Posts Tagged ‘mama earth’

Mojo Monday: Help Mama Earth by Creating A Green Cleaning Kit

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Dear Pinkies, please welcome Robin Frank, otherwise known as “GreenRobeen.” Robeen provides stress-free, easy-to-follow guides to a healthier, happier Mama Earth. She is a writer, seminar leader, mom, and CEO of a social media consulting firm. On this Mojo Monday, Robeen challenges us to create home cleaning products that are better for us, our families, and for the planet. Stay tuned for more by GreenRobeen – a go-to gal for Owning our Health and loving Mama Earth. Welcome, Robeen!

*****

Have you ever wanted to make a Green Cleaning Kit, but didn’t know where to start, or just didn’t have the time to pull all the information together?

In just over an hour, you can make your own Green Cleaning Kit and have enough product for months of cleaning. Plus, homemade cleaning formulas cost about one-tenth the price of their commercial counterparts – so it actually takes less green to be green.

Here’s what you’ll need

Baking soda, White distilled vinegar, washing soda (may need to buy this online), castile soap, hydrogen peroxide, tea tree oil (Trader Joe’s is cheap), clean spray bottles, glass jars, and labels.

As you make each of these products, clearly label them with the recipe. This way, when you run out, your ingredients and instructions are right there.

Product Recipes

CREAMY SOFT SCRUBBER

  • Pour 1/2 cup of baking soda into a bowl
  • Add enough liquid detergent to make a texture like frosting.
  • Add 1 teaspoon of vegetable glycerin to the mixture and store in a sealed glass jar to keep it moist.
  • Optional: You can also add ½ teaspoon lemon essential oil.

Note: This is perfect for cleaning the bathtub because it rinses easily and doesn’t leave grit.

WINDOW CLEANER

  • Place 1/4-1/2 teaspoon liquid detergent into a spray bottle. (The soap cuts the wax residue from the commercial brands you may have used in the past.)
  • Add ¼ cup white distilled vinegar
  • Add 2 cups water

ALL-PURPOSE SPRAY CLEANER

  • Add 1/4 teaspoon washing soda or baking soda to a spray bottle
  • Add a dab of liquid soap
  • Add 2 cups hot tap water
  • Combine the ingredients in a spray bottle

Note: You can also add ¼ cup white vinegar to this mixture, as well as 15 drops lavender and/or 15 drops tea tree essential oil.

MOLD AND MILDEW

  • 2 teaspoons tea tree oil in a spray bottle
  • 2 cups water
  • Shake to blend
  • Spray on problem areas and do not rinse. The smell of tea tree oil is very strong, but will fade in a few days.

Note: Can be used on a moldy ceiling from a leaking roof, a musty rug, moldy showers/baths, and a moldy shower curtain.

OVEN CLEANER

  • Sprinkle water generously over the bottom of the oven.
  • Cover the grime with enough baking soda so that the surface is totally white.
  • Sprinkle more water over the top.
  • Let the mixture set overnight, and wipe up the grease the next morning.
  • When you have cleaned up the worst of the mess, dab a bit of liquid detergent on a sponge, and wash the remaining residue from the oven.

Note: If this recipe doesn’t work, use more baking soda and/or water.

DISHWASHING DETERGENT

  • Add 1 Tablespoon of Super Washing Soda to the dishwasher dispenser
  • Add 1 Tablespoon of 20 Mule Team Borax to the dishwasher dispenser
  • To remove the water spots that frequently occur, pour distilled white vinegar into the dispenser for the clear rinse gel.

Note: The cost for this recipe is less than 4 cents per load.

STOVE CLEANER

  • For big messes, put baking soda in the burner trough. Drizzle with vinegar. When it foams up, get scrubbing.
  • For aluminum surfaces: Mix two parts cream of tartar with one part water. Dip a soft cloth into the mixture and use it to clean aluminum surfaces

TOILET CLEANER

  • Pour 1 cup of borax into toilet bowl and let sit for a few hours before scrubbing.
  • Drain cleaner
  • Pour one cup baking soda down the drain followed by three cups of boiling water. Or pour ½ cup of baking soda followed by ½ cup of vinegar and follow with boiling water. Remember volcano science experiments? Definitely some pressure there.

FLOOR CLEANER – LAMINATE

Combine 2 teaspoons of Castile soap with 3 gallons of water. Make sure to rinse well to remove any dulling residue.

FLOOR CLEANER – WOOD

  • Use ¼ of a cup of mild liquid dishwashing detergent added to a bucket of warm water (for damp mopping).
  • For scuff marks, use a sprinkle of baking soda on a damp sponge and rub.

FABRIC SOFTENER

Add ¼ cup of baking soda or vinegar to your wash cycle.

LAUNDRY BLEACH

For an average size load of whites, add 1 cup of 3% Hydrogen peroxide after you have filled the washer with hot water.

Note: Be sure to spot test because Hydrogen Peroxide may lighten fabrics.

A few (not so fun) facts:

  • Many household cleaners are potentially hazardous. In 2005 the American Association of Poison Controls Centers reported 218,000 calls involving cleaning products
  • After being rinsed down the drain, toxic ingredients from cleaning products are discharged into waterways where they harm wildlife
  • Cleaning products account for 28% of the plastic debris sent to landfills

So Pinkies, are you up for the challenge? Have you thought about doing this before? What has stopped you? Do you have your own ideas and recipes for easy, natural homecare products? Please share your ideas and experiences!

Cleaning green,
Robeen

Stay Grounded & Rooted To Mama Earth

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

IMG_0343

This is the first in a series of posts I wrote while retreating to Harbin Hot Springs.

Body Awareness

I have a tendency to live in my head, completely unaware of the body I’m blessed to inhabit. When I get massages, the massage therapist always asks, “So is there any place in your body that needs special attention?”  My standard answer is, “Nope. It’s all good.”

Then my massage therapist (who I can just see shaking her head, knowingly) will start the body work and find all these sore, twisted knots all over me.

It’s not that I’m in denial. It’s that I’m honestly that disconnected.  My steady state is that I simply don’t notice my body unless I make a conscious effort to tune in.  Even Mojo Mentor and Pink Goddess Caroline saw this when she did my Pink Intuitive Reading.  My spirit was floating around the astral planes, communing with the Divine, while my shell of a body was left on earth, untended.

What Do You Mean, I’m Grounded?

When someone first spoke to me about staying grounded (and trust me, Pinkies- there have been many people talking to me about staying grounded!), I resisted.  Why would I want to stay in my weak, limiting, imperfect body when my spirit could be cruising around the astral planes?  The body seemed almost inconsequential to my life’s purpose, so why should I stick around and endure its endless restrictions?  Better to live in my head, swirling with creative ideas, manifesting dreams, listening to Signs from the Universe, and putting my highest good into the world. Right?

Wrong. I see it now.  Not that there’s anything wrong with flying around the astral planes. Not that creativity, intelligence, thoughts, and other manifestations of the mind don’t have great value.  But we are spirits that live in bodies, and if we live solely in our heads, the brilliant creations of our minds and spirits can get lost in Neverland, with nothing to ground them.

But what does that mean, to be grounded? You know it when you see it. And you know it when it’s not there. Haven’t you met people who are creative, spirited, passionate, but, well- flighty? They feel like a whirlwind of energy and when they leave the room, you feel a little tired, like you’ve been riding the rapids on a rocky river. Those people tend not to be very grounded.

And then you’ve met others- maybe they’ve very earthy, centered, calm, and peaceful. Perhaps they’re not spewing forth with creative energy. They move a little slower and stand firmly planted on the ground.  In their presence, you feel stillness, like a lake with no ripples.  These people tend to be more grounded.

Owning Balance

But imagine if you could combine the two. If you could take all of the creative, passionate divinity of the mind and spirit and ground it, such that there is an open channel between the spirit realm and the core of the earth, imagine the potential for creation, for healing, for true connection. That is my goal right now.

While I’ve been here at Harbin, I have been practicing exercises to get in my body. First, I’ve tried to still my mind. With the exception of writing this post, I have not opened my computer to write; I have tried to avoid thinking or figuring anything out; I have been meditating to quiet the monkey mind; I have focused on breath.

At the same time as I have been trying to still my mind, I have also been engaging in activities to enliven my body- doing yoga, bathing in hot and cold mineral springs, hiking in nature, free form dancing, and getting a Lomi Lomi massage and Watsu (water shiatsu).  All of these things have been aimed at helping me get grounded and stay rooted in this time of great energetic change in my life.

Yesterday, after a cycle of moving between an ice cold pool (mind you, it’s 20 degrees outside where I am!) and a 113 degree natural mineral spring 7 times, Mojo Mentor Tricia Barrett and I sat by a waterfall at Harbin.  The river that creates this waterfall parts two trees- an oak tree and a fig tree.  The flow of water is arguably the most creative and destructive force in nature. Just look at the Grand Canyon. You would think these two beautiful trees would be at the mercy of this river, as it flows down the mountain. Surely, the powerful force of water would override a living thing’s desire to live and thrive.

Strength in Roots

And yet, this has not happened.  These trees stand tall, roots exposed and subjected to a constant flow of the river, because these trees are deeply rooted into Mama Earth.  Even though the sand and clay beneath these roots has been washed away, these strong, steadfast roots hold the trees upright.

I think these tree roots and the waterfall that flows over them are a fitting metaphor for life.  Sure, it’s exciting to stay in your mind. Magic can happen in the mind- beautiful thoughts, passionate creations, conversations with yourself and the Universe. But unless you root your mind and spirit into your body and the earth, you risk allowing any potentially destructive force to sweep you downstream.  Unless you’re grounded, every little crisis can tip you over by pushing you with a feather. Every breeze of change, transition, or trauma can unravel you.  But if your mind and spirit rest upon well-grounded roots, you can weather any storm.

I don’t know about you, Pinkies, but I’m committed to growing stronger roots and would love to hear your wisdom about how to best accomplish this. I know so many of you are Pink Gods and Goddesses when it comes to staying grounded, and I know others of you are just like me- flying around the astral planes and wishing to feel more connected with your body and yourself.  Please share your journey, your wisdom, and any thoughts this might stir up for you.

Plugging in to the Earth’s energy,

Lissa


Join The Pink Community and Feel the Love.

Taking Time To Tune Out

Friday, November 6th, 2009

IMG_0537Hiya Pinkies,

I just wanted to let you know that I’m heading to Big Sur this weekend for an internet-free, kid-free holiday weekend. Pink Goddesses Joy and Megan will be running the Pink show for me while I’m gone, and I know the rest of you will maintain the sacred space, as you always do.

It got me thinking. I have been so remiss at taking time for myself while I’ve been writing my book. That December 1 deadline looms ever-large, so it’s tempting to stick my nose to the grindstone and plug away endlessly. After all, if I keep doing and efforting, more will get done, right?

My husband thinks differently. When we lived in Monterey, he used to prescribe a day at Esalen in Big Sur at least once a month. The day would come unplanned, and he would tell me, “It’s time.” I never quite knew if that was a sign that I had become cranky, or if he was secretly asking for some time to himself. But I always took his advice. He swears that I always returned from those days to myself more grounded, more creative, more patient, more invigorated. In essence, a day to myself made me, paradoxically, more efficient, as well as more joyful. It’s as if unplugging recharged me.

But I have been remiss of late.  With my book deadline fast approaching, I could fall into a state of anxious inattention. I could pull all-nighters and burn the midnight oil. I could ruminate in self-doubt, sleepless nights, and sheer terror at how much I’m going to be putting myself out there with this book (seriously, Pinkies- you will know more about me and my coochie than you may ever wish to know).

But no. I’m not going to do that. Instead, I’m going to turn off for three days and let Big Sur nurture me. I will sit among the redwoods, gaze at the fog creeping in between the ocean cliffs, and watch the condors circling overhead. I will make love with my honey, sip wine on a park bench at sunset, and soak my body in the warm natural hot springs of Mama Earth at Esalen. I will write, only if the spirit calls, and I will meditate. I will laugh with old friends and commune with old trees.  I will pray for guidance from the Universe. I will seek answers but live the question.  I will rest.

Monday, when I return, I will tackle my manuscript with renewed vigor, bringing to it all that bubbles up for me this weekend. My book will flow more freely as a result of the break I will take.  The work that awaits me ain’t going nowhere. It will be right here, waiting for me, when I return, refreshed.

What about you, Pinkies? Do you trust that you can do more by giving yourself a chance to do less from time to time? Can you have faith in the gentle process that invites you to check in with yourself, even when life gets busy? Can you turn off to turn on? I know you can.

Until Monday, Pinkies, ta ta! I love you!

Pushing the reset button with love,

Lissa