Clean up your act with non-toxic
cleansers that are good for you and the environment
I remember my grandmother using
soapnut to wash her nine-yard silk saris that she would then fastidiously hang
on the clothesline. I also remember weekly oil baths with a robust hair wash
made of shikakai (acacia concinna ). Coconut shells with besan (gram
or chickpea flour) would be kept handy to be used as soap in the bathroom where
a wood-fired copper drum yielded piping hot water.
Those memories and practices were
elbowed out by detergents in colourful packaging, shampoos and conditioners
that promised me Rapunzel hair, and geysers. Funny, I was now back at a
workshop after all those years trying to relearn what my grandmom already knew
and practised.
“Even now it is not too late.
Learn the old practices from the elders in the community, before they are lost
to us,” urges Gauri S of the Seeragam Native Store, Coimbatore, where she has
invited Sangeetha Subhash to speak about natural cleansers. Sangeetha will
share how she has made the crossover from commercially available,
chemical-riddled detergents and vessel/floor cleaners to home-made, toxic-free
and economical alternatives for a clean life. Gauri introduces Sangeetha as
someone who walks the talk about green living.
“I took time to get used to the
idea myself,” starts Sangeetha disarmingly. Unlearning old habits is the
hardest thing, she admits. But concern for her children persuaded her to make
the change or at least try to. Pointing to the table laden with bottles and
jars, she says, “It is not difficult at all. Five years ago, a friend
introduced me to soapnut and there has been no looking back. Even if I was
convinced, there was resistance from the family. So I decided to have a toilet
competition at home.”
Sangeetha said she decided to clean
her toilet with natural cleaners while the other toilets continued to be
cleaned with the usual strong chemical cleaners. Everyone was surprised to see
her toilet cleaner and fresher than the others. “I used besan to
clean my toilet,” she says.
Sceptical, I look around me and,
to my surprise, many present are nodding in agreement. There are other people
here who have also cleaned their toilets withbesan ! “From just besan ,
I graduated to adding powdered orange peel and soapnut powder to my cleaners,”
continues Sangeetha, who decided it was a good time to banish chemicals
altogether when she and her husband built their own home and moved into it with
their children.
So how tedious is the process of
making all these magic cleansers, I ask her. If it means going on interminable
hunts to procure the raw material and then slaving over them instead of just
snipping open a package or unscrewing a lid, I am out. Sangeetha asks me, “Have
you ever stood in a line at the beginning of the month at a supermarket? It takes
at least an hour to buy stuff, bill and pay for them. I spend that same hour at
home making the cleansers and have enough for a month not just for myself, but
also for my friends and family,” she says. There is great satisfaction that she
is not adding to the landfill. She wants no part of that guilt. “When I walk
into a supermarket today I look around me and I know for a fact that I do not
need over 90% of the items on the shelf.”
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