The Dangerous Chemicals Lurking in Your Laundry Soap

donnay

Member
Joined
Nov 20, 2007
Messages
42,534
The Dangerous Chemicals Lurking in Your Laundry Soap

Dr. David Juan

You wear your clothes every day and probably take great pains to keep a number of different outfits ready for any occasion.

You’ve likely invested time and effort into making sure your clothes fit properly and look good when you put them on.

It’s kind of odd then, that most of us pay little attention to what we clean our clothes with.

There are commercial laundry soaps galore on store shelves and each assures that it does the best job when it comes to getting clothes clean. But what these soaps are also full of chemicals. The average laundry soap has a number of harmful substances in it that could potentially enter into your skin when you wear clothes that retain some of these chemicals. As for the air you breathe, some estimates peg the number of VOCs that can be released into the air when using commercial laundry soaps or dryer sheets in excess of 25.

There is a way you can reduce your exposure to the chemicals in laundry soap and that is to try to buy products made without these harmful chemicals. Alternately, you can use some all-natural, time-honored soap recipes that you can make yourself right in the comfort of your own home.

When buying laundry soap from the grocery store, you can be sure that a product labeled with a dozen warnings is probably not going to be good for your skin or the environment. Instead, look for products with the fewest toxicity warnings. Buy products scented with natural essential oils instead of artificial fragrance.

Avoid using chlorine bleach to whiten clothes. Instead, try borax. Borax is made from sodium borate, a mineral that occurs naturally in the environment. Sodium borate contains sodium, boron, oxygen and water. You can add a 1/2 cup of borax to regular detergent to help remove stains and brighten whites and colors. Use borax in small amounts as it too can be harmful in large amounts.

Try adding white vinegar to your rinse cycle. White vinegar is great for fighting odors and preventing mold and mildew. White vinegar also brightens clothes and can be used as a fabric softener. NOTE: Don’t combine vinegar with bleach as it creates a toxic chlorine vapor.

Here’s a homemade recipe you can create from scratch. Add 11 cups of washing soda to 15 cups of baking soda. Mix in seven cups of castile soap and three tablespoons of essential oil (such as lavender or lemon). This recipe should get you through months of doing laundry.

Here’s one more laundry trick. Avoid taking your clothes to the dry cleaners after a single use. Fill a spray bottle with inexpensive vodka and spot spray clothing (check for color fastness first). Alcohol kills the bacteria that can lead to odors.

There you have it: all the information you need to create a healthier and more-environmentally friendly laundry soap. Your clothes will appreciate it and your body will too. As for the environment, you may not be able to see the impact first hand, but you will be contributing to less pollution in the air and water.

Sources:

Hollender, J., et al., “Natural, Homemade Laundry Soaps, Mother Earth News web site, July 14, 2011; http://www.motherearthnews.com/natural-health/natural-laundry-soap-ze0z11zhir.aspx, last accessed Dec. 10, 2013.
Lozanova, S., “Toxic Laundry Ingredients to Avoid,” Mother Earth News, April, 2012; http://www.motherearthliving.com/he...undry-detergent-ingredients-zmez12mazmel.aspx, last accessed Dec. 12, 2013.
This article “The Dangerous Chemicals Lurking in Your Laundry Soap” was originally published on DoctorsHealthPress, visit their site to access their vast database of articles and the latest information in natural health.

David Juan, MD has a distinguished reputation as an authority on nutrition, vitamin D and calcium metabolism, hormones, and medical research. His 30 years of clinical experience, 12 years of medical school teaching experience, and medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania give Dr. Juan a leading edge in his expertise. He is well versed in both traditional and alternative medicine and has written and researched breakthrough papers on a variety of medical subjects. Dr. Juan is currently on the staff of a holistic pain relief center in San Francisco and he lends his experience to The Vitamin Doctor.

http://beforeitsnews.com/health/201...als-lurking-in-your-laundry-soap-2516782.html
 
You aren't supposed to eat laundry soap.

But what these soaps are also full of chemicals.

Avoid using chlorine bleach to whiten clothes. Instead, try borax.

Borax is also a chemical.

Use borax in small amounts as it too can be harmful in large amounts.

Just like everything else.
 
Last edited:
At the very least I buy the 'Free & Clear' versions of laundry detergents, but usually make the effort to get a natural brand like Seventh Generation, etc. I'll definitely pass on all those toxic dyes, scents, and God-knows-what-else found in most detergents.
 
I've been having great success with a very simple recipe:

1/2 cup of borax
1/2 cup of super washing soda (arm & hammer)
1/2 bar of soap grated on the small size grate of a cheese grater

Mix together well, store in an air tight container. 1-2 tbs per load.

In the fabric softener area, I put about 1/4 cup of white vinegar and 3-5 drops of lavender essential oil.

I cut up some 5"x5" squares of white cotton from an old undershirt and add 3-5 drops of lavender essential oil to a square of the cotton and add to my dryer load instead of a dryer sheet. You can reuse them. If you want you can wash them after every few loads. You shouldn't have too much issues with static cling, but if you do you can stick a ball of aluminium foil in the dryer and reuse it.
 
Last edited:
I hate any of it just about that is scented . If there is anything dangerous in there I should have been dead long ago , The Mrs throws things in the washer as soon as I take them off. If it were just me , I would just hang up my jackets and quilted flannels somewhere , maybe wash it once a week , LOL
 
You aren't supposed to eat laundry soap.





Borax is also a chemical.



Just like everything else.

You're right, borax isn't really the safest alternative as once thought. I tried this alternative, and it seems to work well. I added an essential oil for a faint smelling fragrance.

Recipe for Borax-Free Laundry Detergent:

Ingredients:

1 bar glycerin soap, grated finely
1 c. washing soda
1/2 c. baking soda
1/2 c. citric acid
1/4 c. coarse salt

Directions:
1. Finely grate 1 bar of pure, unscented glycerine soap

2. Add last 4 ingredients

3. Mix thoroughly

4. Place a desiccant in jar to prevent clumping.

5. Store in airtight container

6. Add 1-2 tbsp. detergent to machine for clean, safe, fresh laundry!

http://myhealthygreenfamily.com/blog/wordpress/homemade-borax-free-laundry-detergent/
 
1 bar glycerin soap, grated finely
1 c. washing soda
1/2 c. baking soda
1/2 c. citric acid
1/4 c. coarse salt

All five of those ingredients are also chemicals or contain chemicals, so that can't be safe either.

Are there any chemical-free laundry soaps you can point us to?
 
All five of those ingredients are also chemicals or contain chemicals, so that can't be safe either.

Are there any chemical-free laundry soaps you can point us to?

The last I knew, everything on the Periodic chart of the elements is considered a chemical. Of course if that's true, that means we are made of chemicals.
 
The last I knew, everything on the Periodic chart of the elements is considered a chemical. Of course if that's true, that means we are made of chemicals.

If you want to be specific, everything on the periodic chart are chemical elements, and the nasty stuff in that laundry soap is called chemical compounds. But yeah, we're made of chemicals....nasty, icky unsafe chemicals.
 
The last I knew, everything on the Periodic chart of the elements is considered a chemical. Of course if that's true, that means we are made of chemicals.

Yep kind of like dopamine is a chemical our bodies produces. The dopamine that you get in drugs is of the man-made kind.
 
I make my own soap because the homemade version works pretty good, is ok to use in an HE washer, is cheap and doesn't bother my son's skin. I use Danno's recipe but I add baking soda(we have hard water) and I put my soap in the Ninja instead of grating it - it comes out finer and grating's a pain in the butt.

I enjoyed the article but I did have to laugh at this suggestion, yeah let me spray my clothes with cheap Vodka before I go to work:rolleyes:

Here’s one more laundry trick. Avoid taking your clothes to the dry cleaners after a single use. Fill a spray bottle with inexpensive vodka and spot spray clothing (check for color fastness first). Alcohol kills the bacteria that can lead to odors.
 
Really? Out of all of the things to be concerned about, you're attacking laundry detergent?

If people really care about their health, instead of worrying about fluoridated water and chemicals in laundry detergent, they should be worrying about going to the gym and eating a clean diet.
 
Oh, I didn't catch the unnecessarily facetious nature of your post. My mistake for trying to have a real conversation.

Well come on here...a real conversation involves words that are used correctly. If there is an issue with certain chemicals, and there's plenty of them to have issues with, then say why and which ones. Just saying "like ewwww man, this has chemicals in it, it's bad!" is meaningless when pretty much everything in this world is made of chemicals.
 
I used to add Trisodium phosphate, then I read somewhere that was the wrong phosphate to use.

TriSodium Phosphate Synonyms: Sodium phosphate, tribasic; Sodium orthophosphate; Sodium phosphate; Trisodium orthophosphate; Phosphoric acid, trisodium salt; Sodium phosphate
Na3O4P

Sodium TriPolyPhosphate Synonyms: Sodium triphosphate; Triphosphoric acid, pentasodium salt; Sodium Phosphate Tripoly; STPP; pentasodium triphosphate; Pentasodium Tripolyphosphate

[Na5O10P3]n

TSP is a simple or "mono" phosphate and generates a precipitate, which is not a good thing for laundry use but not so much a problem washing a driveway. Avoiding precipitates is the reason for using STPP instead of other types of water softeners/boosters.

STPP is a "complex" phosphate compound and does not form a precipitate in the wash water. STPP decomposes into TSP over time with exposure to moisture (detergent packages instruct "store in a cool, dry place" which is to protect the product quality, whether or not phosphates are in it), and thus should be kept in an air-tight container for long-term storage.

No idea what the bolded part means, but there it is.
 
Wait I add TSP to laundry and dishes. I thought it was a rinsing agent. Plus I thought TSP was in all cleaning products until it was banned recently over pollution.
 
What a bunch of shit. Which chemicals, specifically? How Are they substantive to the textile and not soluble in the water rinsing? Where's the study confirming the mode of action/mechanism where any chemical residue on properly laundered textiles is adsorbed through the skin? Give me some units with that VOC claim; and how about the method of collecting that data? Right over the drain?

Junk science article is junk.

But if you want the 'safest' - but quite possibly most ineffective product - use sodium bicarbonate, sodium carbonate, sodium citrate, sodium chloride and a natural, tallow based surfactant/soap (but be careful if you have hard water).

Typical home laundry has very little soil, so throwing some table salt and baking soda into the washer might seem like the best kept secret since the invention of the washing machine. But there's really nothing there. Tide (P&G) employs an army of R&D scientists and patent attorneys to make actual, science based claims, backed up with studies, methodology and data. They even post their product ingredients online and their MSD sheets. So, unless someone can show me how a palm based, readily biodegradable linear alcohol ethoxylate surfactant used at the PPM (talking milligrams per liter) concentration during the wash process is somehow remaining on the textile after laundering and drying, which is also adsorbed onto the wearers skin, I'm not losing any sleep.

But kudos if you make your own, save some cash, get good results, keep money from the big corps, and enjoy it. If you want any tips to enhance your detergent, hit me up; I know this stuff pretty well!
 
Back
Top