Eco-Friendly Shampoo and Conditioner

I seem to be on a body-care roll these days. Perhaps its the cold weather, keeping me inside and giving me time to think about all the ways in which my daily routine is still in need of an eco fine-tuning. I tend to live pretty low on the consumer scale, but I still buy commercial (all-natural) toothpaste; I still use shampoo in plastic bottles (though I buy as local, handmade, toxin-free as possible); I still buy commercially-made soap (Dr. Bronners but I could make my own, or buy more locally if I really tried). So the other day, when my friend sent me a link to a mom-blogger who posted her homemade, non-toxic, eco-friendly shampoo and conditioner routine to her site, I thought, okay, I should really try this.I was definitely (still am) thrown off a little by the caveat, You might have a transition period that lasts from a few weeks to a few months, where your hair reacts with excess oil to the lack of shampoo. Now, my hair is naturally fine, naturally prone to being oily, and naturally my least favorite feature, so when someone tells me its going to look worse than it usually does, I take pause. But this week, Ive washed and conditioned it with six different shampoo and conditioner combinations (due to construction at my house, I had no hot water this week, so vagabonded my way through showering at other peoples houses), all resulting in less and less happy hair. In fact, resulting in very oily hair. Which led me to realize that if I was going to suffer through oily hair, it might as well be while working towards the gorgeous results I hope to find in homemade shampooing and conditioning.Here is her basic homemade shampoo and conditioner recipe (I would quote her by name, if I could find her bio anywhere on the blog site, but all I know of her, besides her beautiful hair, is her byline name of TSH), and I encourage you to read her whole post as it explains a bit about why commercial shampoo is damaging to both you and the environment and gives a nice personal story to go along with the ! recipe b elow:BAKING SODA SHAMPOO:
1 TBS baking soda
1 C waterNote: Those with curly or thicker hair might need a bit more baking soda, and those with thin or fine hair might need less. Experiment, and see what works for you. I use a simple 8-ounce squeeze bottle, pour in a tablespoon of baking soda with a funnel, then fill up the rest with water from the kitchen sink. I give it a good shake to dissolve the baking soda, and its ready to be used. In the shower, I soak my hair with water, then I squeeze a bit of the baking soda mixture on my scalp, starting at the crown. I massage it in as I go, squeezing a bit more here and there, concentrating mostly on the scalp. I include my hair as well, but since most of the oils originate from the scalp itself, the hair will naturally get cleaned once the scalp is clarified.VINEGAR CONDITIONER:
1 TBS apple cider vinegar
1 C waterNote: For this, I use an old conditioner bottle, and fill it with the vinegar and water via funnel, then finish it with a shake. My hair tends to rest a little on the oily side naturally, so I dont use much of this. I pour a little on just the ends of my hair, let it rest for a few seconds, then rinse it out. [1]I am without both baking soda and apple cider vinegar, but am clearly with oily hair that needs washing so badly, even the I-just-got-back-from-the-yoga-studio-knot-of-hair-on-top-of-my-head look isnt fooling anyone; and therefore am off to Whole Foods to go get myself some old-fashioned hair washing ingredients.- Jocelyn Broyles[1] How To Clean Your Hair Without Shampoo by TSH on SimpleMom.netHeadline image Jessica Mullen

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