Wednesday, September 18, 2013

What's in the Phytospecific Relaxer??

This is the ingredient list for the Phytospecific Relaxer. Just the straightening cream though because I really do not feel like doing everything that comes in that box because it's entirely too much going on in there. They say it's "non-chemical" and "odorless" but one of the ingredients says "fragrance" and there are "carefully selected molecules from egg and soya" so..........? which one is it?

The DO-NOT'S of the relaxer are:
That's crazy to me. A lot of people think it's so much work to use/make natural products, and honestly whether you're relaxed or natural, using natural products will make and keep your hair healthy, and it'll be worth the effort. Some of these ingredients are used in your cleaning products, and parts of some of them are used to clean rust off metal.... and this is what you're putting into your hair. Anyway. I'm not going to tell you to not use anything, but at the end of the day, there's alternatives for everything. Even relaxers. Yea... But send me a message and tell me what you think about this!

Water <  we don't need to explain that.

Mineral Oil: it's not terrible, but it's not the best. it's a lubricant and forms an occlusive film on hair. That means it doesn't let moisture (water) go in or out of our hair. basically it's a film on your hair. you can't just use any or everything to wash it off because it's a "water-hater"

Emulsifying Wax NF: it's four ingredients:
-Cetearyl Alcohol (a mixture of fatty alcohols),
-PEG-150 Stearate (PEG= polyethylene glycol. used in making cleansers to dissolve oil and grease as well as thicken products. a lot of times used in caustic spray-on oven cleaners. caustic = "able to burn or corrode organic tissue by chemical action." Stearate is a fatty acid. a waxy solid. stearate is derived from the Greek word 'stear' meaning tallow, which is a rendered form of beef or mutton fat and sometimes lard.)
-Polysorbate 60 (used to help "grow hair" by breaking up sebum. we need sebum because its a natural oil. its only potentially harmful to hair when our body creates too much of it; but if that happens, that's why we wash our hair..)
-and Steareth-20. (It mirrors the properties of cetyl alcohol while promoting the thickening features of stearyl alcohol.)

Propylene Glycol: It is widely used as a moisture-carrying ingredient in place of glycerine because it is cheaper and more readily absorbed through the skin. It is related to polyethylene glycol (PEG) and is known to cause contact dermatitis even at very low concentrations. It is recognized as a neurotoxin by the US National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety, and it may cause kidney damage. The Material Safety Data Sheet for propylene glycol warns workers handling this chemical to avoid skin contact. [X]

Egg Extract: see egg oil Lanolin is the smelly pale-yellow natural oil found on sheep's wool. As a waste product in wool processing, it's also known as wool oil, wool wax, wool fat, or wool grease. It's a natural water repellant.

Steareth-100: a cleansing agent and solubilizing agent. A waxy compound

PEG-75 Lanolin:  Lanolin is the smelly pale-yellow natural oil found on sheep's wool. As a waste product in wool processing, it's also known as wool oil, wool wax, wool fat, or wool grease. It's a natural water repellant.

Disodium Cocoamphodiacetate: a synthetic amphoteric surfactant routinely used in personal care products. amphoteric is a molecule or ion that can react as an acid as well as a base

Oleth-20: Organic perfume stabilizer, derived from unsaturated fatty acids. an emulsifier.

Cetearyl Alcohol: a mixture of fatty alcohols, consisting predominantly of cetyl and stearyl alcohols and is classified as a fatty alcohol. 

PEG-10 Rapeseed Sterol:  PEG + the fatty acid component of the rapeseed plant. Used as a surfactant and to help make products soluble.

Hydrolyzed Soy Protein:   The extraction process of hydrolysis involves boiling in a vat of acid (e.g., sulfuric acid) and then neutralizing the solution with a caustic soda. The resultant sludge is scraped off the top and allowed to dry. In addition to soy protein it contains free-form excitotoxic amino acids (e.g., MSG) and other potentially harmful chemicals including cancer-causing chemicals in many cases. A newer method of hydrolysis involves the use of bacteria by itself or in addition to the chemical processes described above. There is a possibility that genetically-manipulated bacteria may be used.

In almost all cases, hydrolyzed soy protein contains a significant amount of genetically-manipulated soy. The hydrolyzed protein products currently added to foods should be considered a detriment to one's health. There are much healthier sources of soy protein and soy nutrients. [X]

Fragrance

Egg Oil: some special process they do to extract natural oils from hen eggs. they used to do it using heat, but now the process is done using hexane or ethanol. 
(hexane is a colorless, significant part of gasoline with a gasoline-like odor. relatively safe when not exposed to it a lot of it.)
(ethanol is also called ethyl alcohol, pure alcohol, grain alcohol, or drinking alcohol. it's a volatile, flammable, colorless liquid) 

- Lauren

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