream and then a powder that you apply on top of the cream.

The cream is nice and soothing, and also antibacterial. The powder, which is held on your skin with the help of the cream (!), helps to absorb moisture and odour.



For the cream, I changed the recipe a little bit because of the reading I had done about other deodorant recipes. I know that both shea and cocoa butter are great for smoothing and soothing irritated skin and i'm loving it in my lotions, so I did:

15g coconut oil
20g shea butter
10g cocoa butter
1 drop tea tree essential oil
6 drops lavender essential oil
3 drops lemon essential oil


I melted the coconut oil, shea butter and cocoa butter in a double boiler and then removed it from the heat. After letting it cool down a little bit, I added the essential oils, mixing well, and poured it into my sanitized container.

For the powder, taking Crunchy Betty's advice, I replaced the cornstarch for arrowroot powder:

1/2 cup baking soda
1/2 cup arrowroot powder
2 drop tea tree essential oil
10 drops lavender essential oil
6 drops lemon essential oil

The cream cooling and the powder nice and mixed and smelling amazing!

Today is the first day i'm going to try it, and this deodorant is really going to be put to the test next week when we head to BC for a wedding! I anticipate travel b.o. (yes, it's a real thing), sweaty hikes and much dancing at the wedding! I will report back at the end of our trip to see how well this stuff actually works!

UPDATE: check out my thoughts on how this deodorant held up for multiple days of travel, a wedding, and nature walks!

Monday, March 10, 2014

Yoga-ing with an Infant

I absolutely love yoga. I found it relatively late in my life- only a few years ago, and its benefits are uncountable! It gives you both physical and mental strength, it teaches you to breathe and the importance of breath, and it grounds you and centres you. Yoga can heal all parts of your body, and I have seen an experienced that first hand!

Yoga is challenging. It's meant to be. So naturally, it's challenging to do with a baby, or an infant. But one of the things I love about yoga is that whatever you do, it's your practice. Zen, yogic calm, the groundedness…. all of that is whatever you make it to be in the moment.

Zen is not perfect calm and silence for me. It just can't be. I have to find my own calm in the shitstorm that is being a mum of a very active infant! Heck, I barely even close my eyes during a practice, because that wouldn't help me relax into it.

On the contrary, as a mum, my yogic calm is having an awareness of where Jaxson is so i'm not stressing that he's getting into something he's not supposed to.

My yogic calm is fitting my practice around him, whether that means stopping to feed him or change him and then coming back to it, or maneuvering my poses around him as he crawls beneath me and behind me, or is sitting in front of me as I try to go through a chataranga! And honestly, I don't always miss him!

I have most definitely kicked Jaxson in the head as I lift my foot and find that he is at that exact moment crawling behind me! And Jaxson has most definitely pushed me out of balancing poses, because he's decided that now is the time that he wants up and starts climbing up my leg!

I admit too that I don't always stop my practice. Sometimes, I need the flow more than I know he needs me, so i've breathed through my poses and his screaming.

This is yoga with an infant: WHATEVER YOU MAKE OF IT!

That's the beauty of yoga! Find your centre, your calm, and breathe into it. Yoga truly is for everyone.
I actually love doing yoga with Jaxson, because it has become a completely different practice for me than it used to be. My yoga practice has evolved, and with it, so have I.

I used to have a hard time finding my centre, my calm in a quiet, focused class. Now I find it with a little one pulling on my pant legs while i'm in tadasana or half moon pose, crawling under me when i'm in downward dog, pulling my hair when i'm in child's pose…. For me, this is quite an accomplishment. After pregnancy, labour and delivery, and these past 10+ months, I am more equipped to breathe through challenges and uncomfortable-ness than I ever was before. And as I yogini mum, I believe that all of that prepared me and turned me into a better yoga practitioner.

The key is to stay focused on your breath, if nothing else. Just breathe! Breathe through everything, every frustration, every muscle ache and pain, every unbalance.

And laugh. Yoga is not meant to be so serious. Have fun with it, laugh at the difficulties and pain, laugh when your kid knocks you over or suddenly wants your attention when you're in a difficult pose, or are just getting into the flow.

Laugh and breathe.

That is my life, and if I want to do yoga, I just need to find it wherever I can, every day. Yoga is in everything we do, and by starting with a practice like this, I can bring it into all aspects of my life.

Jaxson is my son, my sun. I couldn't imagine my life, my practice without him. He is a vital part of it all, and he is my centre.


Thursday, March 6, 2014

Witch Hazel and Thyme for Breakouts

In hand with the oil moisturizer I started using about a month ago, I decided to try another acne "cure" I read about on Crunchy Betty - thyme infused witch hazel. Apparently, thyme is better at killing bacteria than benzoyl peroxide, which is the main ingredient in prescription acne creams. Thyme, a common and inexpensive herb found in practically every kitchen everywhere, is more effective (not to mention better for you) than medical prescriptions? A) sweet! B) why am I surprised? The beauty and strength of nature! Gotta love it!




Naturally, I had to try this! I use witch hazel and rosewater as a toner anyway, so the first time I tried this, I just added 3 tbsp of dried thyme to my witch hazel and let it steep for 36 hours before straining it. It turned a beautiful golden brown within minutes and by the end of the second day, was a dark earthy brown. I strained it through a coffee filter, and really wrung out the thyme to get as much of the liquid-y goodness as I could! 


At the end of 2 days, this is how dark the infusion gets!
Fully strained. Lovely!
One thing I will say about it is I originally made up a relatively large amount, and I believe it went bad after a couple weeks, so I had to toss it. So this time around, I made a smaller batch (5 tbsp witch hazel and 2 tbsp of thyme). I'm also storing it in the fridge from now on, so it'll keep longer. Plus, this way it's so nice and refreshing when I use it! I would recommend either doing this, or making small batches that you can use up in a week or so to avoid it from spoiling.

I absolutely love it! I noticed a difference in my skin after just 2 days of using this in conjunction with my oil moisturizer! So I can safely say that it works very very well! It's kind of funny, though, because I smell like a curry, what with the tamanu oil in my moisturizer and the very thyme-y witch hazel! It works though, and I don't mind the smell, it's just different than any other, unnatural products, I've used in the past!


Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Homemade Body Butter for Jaxson's Dry Skin

It being winter in the prairies, my whole family suffers from dry skin. Not bad, though eczema does run in the family. Just dry skin. But dry skin of any kind sucks!

I've been looking for months for something that would help Jaxson. I was unwilling to buy any baby lotions, because they are either very bad (ie. Johnson and Johnson, which is chock full of chemicals, fragrances, etc which rate very poorly on the EWG) or very expensive (ie. Earth Mama). Plus, since my little bug came along, I've been more conscious about what I put on my body, and his, so I've been wanting to make my own lotion for him for ages. 

I've been using coconut oil since he was born, and I love it, but it's not moisturizing enough, for any of us, for the winter months! I finally indulged and bought some cocoa butter and shea butter from an organic market here in Saskatoon. The unfortunate thing is it's really expensive, so I had to wait to till my order from New Directions Aromatics (NDA) arrived. Since it finally has, I plan on experimenting a bit with my original recipe (below) to make a more moisturizing cream.

Because it was so expensive at the market in Saskatoon (50g for $16! :-O), I was very hesitant about using it, so this recipe didn't turn out as thick and moisturizing as I wanted it to; I still ended up using mostly coconut oil. However, it's a lovely lotion and in a DAY I noticed a difference with Jaxson's skin! It's softer, smoother, way less dry and chapped. I love what this does to his skin! I'm excited to try making it again with more cocoa and shea butters, and to try it out for myself, with essential oils!

My original recipe:

1 tbsp shea butter
1 tbsp cocoa butter
A bit more than ¼ cup coconut oil
7 drops lavender oil

I melted all these in a double boiler, stirring often, until they were just melted. Then I took it off the heat and added the essential oils, stirring well after each so I could smell it and make sure I didn't add too much. While it was still liquid, I poured it into the sanitized jar I planned on keeping it in, and stuck it in the fridge till it had solidified.

I know that small changes in the ingredients will have huge changes in the consistency of this lotion, and I'd prefer it to be a bit thicker, but this batch is actually quite nice- it's soft and buttery, oily, spreads well and I don't need much to cover Jaxson's whole body! It also soaks in much quicker than I expected it too, so it's not too oily!

Now that I have my order from NDA, and have finally run out of the batch I made (above), i've changed the recipe a bit. As I said, I wanted something thicker, and so I did some reading about the safety of beeswax on babies, since I know honey is not supposed to be introduced till they're a year old due to botulism risks in spores. Honestly, I read very mixed reviews, but apparently a lot of natural baby lotions and nipple creams do contain beeswax. My conclusion is that it's very subjective (as most things are, I find, when it comes to babies)... Most babies are fine, some are not, so use your own discretion. I decided to add just a bit to my new recipe; just enough to really thicken it up and help lock in moisture. 



So my new recipe is:

8 g beeswax pellets
30 g shea butter
45 g cocoa butter
25 g coconut oil
10 drops lavender essential oil



Again, I melted everything in a double boiler, starting with the cocoa butter and then beeswax, because those take the longest to melt. When all the ingredients had fully melted, I removed the bowl from the heat and let it cool a bit before adding the essential oil. The oil smelled amazing on its own, so I only added a little lavender- more for its healing properties than for smell. I really didn't want to take away from the sweet, warm smell of the cocoa butter and beeswax!



One thing I've come to absolutely love about beeswax is how quickly it starts to thicken and solidify! The last batch I made took so long to cool and solidify. This batch started to harden within 10 minutes, and it was a beautiful, thick, though still pourable consistency by the time I poured it into the jar.

I love the colour!
The consistency feels a bit oiler on the skin than the last batch, but still soaks in beautifully! I really like it more than the first batch I made. Surprisingly, though it goes on more oily (which is nice for rubbing it on), it soaks in much faster than the first batch. It smells absolutely divine, and I want it for myself!

I've so far been so pleased with everything i've made - and it's giving me more confidence to try more things! I'm so excited to experiment even more!


Monday, March 3, 2014

My First Home Cooked Meal in a While

I don't cook as often as i'd like to. A) Adrian's the chef. He's good at it… really good…. so I don't tend to do much cooking. B) Adrian's more often than not working through dinner, so I end up eating noodle soup or perogies or something similarly as easy and unhealthy. This is something i'm really wanting to change, however. I personally want to start eating better, but it's also more convenient as Jaxson's appetite grows and he can start eating what we are.

I was recently shown a blog that has tons of easy to make crock pot meals. This lady has actually done an excellent job of laying it out! She's got a couple of posts, so I took recipes from a couple of them, but she also writes up master shopping lists to go along with the blog post about her recipes! It's a lot of work, and it's pretty impressive. I wasn't a huge fan of all of the recipes, so I just chose a few that looked good to me. I also tried to make them a bit more healthy by using homemade or fresh ingredients where I could (she uses a lot of soy sauce, bbq sauce, packaged apple sauce etc). The other great thing about this is you make up a few recipes all at once and freeze them to be pulled out and defrosted as you need them! It's awesome for a stay at home mum! I got Adrian's help and made 8 of them.

Tonight, I put one of these recipes in the crock pot around noon - the Honey Garlic Chicken. It's one of the easiest ones, and after about 3 hours, it smelled so good I almost couldn't wait till Adrian got home! I served this with some leftover Mexican rice from earlier this week. I know, I know, very different taste profiles, but that's how we ro'!

Honey Garlic Chicken:

Chicken - I used 6 thighs, and for this recipe, I probably should have used more!
5 garlic cloves, minced
1 tsp oregano
3/4 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup ketchup
1/2 cup bbq sauce
1/3 cup honey
salt
pepper

Throw everything in the crock pot!

Source: Who Needs a Cape

I had him text me when he was on his way so that I could get broccoli going, so we had a green. This is another problem with our diet at the moment. We just do not eat enough fruit and veggies, so i'm trying hard to incorporate this into our meals. Jaxson, on the other hand, eats unbelievably well and balanced!

Adrian surprised me by coming home with some sparkling wine, just for fun!


For desert, I made an almost vegan chocolate avocado pudding! This turned out surprisingly well! I didn't know what to expect, because i've never done this before, but the avocados actually do make it pudding-y! The original recipe wasn't sweet enough for my (or, I knew, Adrian's taste), so I added an extra 2 tbsp of honey (hence almost vegan), and that was all it needed!



Chocolate-Avocado Pudding:

2 ripe avocados
6 tbsp unsweetened cocoa power
5 tbsp maple syrup
1/4 to 1/3 cup liquid (I used coconut milk)
1 tsp vanilla
pinch of sea salt

Throw everything in a food processor and blend until smooth.

Source: Janet and Greta



I didn't tell Adrian what this pudding was, and it was pretty funny having him try to guess. He didn't get it, but he sure tried! I know it wasn't as sweet as he would have liked it (he's got the biggest sweet tooth i've ever seen!), but I loved it!

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Girl's Night with Mum

I get together with my mum often, every weekend at least and more often than not, multiple nights a week when Adrian's at work. I love my mum. She's fun, easy to talk to, she's a friend… And she loves her grandson! hahah So it's also nice for me to get a bit of a break and be able to relax a bit.

Last night, I brought over all my New Directions Aromatics order so I could show her all the essential oils and butters I bought. Fun for me mostly, i'm sure. However, I did bring over the Rhassoul clay as well so we could try it out together! It had been a week since i'd done it myself, and so I was dying to try it again (i'm not too sure yet how often you can do it). I was hoping we'd get around to doing it when Jaxson was napping, but he had a rough day of teething and so things didn't go as I had hoped. It ended up working out even better, though, because we waited until the evening, fed Jaxson, helped ourselves to a glass of wine, and then indulged! It was pretty hilarious how Jaxson reacted to us with the clay on our faces - he was so unsure! hahah

This time around, we decided to try mixing the clay with milk instead of water. Milk is an awesome face mask ingredient. The lactic acid in milk acts as a natural microdermabrasion for your skin, sloughing away dead skin cells as a gentle exfoliator. It also apparently helps the skin look more radiant, prevents premature aging, shrinks pores, reduces irritation, helps heal wounds and nourishes and softens. Source: Beautiful Skin with Milk. I've used milk, or yogurt, a couple times in masks and I absolutely love it.



I used 2 tablespoons of clay (which, again, ended up being way too much), because I read that the ratio for a mask, with any liquid with this clay is 1 part clay, 1/2 part liquid. Boy, was that wrong! I ended up using a 3:1 ratio milk:clay! This made a beautiful paste, but it was way thicker than when I did it with water. I actually liked this, because it was a bit easier to apply.



As before, the clay went on beautifully, and we both immediately commented on how soft and smooth it was. One thing I instantly loved about this with milk is it didn't start drying as quickly, and took way longer to dry, so it didn't get painfully tight.

Jaxson gave us the most hilarious looks when we came out of the bathroom with our faces covered in this. He didn't know what to think. I think he was a little freaked out, but all he did was stare at us.

Jaxson's first look at us. WTF?


Almost 10 minutes later, and he still has no idea what's going on!

Gramma trying to put him at ease by showing him she's still under that mud!
Something we both noticed, and I believe it was the lactic acid in the milk, because I didn't have this sensation with water, is that after 5 minutes or so, it started to sting/itch a bit. Not in a painful way, but noticeable. I kind of liked it!

We sat for about 20 minutes before washing it off, and it hadn't completely dried like it did with water, but interestingly, it sort of fell off in small clumps. I also noticed that it didn't rehydrate the same way it did with water. It took more water to hydrate it and rub it off, and it came off in bigger chunks as opposed to almost dissolving off.

Stretching our faces and cracking the mask! Felt so good!
Mum immediately commented on how soft and radiant her skin looked. She loved it!! Success!

I enjoyed it just as much this time around, and felt like my skin was just glowing!

Glowing!
It was a fun night, with lots of laughs because of Jaxson's reactions. These things are fun and so easy to do at home by yourself, but I always feel they're way more fun to do with good company!

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Warming, Relaxing Massage Butter

Since getting my order from New Directions Aromatics, I have been putting off making anything, because it's been so hard for me to decide what to make! I'm nervous about wasting my product, and I want to make sure it all goes to good use!

Today, I decided to try making a massage lotion to surprised Adrian, since we've both been stiff lately and needing free massages! I wanted something thicker than an oil, because it's so dry here that both Adrian and I just soak up coconut oil, so after some research, I decided to make a melting massage bar using shea butter, cocoa butter, jojoba oil and even a bit of beeswax! I also wanted this to be a warming lotion to use at night, so I used cinnamon bark essential oil, birch essential oil, and vanilla 10 fold.



Both cinnamon and birch can be irritating for the skin, and should be used with caution, in small quantities, so I was very careful about the amount of drops I used of each. The recommended starting concentration of both of these oils is 1 drop per 3 tsp of carrier oil, and then to go from there. Cinnamon bark oil is a great antidepressant, antibacterial/fungal/microbial, and is also an antiviral and antiseptic! It stimulates the immune system, purifies the body and is warming and also an aphrodisiac. It is beneficial for self acceptance and grounding and supports healthy relationships. Birch oil is a wonderful oil for aches and pains, for muscles and joints and bones. It is a natural analgesic, is anti-inflammatory, anti-spasmodic and anti-rheumatic. This is because it contains methyl salicylate, which has cortisone like properies, acting similarly to aspirin. It is also a wonderful oil for finding inner strength. Vanilla is an antioxidant, aphrodisiac, anti carcinogen, antidepressant and is also tranquillizing/relaxing. It also smells absolutely incredible, and I knew it would smell amazing with the cinnamon and birch!

Source: Sustainable Baby StepsOrganic Facts

To keep things simple, I didn't want a whipped lotion, but I also didn't want a solid bar, so I decided to try a variation on this recipe:

1 part beeswax
1 part cocoa butter
1 part liquid oil
essential oils, as desired

Source: Humblebee and Me

I didn't want mine quite as hard as this would turn out, so this is how I adapted the recipe:

50g cocoa butter
15g beeswax
50g of shea
15ml of jojoba oil
4 x drops of cinnamon bark
2 x drops of birch (a very little goes a very long way!)
5 x drops of vanilla 10 fold

Cocoa butter takes the longest to melt, so I put that in my double boiler until it was almost fully melted, and then added the beeswax. This mix alone smelled so amazing!

Cocoa butter and beeswax


When the beeswax had almost completely melted, I added the shea butter and let that melt fully.

Shea butter in the cocoa butter and beeswax


I then took it off the heat and added the jojoba oil.

Started to solidify after 8 minutes!

When this had cooled to the point where it was starting to solidify around the edges, I added the essential oils, so they wouldn't simply evaporate off of it. To add the essential oils, I started off with just a single drop of each, mixing fully and smelling to decide if I should add more. I added just enough to give this oil a nice, subtle, warm and spicy scent. I'm not a fan of overly scented products, and I think this turned out beautifully. It set very quickly because of the beeswax, and I actually had to put the bowl back on the still warm burner so I could fully incorporate the essential oils!

Essential oils added, ready to cool in the fridge.

After that, I poured it into my sterilized mold/container and stuck it in the fridge with the lid off to solidify completely.

Not too much of a colour change, but you can tell that this is more solid than before! 
Once it had solidified completely (about 30 minutes, thought it didn't even need that long), I took it out of the fridge to see what the consistency was like. I love it! It's definitely solid, but the minute my finger touched it, it started to melt a bit - it's exactly what I wanted. I cut it into little cubes to store in the same container, so that all I'd need to do is pull out a cube and melt it in my hands - way easier than trying to gouge out a chunk whenever I wanted to use it.



It smells amazing - subtle, just like I wanted. This was absolutely perfect. Thick, and moisturizing, it took a long time to soak in, and so lasted for the whole massage! It was a great consistency for massaging, and smelled absolutely incredible as it warmed into the skin. I am so happy with this massage butter! Definitely going to be making more of this, and experimenting with different scents!