Sunday, June 26, 2011

A Favorite Film

There is a film that seldom fails to put a lump in my throat, causing my voice to shake and my eyes to go misty.

Not Doctor Zhivago . . . 

No -- the film that really gets me is Multiple Chemical Sensitivity: A Short Introduction*, featured on the website of The Chemical Sensitivity Foundation (features the chemically injured, including World Trade Center first-responders and war survivors):

No sooner do I see the face of HUD's Bennie Howard and hear the concrete words of support he is speaking than the syndrome starts all over again --  I just want to cry.

Why?

Because Howard's face and voice tell me that there are people out there who actually acknowledge the grueling reality of MCS.  So many people persist in withholding full belief in the MCS sufferer's credibility. This withholding of belief enables them to hang back from the issue, to be content with knowing the bare minimum about it, to tell themselves that it's only "so-and-so" who has this strange MCS problem.  By remaining detached in this way, they easily miss the reality of the rapidly growing population of MCS sufferers.  Moreover, they miss learning about the smoldering dangers to the health of all humans, humans who are exposed to the very same toxins that MCS sufferers just happen to react to earlier.

What is behind this detachment?

When people develop allergies to ordinarily harmless, natural substances, no one is incredulous about this.  Never, for example, have I heard anyone insinuate that a pollen-allergy sufferer has brought on his own allergic reaction by a wrong, fixed idea in his head, by a morbid "fear" of nature, or by a neurotic belief that he is simply doomed to get sick often and from everything.

When, however, a person's body consistently reacts to toxic substances, actual poisonous elements, in common products, he is often treated with incredulity or frank disbelief.  He is frequently subjected to comments which suggest, time and again, that he must make yet a better case for his symptoms and "prove" his malady.  He is then treated, predictably, as the type of person who readily takes on hypochondriacal ideas and who thereby encourages himself to fall ill.

This type of treatment takes a careless swipe not only at the grim reality of MCS, but also at the overall credibility of the person who suffers from it.  It is common, therefore, for the MCS sufferer to find himself gasping out, as quickly as possible and over many successive visits, essential MCS information to unconvinced medical practitioners whose persons and/or offices continue to exude many non-medical synthetic scents that will incapacitate him for the next couple of days.  This is akin to someone with goldenrod in hand asking a person whose eyes are streaming with pollen-caused tears (or who is wheezing with an asthmatic reaction to pollen) to prove that goldenrod caused the allergic reaction, to prove that he didn't somehow bring on the reaction by latent hysteria . . . essentially making him beg for thorough accommodation of his medical problem.

Yes, many people like, for example, the synthetic fragrances of scented paraffin candles in medical offices.  If many people liked abundant grasses and pollen-bearing plants, would the medical practitioners include these, as well, in their offices -- even though they caused other people to wheeze and sneeze?  Probably not.

But perhaps a given practitioner has only one (known) MCS sufferer as a patient.  So why take away the synthetically scented candles?  Well, for the same reason that a medical office has accommodations for even one single person in a wheelchair:  Because MCS is a true disability.  Ask Bennie Howard.

And also because the synthetically scented candles are not only "the MCS sufferer's problem."  The synthetically scented candles can become anybody's health crisis of tomorrow.  Perhaps the next person won't develop MCS.  Perhaps he or she won't have that chance.  Perhaps it will be a sudden neurological affliction.  Perhaps it will be cancer.  The staff would be at risk, first, being more frequently exposed to whatever toxic scents are present in the office.

The incredulity and disbelief surrounding MCS leads to inconsistent, illogical, prejudicial, and unjust treatment of the MCS sufferer, who happens to be dealing with a true medical problem.  Is it not, after all, more scientifically and medically unusual when a person reacts adversely to a natural and ordinarily harmless substance than when he reacts adversely to a known chemical toxin?

Why, then, such unwillingness to accept the reality that actual toxins can cause many people's bodies to recoil in severe and prolonged distress, setting the stage for early onset of permanent degenerative disorders or cancer?  Why this bias that makes cheerful allowance for allergic reactions to natural substances but perpetually tests, doubts, and frequently disregards as neurotic those who suffer systemic reactions to always-harmful toxins?  Finally, why is there not much, much more medical concern over the dangers posed to all by the neurotoxic and carcinogenic elements present in synthetically scented products?

I do not know.

"Cheers!" in defiance of this gloomy and irrational state of affairs, and in the hopes that more people will begin to care deeply about the growing reality of chemically caused damage to humans.
  
~ Carolyn

Friday, June 24, 2011

Pure Elegance

Candles. 

Romantic, soothing, prayerful, inspiring, poetic, sublime, glowing, elegant . . . . . 

Who doesn't love burning a beautiful candle?

Even the chemically sensitive need beauty and loveliness!  However, paraffin and/or synthetically scented candles are a health hazard for all, in varying degrees and at varying rates.  For the chemically sensitive, the harm done by paraffin and/or synthetically scented candles is quickly detected in sudden sinus/facial heat and inflammation, rapid-onset migraine, balance difficulties, restricted eye movement, shaking arms/hands, intense brain fog, a drugged and spacey feeling, impaired coordination in general, cognitive slowdown, breathing difficulties, blood pressure fluctuations, arrhythmias . . . . .  The list goes on and on, and the suffering can last for days at a time following exposure.

What is the reason for this damage when paraffin and/or synthetically scented candles are burned?  Paraffin, a petroleum product, and many scents which are totally synthetic or synthetically based combine to exude airborne mixtures of irritants, carcinogens, and neurological toxins.  Soot, also a by-product of this combustion, is then deposited throughout the area.  These airborne toxins and soot, in turn, are absorbed by nearby fabrics, carpets, and plastics.  The soot lingers on the walls and in the environment.  Cleaners, also often chemically based, cannot remove these contaminants.

So, readers, please do not miss the results of Dr. Anne Steinemann's scientific study on the hazards of common cleaning and air-freshening products, below.  This priceless report happens to include, also, the hidden risks of some corrupted "essential oils" and other supposedly "natural" or "organic" fragrances which are added to many household products and candles:

Dr. Anne Steinemann, Ph.D. - Letter to Missouri Green Cleaning for Schools . . .

For the chemically sensitive, moreover, not only does the burning of paraffin and synthetically scented candles potentially bring on degrees of systemic meltdown, but even unburned synthetically scented candles can fill a room with layers of toxicity, literally thickening the air with unseen but physically felt debris.

Is there any lovely, pleasing, and safe alternative to such contamination?

Yes!

100% pure beeswax candles.  These naturally honey-scented gems of any size or shape illuminate, sweeten, and cleanse the atmosphere, giving off a sleek, chic glow that burns most cleanly.  For more facts about beeswax -- plus life-lengthening and vital home-preservation information -- be sure to read the following links:

"Beeswax Benefits - Beat Nagging Allergies and Sinus Problems" by Dr. Jonathan V. Wright, M.D.

"Are Scented Candles Making You Sick?" by Melissa Breyer

"Are Scented Candles Damaging Your Home?" by Insure.com

EPA Report: Candles & Incense

Wishing you the rarefied pleasure of purified air,

Cheers!

~ Carolyn