Welcome the Premier Badminton League to the Cancer Prevention Challenge!

Untitled-design-3.jpg

WHEN is excited to welcome the Premier Badminton League to the Cancer Prevention Challenge! Check out their Campaign here. Check them out on Facebook at Premier Badminton League and at their website. Anyone who donates $5 to their campaign has a chance to a judge for the Clean Beauty Awards!

 

An Interview with Charles Pyne of the Premier Badminton League

What does Prevention Mean to you? Prevention is taking a proactive stand whether that be education, environmental manipulation or monitoring to reduce the risk of something harmful from taking place.

Tell us about your organization: The Premier Badminton League (PBL) is a professional badminton league in Canada. PBL provides an opportunity to badminton enthusiasts to compete at varying skill levels separated by divisions on a regular basis throughout the year. PBL is open to people of all ages and is the perfect way to improve your game, meet new friends, and enjoy the sport.

What are the benefits of being a member of playing in the Premier Badminton League? Physical health and social interactions throughout the community.

How do you aim to help reduce environmental health risk? By working with CertClean to promote clean and non-harmful products.

Where do you operate and who does your league benefit?

The Premier Badminton League currently operates throughout the province of Ontario. The league will benefit anyone that enjoys playing and competing in the sport of badminton.

When and why did you start this league?

PBL started in 2014. PBL has been created to promote the sport of badminton and a build a stronger community within the sport throughout the nation.

2015 Cancer Prevention Challenge

We are off - Cancer Prevention Challenge 2015 is launched!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-we3ocA9bo

The World Health Organization states that, “prevention offers the most cost-effective long-term strategy for the control of cancer,” and cites a variety of preventable factors which can lead to cancer in our daily lives, including pollution, occupational carcinogens, and radiation.

Get Started

Join other individuals and businesses that have stood up for cancer prevention!  Make a difference in the fight against cancer…

Cick here to find out more about how you can participate.

Why prevention?

In 1962, when Rachel Carson’s world-awakening book, Silent Spring,was published, cancer struck one in every four Canadians. These were shocking statistics back then. In what became one of the best-selling books of the 20th century, Carson urged governments to seize the ‘golden opportunity’ to prevent cancer, rather than solely focusing on treatment and research for the cure. But with little attention paid to prevention over the past 40+ years, cancer rates continue to increase. Currently, nearly one in two males in Canada and over one third of females will be diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives. Cancer is now the leading cause of death in Canada. Every April and October – the two ‘cancer months’ on our calendar – we are urged to adopt healthy lifestyle choices, which is indeed very good advice. Not smoking, eating plenty of fresh, whole – preferably organic – foods and getting regular exercise are all essential to good health. So is maintaining a healthy body weight, being moderate with alcoholic beverages, and reducing UV radiation exposures. The carcinogens in our air, water and food – those scores of toxic hitch-hikers we don’t choose – are often an afterthought in Canadian cancer messages, as are the serious hazards in our homes and workplaces. The Cancer Prevention Challenge is designed to draw attention to these unnecessary and preventable risks.

For those in whom cancer is already a hidden or visible presence, efforts to find cures must of course continue. But for those not yet touched by the disease and certainly for the generations as yet unborn, prevention is the imperative need.”  

Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (1962)

Learn more.

Raising Elijah, by Sandra Steingraber

Reviewed by Marie Lorenzo

RaisingElijahLarge

I now think of Raising Elijah as the ultimate parenting book. Taking a parenting perspective, in her latest book, Sandra Steingraber takes us through another engrossing account of environmental challenges to our children’s, and ultimately our own, health. With her beautiful prose, she steadfastly and skillfully uncovers the ugly underside of so much of modern consumerism, and challenges us to come up with better alternatives. And that has to start with parents, mothers and also fathers, the gatekeepers of consumption in the average North American family.

But interestingly, to the relief of many, she manages to take a completely supportive role of parents’ growing hopelessness and despair in the face of these modern-day threats. What is a parent to do when offered a more lucrative and prestigious job in another city when that will mean more polluted air for an asthmatic child to contend with? How is a parent on a tight budget to choose between saving money and buying the fresh fruits and vegetables with pesticides vs the organic ones? What is a parent to do when financially desperate neighbour sells their land to a fracking company, with all the poisoning of underground waterways that will entail?

These are questions which take us to where Steingraber really wants to go: why are these terrible choices even options? How, as a society, did we let this happen?

So in the end, this is not a parenting book about what you are personally going to do about protecting your family, that is, do your own research, tread carefully through drugstore aisles, or even, sell your home and pack up your bags to find a better place to live. No, this is about the fact that we cannot do this alone. We need those government bodies that we elected, and we pay taxes to, to actually do their job – we don’t want to have to choose between poison and no poison in a so-called “free” market. Parents don’t want the poisons as an option at all. And government regulators, work for us, not for the developers or the corporations profiting from these ventures. And that means that they need to hear from us, from communities coming together, from parents organizing around their children’s health. And this is the ultimate, hopeful message of this book, that is, yes, this is what parenting is really about: getting out there and joining in community action, taking back our communities so that they are healthy places to bring up our kids.

Going Natural

By Laila Harris, MA, BA (hons.), WHEN Board of Directors

It was early on that I developed an interest and passion for the environment and for living a natural lifestyle. While my mother had always raised us to eat natural foods, use natural products, and moved our family away from Toronto to a forested paradise in Northern Ontario when I was 10 years old, it wasn’t until I went to university that my consciousness about the environment really began to develop.

At this time, my concept of the natural world grew from the enjoyment I had always experienced at being one in the calming beauty of natural landscapes, to a greater reflection on the meaning of nature in our society. In particular, I became interested in the ways in which cultural norms have lead us to mistreat the natural environment (and in turn ourselves), in favor of profit, capitalist gains, and near-sighted greed.

Through my academic research, the frightening things I learned about toxic chemicals and health also encouraged me to eliminate the use of toxic chemical products in my day-to-day life. Since then, I have continued to avoid using cosmetics and personal care products that contribute to the toxic load that most, if not all, of us bear as an inevitable consequence of living in a polluted world. I also attribute this lifestyle change to the natural upbringing I was fortunate enough to have as a result of my mother’s own awareness about living a natural lifestyle and cancer prevention.

My approach to choosing what types of products I will use on my body is actually quite simple and reduces much of the guessing game that can occur when we are trying to determine what ingredients in skin, hair, and body products are either safe or harmful to our health. The simple rule is: don’t put anything on your skin that you can’t eat. Thus, propylparaben, oxybenzone, and fragrance don’t make the cut. You see, as our largest organ, the skin absorbs much of what is applied to it, which then travels directly into our bloodstream and is transmitted throughout or body to be processed and stored. It’s easy to imagine that this can cause significant stress and damage to our organs.

While it may be hard to believe that companies will put extremely toxic and harmful ingredients in their products to increase profits, they do. We can also see that cancer rates continue to rise exponentially and for many, there is a clear connection. Thus, it is time that we take charge of our own well-being, raise our own awareness about the ways in which we can reduce health harms, and make the commitment to use only those products that are safe and nurturing to our bodies, rather than those that are laden with chemicals and other toxic additives.

The following is a list of personal care products that I avoid using, as I believe them to be highly toxic:

1) Hand sanitizer - Soap works just fine.

2) Conventional Shampoo - I clean my hair with a mixture of baking soda water, and essential oils – usually lavender. Though the mixture doesn’t foam, my hair is always left feeling clean and free of residue, while my scalp feels healthy and rejuvenated because of the scrubbing action of the baking soda, as well as its ability to restore PH levels.

3) Conventional Soap - because I’d prefer not to wash my body with toxins, I use only natural soaps

4) Anti-perspirant or deodorant - I use ½ tsp. baking soda mixed with warm water and rub it under my arms (this really works better than any deodorant I have ever tried, as it kills odor-causing bacteria and lasts the full day)

5) Anything antibacterial - Soap works just fine and triclosan, the active ingredient in most antibacterial products, is harmful!

6) Conventional toothpaste - I avoid fluoride and only use natural toothpastes OR baking soda. I should also point out that at 30 yrs. old and have only ever had 1 cavity

7) Conventional skin creams - no fragrance, preservatives, or other chemical additives should be touching your skin. Instead, opt for natural oils and butters – and no, they do not cause acne. (I suggest experimenting with different oils and butters to find out what works best for you and your specific needs. Olive oil, sweet almond oil, grapeseed oil, as well as shea butter are some great natural options that promote healthy skin and/or hair)

8) Conventional cosmetics - this one was tricky because I love makeup, but I’d rather not harm my body for something superficial. Besides, there are tons of natural cosmetics out there that work almost, if not equally, well and give you peace of mind

9) Perfumes and fragrances - while we all have our favorite scents, these products are packed with toxic substances that mess with your hormone levels and are very hazardous to your health.

For me, replacing toxic chemical products with natural alternatives has been a powerful form of practicing cancer prevention in my day-to-day life. With contaminants in the air we breathe, water we drink, and food we eat, as well as in our workplaces and homes, the use of natural products feels like one way in which I have some control over limiting my toxic exposure and respecting my body. Now that I am pregnant, this journey seems all the more important.

Note: if you are curious to learn more about the toxicity of ingredients in a specific product, I encourage you to visit the Environmental Working Group’s Skin Deep Database (http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/), which includes information on over 77, 000 products!