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I am a 2nd time mom, and I would like to know the benefits to all of this organic stuff?
By admin | February 23, 2010
Topics: Newborn & Baby |
Goodbadluckgirl3 asked:
I am 8 months pregnant. I mean I just had my son in 2006. Now, I am hearing all of this organic food, diapers, 7th generation cleaning. Really, should I jsut stick to plain old papmers, gerber, and clorox? Or should I really introuduce my new baby to the “organic life”? Pros and Cons please?
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I am 8 months pregnant. I mean I just had my son in 2006. Now, I am hearing all of this organic food, diapers, 7th generation cleaning. Really, should I jsut stick to plain old papmers, gerber, and clorox? Or should I really introuduce my new baby to the “organic life”? Pros and Cons please?
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As far as food goes, I think organic is better because there are no hormones that make a baby ***** full grown in a matter of weeks. Have you noticed that little girls are starting to develop ******* at earlier ages…well, that is because of all the growth hormones. And pesticides just can’t be good to keep eating. They kill bugs and what not because they are poisons, even in the smallest of doses over a long period has to be doing some damage. And a lot of the pesticides
and preservative are well known to be linked to cancers because small doses of them over a period of time cause
mutations in DNA replication, and you get…cancer cells and ETC.
Now, when it come to diapers, sheets, towels….buy what works and what you like, please don’t waste to money. And as far as chemicals to clean with go, I have one bottle of baby organics cleaning spray. I clean my child’s high chair tray and certain toys she like to put in her mouth. i use it for her things only, and that’s because she is going to be eating or tasting whatever it is and I worry about harsh chemicals.
But congratulations on the new baby and bigger family.
Sorry about all the typos, I am so tired.
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i do think organic foods are useful to use. foods are pumped up with so many hormones and chemicals its crazy once you learn about it. as far as organic diapers/bedding/clothes etc for your baby. its nice but nearly impossible to afford all of that.. i would say some of it isnt anymore organic but just fancy advertising gimmicks. i use regular huggies. i use regular wipes. i used regular things to clean my house with.
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some things, yes - you should go organic because they’ve done further research that has given some pretty horrifying results (check out ; and )
other things, though, there’s no point going organic. if the skin of the fruit or veg is non-edible and thick and it’s not a root crop, then don’t bother buying organic because the part you eat will not have absorbed any chemicals (pesticides, etc). organic milk is ridiculous - milk in canada doesn’t have growth hormones, etc, and even non-organic-farmed milk doesn’t contain antibiotics because once the cow has been treated, the milk is dumped until the antibiotics are no longer in the system. certainly doesn’t justify paying $3 a litre!
however, if you’re talking things like apples, strawberries, etc, then organic is better because the flesh can absorb chemicals from the environment.
taste-wise, nutrient-wise, organic and non-organic foods are equal.
meat, however, is a tricky one. the *theory* is that organically-raised meat animals are treated more humanely and have a carefree life skipping about in the sunshine sniffing the daisies until nice people in shiny white coats gently lead them to their Final Destination (ie, my plate). the truth is that “organic”, like “free-range”, is a meaningless term, legally speaking. i can toss the chickens out in a 4×4 patch for 15min a day and legally call them “free range” even if they spend the rest of the day locked up in a barn like any other battery hen.
organic food or not?:
for myself, i buy food grown in canada whenever possible (because i am familiar with our legal requirements and it’s from my own environment, not likely to catch an unfamiliar bug). i don’t buy organic meat - but i would if it could because i know the farm i’d buy it from if i had the money - and i would never buy organic milk (but i would raise milk animals organically). diaper-wise, i just went with what worked - i don’t have the budget to go shelling out crazy money that’ll get tossed in the garbage can but if my daughter didn’t keep getting rashes from them, i’d've been pleased as punch to use bamboo cloth diapers.
the ultimate in organic parenting, however, is completely free: breastfeed your baby! my youngest will be 3 in march and to this day, i’ve spent zero, zip, zilch, nada, on formula, bottles, etc.