Jane Smith
11-16-2005, 08:17 PM
Home Enlightenment
Practical, Earth-Friendly Advice for Creating a Nurturing, Healthy, and
Toxin-Free Home and Lifestyle
By Annie B. Bond
Published by Rodale
October 2005; $27.95US/$37.95CAN; 1-57954-811-3
Housekeeping, Health, and Harmony
You can start with a simple change -- using a natural cleanser instead of a
chemical one, cocooning in organic bedding instead of polyester sheets with
a no-wrinkle finish, and choosing wall paint with low volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) instead of an oil-based paint. Keeping house in the 21st
century means living in a healthier home -- one that's free of toxins and
synthetic chemicals -- and creating a beautiful living space that brings
rest, renewal, and harmony to your life.
An informative, practical, and inspirational guide, Home Enlightenment
examines the environmental impact of the choices we make each day and
addresses how common, everyday chemical exposures have a subtle but profound
impact on our well-being and quality of life. You'll learn how to detoxify
your home one product at a time, choose environmentally friendly furnishings
over products that off-gas, and establish day-to-day practices that bring
healing and natural spirituality to your body and soul. Once you start to
develop a natural and nontoxic lifestyle, you can transform your home into a
sanctuary of health, comfort, and rejuvenation.
Author
Annie B. Bond is considered an authoritative voice on the natural lifestyle.
In her work and her books, she offers advice for creating a home that is in
harmony with the earth. Her insight and wisdom are a result of her struggles
with the aftereffects of two chemical poisoning accidents that left her
unable to function in the world as she knew it. Annie's experience with
chemical sensitivity has been a catalyst for change on two fronts -- in her
own life as she learned to create a healthy home without toxins and in the
lives of those whom she inspires to eliminate synthetic chemicals,
off-gassing products, and indoor air pollution in their homes.
Her journey toward health led to her first bestseller, Clean & Green, and
then to The Green Kitchen Handbook and Better Basics for the Home. Annie is
also an intuitive energy healer and dowser. She is the executive producer of
Care2.com's Healthy Living channel, editing six free e-newsletters that are
sent to 1.8 million subscribers; and she hosts Annie's Healthy Living
Network in Care2Connect, where she also posts a blog. Annie is also a
columnist for Body+Soul magazine. Visit her Web site at
www.homeenlightenment.com.
Reviews
"Home Enlightenment has the power to change the way we live and breathe. You
will feel healed -- and whole -- just by reading this book: It's a beautiful
thing. Annie B. Bond, mistress of the green household and expert on chemical
poisoning, gives us remedies for the toxins that ail us. She spells out the
ingredients for the good life and the illuminating benefits of sun and
candlelight, and she identifies the quiet needs of the everyday. Stockpile
copies of Home Enlightenment and give them to everyone you care about."
--Amy Goldman, advocate for agricultural biodiversity and author of two
books on heirloom vegetables: The Complete Squash and Melons for the
Passionate Grower
"Change is all about knowing what to change. We as a culture have much to
change, and it's always a question how we should make those changes. In a
style 'only Annie,' Annie opens the door to your home, reveals the
invisible, and helps you weave necessary change into everyday life. I have
followed Annie's sound advice for years."
--Jeffrey Hollender, president of Seventh Generation, Inc.
"Leave it to Annie B. Bond to create the ultimate healthy-home, living-well
guide with all the right ingredients -- soothing solutions, sensuality, and
a whole lot of good sense."
--Wendy Gordon, executive director of the Green Guide Institute and
publisher of The Green Guide
"This book is healing. It does the work of illustrating -- through our own
homes and our own backyards -- that nothing is separate from anything else
and that everything is interrelated and interdependent. Remembering this
would keep us all -- and our world -- a lot healthier."
--Frank Lipman, MD, author of Total Renewal: 7 Key Steps to Resilience,
Vitality, and Long-Term Health
"Well, if God is in the details, the gods must be applauding this immensely
practical and inspirational guidebook for house and home. From neurotoxins
to nail polish, off-gassing to the case for organics, Annie brings science
down to earth, showing ways to create personal as well as planetary health.
Give a copy of this indispensable encyclopedia to everyone you know, and
they'll bless you forever!"
--Jude Asphar, executive director of the Resurgence Association and former
editor of (Hearst's) Healthy Living magazine
"Annie Bond's Home Enlightenment is a marvelous manual of simple steps to
lead us to walk in beauty and be in harmony with all beings. It's a
must-read for anyone seeking to live a conscious life. My copy will be well
dog-eared."
--Reverend Betsy Stang, executive director of the Wittenberg Center for
Alternative Resources
"This is an essential encyclopedia of natural living from the best expert of
all, one who learned from experience. Annie Bond offers practical and fun
suggestions to a very important subject of creating a healthier environment
for the generations to come. I can already see changes I will make in my
life!"
--Christine Page, MD, author of Spiritual Alchemy: How to Transform Your
Life and lecturer in holistic health
"In Home Enlightenment, Annie gives us exactly what we need -- practical and
eminently useful information for bringing earth harmony into our busy,
everyday lives. She helps us see how our choices not only support our
personal health and well-being but also make a positive difference in life
on this sweet earth for all our relations."
--Brooke Medicine Eagle, earthkeeper, sacred ecologist, and author of
Buffalo Woman Comes Singing and The Last Ghost Dance
Excerpt
The following is an excerpt from the book Home Enlightenment
by Annie B. Bond
Published by Rodale; October 2005;$27.95US/$37.95CAN; 1-57954-811-3
Copyright © 2005 Annie B. Bond
Design a Blissful Bedroom
After reading a snippet about feng shui in a teen magazine, my daughter
entered her bedroom with the dictum she had read in mind: Keep only what you
love. She systematically removed everything she didn't love! The result is a
gem of a room -- all her own and perfect in every way for her unique self.
Ask yourself: What do you love? What do you want to keep in your bedroom?
What brings you a sense of calm? Which fabrics feel good to you? How do you
want to decorate?
Including earth's elements in the bedroom environment enhances the space
considerably. Do you like to sleep with fresh air? There is a joke in my
family that my mother can't sleep unless she has a gale-force wind blowing
through her bedroom. She could never sleep with closed windows. For many of
us, stuffy rooms don't feel as good as rooms full of fresh air, so provide
as much fresh air as you can and as the weather permits.
The earth element in the bedroom is a key component of restful sleep. I like
having all natural bedding that comes from the land and not from a factory,
and I want my bed to rest on a wooden floor. It makes me feel like I am
grounded when I sleep. The emotional watery element of dreams and intuition
has a place in the bedroom too, and dream journals help to foster a
connection to this world. And fire, of course, represents passion, light,
and heat. Be sure to have all four elements included in your bedroom for the
most peaceful rest and restorative sleep.
Pleasing the Senses
The general premise of the bedroom is that you want as little in it as
possible, and you want what you have there to be natural and clean. Renovate
or paint only when you can have the windows open for enough time to fully
air out the room from paint and chemical smells, and sleep elsewhere in the
meantime. You'll spend one-third of your life in your bedroom, so focus your
attention on making the room pleasurable.
Smell: What you smell when you sleep really matters. It makes the difference
between rest and restlessness. Most synthetic chemicals intrude on your
sleep by stimulating the central nervous system, often interrupting your
rest with tension and agitation. It's better to have a tranquil sleep with
soothing smells, such as fresh air from an open window or pure air from a
clean, simply furnished room accented with natural materials.
Smells to avoid in the bedroom can include synthetic mattresses; carpet,
paint, or stain; cleaning products such as furniture polish; clothes that
have been dry-cleaned; moth balls; and anything else with a strong smell.
Synthetic smells from mattresses can be subtle, but they can have a powerful
impact with their blend of fire retardants, stain-resistant solvents, and
pesticides.
Dry-cleaned clothes can be a serious hazard in the bedroom. The cleaning
solvents used can waft through your bedroom, exposing you to powerful
neurotoxins while you sleep. My advice is to purchase natural-fiber clothing
that doesn't require dry-cleaning, of course. That may not always be
possible though, so switch to having your clothes wet cleaned, or hang the
newly dry-cleaned clothes outside for a few days before bringing them into a
bedroom closet. If you'd like to be especially vigilant, never bring
dry-cleaned clothes into a bedroom; hang them, instead, in a closet far away
from the sleeping areas. I personally never dry-clean anything; the solvents
are terrible for the earth, for those who work in dry-cleaning
establishments, and for humans and pets.
Even the natural materials in your bedroom are best if they are as inert as
possible. For example, fresh pine has a smell that could interfere with
restful sleep, as can a houseplant if the soil is a bit mildewed or
waterlogged. Smells that interfere with a relaxing sleep may seem so
commonplace that you may not think about them, like the fragrance from a
perfume bottle or the scented detergent that lingers on your sheets. It's
best to wash laundry with an unscented detergent. The less you smell when
you sleep, the better.
Some smells in the bedroom don't originate there. For example, fumes in the
air may be a result of pesticides used elsewhere or may mean your oil burner
needs tuning. Take the appropriate steps to avoid or clear away sources of
pollution.
Sound: Natural noises are welcome to many of us. Going to sleep in August
with the racket of crickets or waking up at dawn to the call of a wood
thrush is something that's comforting to me, but it may bother you. The bird
song before dawn in the summer in New York's Hudson Valley is enough to wake
the dead, and many complain about it. One family I know has fans in each
room so the entire family can drown out nature. "It sounds like a jet engine
going through the house," the father of four noted to me. Each to their own
choices! Even fans whirling or sirens and traffic in New York City can be
harmonious if it is what you like and are used to.
I feel that you should turn off technological noise (white noise) when you
go to sleep. White noise is any random noise that contains an equal amount
of energy per frequency band and is generated by computers, TVs, and even
white noisemakers. In simple terms, you could identify white noise as a
drone or hum. Turn off the TV or the computer if either is in your bedroom.
White noise can entrain your own rhythms, and that is not what you would
want for deep, restful, healing sleep.
I like surrounding my sleeping environment with as much natural sound as I
can manage. An indoor water fountain is one way to add harmonious, soothing,
natural sounds to your nights. Water falling is a medley of tone colors and
natural harmonies, and it can keep out unwelcome sounds, such as traffic and
pedestrian noise. Compare that with a computer droning incessantly with no
variation in tone or pitch.
The sound of your alarm clock is often the first sound you hear in the
morning. I have been looking for a mellow-sounding alarm clock -- something
that will wake me up with crashing ocean waves or quiet music; instead, I
have one that sounds as if the fire alarm is going off. A pleasant-sounding
alarm clock can help start off your day with more equilibrium. A radio alarm
clock that awakens me to the news is not for me simply because the news is
so often sensationalist and geared toward provoking fear. That's not a way
that I want to start my day.
Sight: Our natural circadian body rhythm is determined by the light of day
and the dark of night. Some people have trouble sleeping because they don't
receive enough natural light during the day, and consequently, their systems
don't turn off at night. Others don't get enough true darkness at night to
fully activate their body rhythms, an increasing problem for those who live
in well-lit cities like New York.
Managing these light issues, as well as coordinating the light we receive
with the sleep we need, is something most of us have to think through at
some point. What parent of a young child hasn't contemplated long and hard
the value of window shades when their young child wakes up with the first
light of dawn? When you invest in window treatments, find a type that
doesn't collect dust (like swags), and choose a simple, clean look with
materials that are easily cleaned. Blinds are now made from untreated
natural products, such as natural grasses, bamboo, and woods, and can be
cleaned easily with a damp cloth. Natural-fiber curtains may appeal to you.
Just make sure your window treatments don't have an odor. I live in the
country, without streetlights or surrounding buildings, and I find that I
get the sleep I need regardless of the natural light. As a result, I don't
have any curtains at all because I don't need them for privacy. This
minimalist approach works even for my teenage daughter.
Color is a treat for the eye, and the color of your bedroom should feel
restful and conducive to harmony and quiet. The bedroom is also an intimate
room, and you want it to be pleasing. Blue is often chosen for bedrooms and
meditation rooms because blue's cool energy is calming, restful, peaceful,
and spiritual. Blue helps inspire quiet meditation and soothes you to sleep.
Color therapy with blue has been found to reduce blood pressure.
Green might be a good second choice for a bedroom color because it is
naturally restful (imagine the landscape in early spring as the trees are
budding). It also has a vibrancy about it, so if you go with green, make
sure it is a light green. Some red touches add sensuality, but don't overdo
red in the bedroom because it can be exhausting and too energizing. I
recommend white ceilings because they reflect light and brighten any room.
Lighting has a few important purposes in the bedroom -- for reading in bed,
for finding clothes in a closet, and for giving you a sense of safety and
security. I like sleeping in the deep dark, my daughter likes to have her
door open and the bathroom light on to banish any images from her
imagination, and my elderly mother always needs a night light to help her
feel confident that she won't fall. While light for sleeping is an
individual matter, be sure there is good lighting for reading in bed.
Reading before sleep is a genuine pleasure, and good lighting lessens the
strain on your eyes.
Touch: The amount of enjoyment we get from our skin touching the covers is
determined by the sensual, soft feel of our bedding fabrics. Clean, soft,
and even silky sheets are as seductive against the skin as anything man-made
could ever be. Feather beds -- cloudlike cushions that are placed on the
mattress under the bottom sheet -- are heavenly.
The ideal bedroom temperature for deep sleep is between 55º and 68ºF. During
the winter, place hot water bottles in the bed before crawling under the
covers to make the bed a welcoming, cozy place. My friend Pat places a hot
water bottle in her kids' beds when they're sick. To me, that one small
gesture shows how loving and nurturing a mother she is!
Being cool in the summer is just as important as being warm in the winter.
Sleeping with moisture-absorbing sheets in the summer helps to keep you from
feeling clammy from perspiration during the night. Light flax linen is a
particularly cool and inviting fabric for summer, although it is expensive
(try saving money by finding used linen sheets at estate sales).
How important is your choice of fabric for bedding? Very important! I recall
reading about a study that compared the heart rates of those sleeping under
wool versus polyester, and they reported that the heart rate is lower when
sleeping under wool. On a scale from 1 to 10 (with 10 being wonderful), rate
how you feel in the morning when you wake up. Keep improving your bedroom
environment until you have a full 10.
Your Sixth Sense: Once you have accomplished many of the tasks required to
have a nontoxic and uncluttered bedroom, take some time to sit in there and
absorb how it feels. Open your intuitive mind to give you information about
the room's comfort level.
Reprinted from: Home Enlightenment: Practical, Earth-Friendly Advice for
Creating a Nurturing, Healthy, and Toxin-Free Home and Lifestyle by Annie
B. Bond © 2005 Annie B. Bond. Permission granted by Rodale, Inc., Emmaus,
PA 18098. Available wherever books are sold or directly from the publisher
by calling (800) 848-4735 or visit their website at www.rodalestore.com.
Practical, Earth-Friendly Advice for Creating a Nurturing, Healthy, and
Toxin-Free Home and Lifestyle
By Annie B. Bond
Published by Rodale
October 2005; $27.95US/$37.95CAN; 1-57954-811-3
Housekeeping, Health, and Harmony
You can start with a simple change -- using a natural cleanser instead of a
chemical one, cocooning in organic bedding instead of polyester sheets with
a no-wrinkle finish, and choosing wall paint with low volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) instead of an oil-based paint. Keeping house in the 21st
century means living in a healthier home -- one that's free of toxins and
synthetic chemicals -- and creating a beautiful living space that brings
rest, renewal, and harmony to your life.
An informative, practical, and inspirational guide, Home Enlightenment
examines the environmental impact of the choices we make each day and
addresses how common, everyday chemical exposures have a subtle but profound
impact on our well-being and quality of life. You'll learn how to detoxify
your home one product at a time, choose environmentally friendly furnishings
over products that off-gas, and establish day-to-day practices that bring
healing and natural spirituality to your body and soul. Once you start to
develop a natural and nontoxic lifestyle, you can transform your home into a
sanctuary of health, comfort, and rejuvenation.
Author
Annie B. Bond is considered an authoritative voice on the natural lifestyle.
In her work and her books, she offers advice for creating a home that is in
harmony with the earth. Her insight and wisdom are a result of her struggles
with the aftereffects of two chemical poisoning accidents that left her
unable to function in the world as she knew it. Annie's experience with
chemical sensitivity has been a catalyst for change on two fronts -- in her
own life as she learned to create a healthy home without toxins and in the
lives of those whom she inspires to eliminate synthetic chemicals,
off-gassing products, and indoor air pollution in their homes.
Her journey toward health led to her first bestseller, Clean & Green, and
then to The Green Kitchen Handbook and Better Basics for the Home. Annie is
also an intuitive energy healer and dowser. She is the executive producer of
Care2.com's Healthy Living channel, editing six free e-newsletters that are
sent to 1.8 million subscribers; and she hosts Annie's Healthy Living
Network in Care2Connect, where she also posts a blog. Annie is also a
columnist for Body+Soul magazine. Visit her Web site at
www.homeenlightenment.com.
Reviews
"Home Enlightenment has the power to change the way we live and breathe. You
will feel healed -- and whole -- just by reading this book: It's a beautiful
thing. Annie B. Bond, mistress of the green household and expert on chemical
poisoning, gives us remedies for the toxins that ail us. She spells out the
ingredients for the good life and the illuminating benefits of sun and
candlelight, and she identifies the quiet needs of the everyday. Stockpile
copies of Home Enlightenment and give them to everyone you care about."
--Amy Goldman, advocate for agricultural biodiversity and author of two
books on heirloom vegetables: The Complete Squash and Melons for the
Passionate Grower
"Change is all about knowing what to change. We as a culture have much to
change, and it's always a question how we should make those changes. In a
style 'only Annie,' Annie opens the door to your home, reveals the
invisible, and helps you weave necessary change into everyday life. I have
followed Annie's sound advice for years."
--Jeffrey Hollender, president of Seventh Generation, Inc.
"Leave it to Annie B. Bond to create the ultimate healthy-home, living-well
guide with all the right ingredients -- soothing solutions, sensuality, and
a whole lot of good sense."
--Wendy Gordon, executive director of the Green Guide Institute and
publisher of The Green Guide
"This book is healing. It does the work of illustrating -- through our own
homes and our own backyards -- that nothing is separate from anything else
and that everything is interrelated and interdependent. Remembering this
would keep us all -- and our world -- a lot healthier."
--Frank Lipman, MD, author of Total Renewal: 7 Key Steps to Resilience,
Vitality, and Long-Term Health
"Well, if God is in the details, the gods must be applauding this immensely
practical and inspirational guidebook for house and home. From neurotoxins
to nail polish, off-gassing to the case for organics, Annie brings science
down to earth, showing ways to create personal as well as planetary health.
Give a copy of this indispensable encyclopedia to everyone you know, and
they'll bless you forever!"
--Jude Asphar, executive director of the Resurgence Association and former
editor of (Hearst's) Healthy Living magazine
"Annie Bond's Home Enlightenment is a marvelous manual of simple steps to
lead us to walk in beauty and be in harmony with all beings. It's a
must-read for anyone seeking to live a conscious life. My copy will be well
dog-eared."
--Reverend Betsy Stang, executive director of the Wittenberg Center for
Alternative Resources
"This is an essential encyclopedia of natural living from the best expert of
all, one who learned from experience. Annie Bond offers practical and fun
suggestions to a very important subject of creating a healthier environment
for the generations to come. I can already see changes I will make in my
life!"
--Christine Page, MD, author of Spiritual Alchemy: How to Transform Your
Life and lecturer in holistic health
"In Home Enlightenment, Annie gives us exactly what we need -- practical and
eminently useful information for bringing earth harmony into our busy,
everyday lives. She helps us see how our choices not only support our
personal health and well-being but also make a positive difference in life
on this sweet earth for all our relations."
--Brooke Medicine Eagle, earthkeeper, sacred ecologist, and author of
Buffalo Woman Comes Singing and The Last Ghost Dance
Excerpt
The following is an excerpt from the book Home Enlightenment
by Annie B. Bond
Published by Rodale; October 2005;$27.95US/$37.95CAN; 1-57954-811-3
Copyright © 2005 Annie B. Bond
Design a Blissful Bedroom
After reading a snippet about feng shui in a teen magazine, my daughter
entered her bedroom with the dictum she had read in mind: Keep only what you
love. She systematically removed everything she didn't love! The result is a
gem of a room -- all her own and perfect in every way for her unique self.
Ask yourself: What do you love? What do you want to keep in your bedroom?
What brings you a sense of calm? Which fabrics feel good to you? How do you
want to decorate?
Including earth's elements in the bedroom environment enhances the space
considerably. Do you like to sleep with fresh air? There is a joke in my
family that my mother can't sleep unless she has a gale-force wind blowing
through her bedroom. She could never sleep with closed windows. For many of
us, stuffy rooms don't feel as good as rooms full of fresh air, so provide
as much fresh air as you can and as the weather permits.
The earth element in the bedroom is a key component of restful sleep. I like
having all natural bedding that comes from the land and not from a factory,
and I want my bed to rest on a wooden floor. It makes me feel like I am
grounded when I sleep. The emotional watery element of dreams and intuition
has a place in the bedroom too, and dream journals help to foster a
connection to this world. And fire, of course, represents passion, light,
and heat. Be sure to have all four elements included in your bedroom for the
most peaceful rest and restorative sleep.
Pleasing the Senses
The general premise of the bedroom is that you want as little in it as
possible, and you want what you have there to be natural and clean. Renovate
or paint only when you can have the windows open for enough time to fully
air out the room from paint and chemical smells, and sleep elsewhere in the
meantime. You'll spend one-third of your life in your bedroom, so focus your
attention on making the room pleasurable.
Smell: What you smell when you sleep really matters. It makes the difference
between rest and restlessness. Most synthetic chemicals intrude on your
sleep by stimulating the central nervous system, often interrupting your
rest with tension and agitation. It's better to have a tranquil sleep with
soothing smells, such as fresh air from an open window or pure air from a
clean, simply furnished room accented with natural materials.
Smells to avoid in the bedroom can include synthetic mattresses; carpet,
paint, or stain; cleaning products such as furniture polish; clothes that
have been dry-cleaned; moth balls; and anything else with a strong smell.
Synthetic smells from mattresses can be subtle, but they can have a powerful
impact with their blend of fire retardants, stain-resistant solvents, and
pesticides.
Dry-cleaned clothes can be a serious hazard in the bedroom. The cleaning
solvents used can waft through your bedroom, exposing you to powerful
neurotoxins while you sleep. My advice is to purchase natural-fiber clothing
that doesn't require dry-cleaning, of course. That may not always be
possible though, so switch to having your clothes wet cleaned, or hang the
newly dry-cleaned clothes outside for a few days before bringing them into a
bedroom closet. If you'd like to be especially vigilant, never bring
dry-cleaned clothes into a bedroom; hang them, instead, in a closet far away
from the sleeping areas. I personally never dry-clean anything; the solvents
are terrible for the earth, for those who work in dry-cleaning
establishments, and for humans and pets.
Even the natural materials in your bedroom are best if they are as inert as
possible. For example, fresh pine has a smell that could interfere with
restful sleep, as can a houseplant if the soil is a bit mildewed or
waterlogged. Smells that interfere with a relaxing sleep may seem so
commonplace that you may not think about them, like the fragrance from a
perfume bottle or the scented detergent that lingers on your sheets. It's
best to wash laundry with an unscented detergent. The less you smell when
you sleep, the better.
Some smells in the bedroom don't originate there. For example, fumes in the
air may be a result of pesticides used elsewhere or may mean your oil burner
needs tuning. Take the appropriate steps to avoid or clear away sources of
pollution.
Sound: Natural noises are welcome to many of us. Going to sleep in August
with the racket of crickets or waking up at dawn to the call of a wood
thrush is something that's comforting to me, but it may bother you. The bird
song before dawn in the summer in New York's Hudson Valley is enough to wake
the dead, and many complain about it. One family I know has fans in each
room so the entire family can drown out nature. "It sounds like a jet engine
going through the house," the father of four noted to me. Each to their own
choices! Even fans whirling or sirens and traffic in New York City can be
harmonious if it is what you like and are used to.
I feel that you should turn off technological noise (white noise) when you
go to sleep. White noise is any random noise that contains an equal amount
of energy per frequency band and is generated by computers, TVs, and even
white noisemakers. In simple terms, you could identify white noise as a
drone or hum. Turn off the TV or the computer if either is in your bedroom.
White noise can entrain your own rhythms, and that is not what you would
want for deep, restful, healing sleep.
I like surrounding my sleeping environment with as much natural sound as I
can manage. An indoor water fountain is one way to add harmonious, soothing,
natural sounds to your nights. Water falling is a medley of tone colors and
natural harmonies, and it can keep out unwelcome sounds, such as traffic and
pedestrian noise. Compare that with a computer droning incessantly with no
variation in tone or pitch.
The sound of your alarm clock is often the first sound you hear in the
morning. I have been looking for a mellow-sounding alarm clock -- something
that will wake me up with crashing ocean waves or quiet music; instead, I
have one that sounds as if the fire alarm is going off. A pleasant-sounding
alarm clock can help start off your day with more equilibrium. A radio alarm
clock that awakens me to the news is not for me simply because the news is
so often sensationalist and geared toward provoking fear. That's not a way
that I want to start my day.
Sight: Our natural circadian body rhythm is determined by the light of day
and the dark of night. Some people have trouble sleeping because they don't
receive enough natural light during the day, and consequently, their systems
don't turn off at night. Others don't get enough true darkness at night to
fully activate their body rhythms, an increasing problem for those who live
in well-lit cities like New York.
Managing these light issues, as well as coordinating the light we receive
with the sleep we need, is something most of us have to think through at
some point. What parent of a young child hasn't contemplated long and hard
the value of window shades when their young child wakes up with the first
light of dawn? When you invest in window treatments, find a type that
doesn't collect dust (like swags), and choose a simple, clean look with
materials that are easily cleaned. Blinds are now made from untreated
natural products, such as natural grasses, bamboo, and woods, and can be
cleaned easily with a damp cloth. Natural-fiber curtains may appeal to you.
Just make sure your window treatments don't have an odor. I live in the
country, without streetlights or surrounding buildings, and I find that I
get the sleep I need regardless of the natural light. As a result, I don't
have any curtains at all because I don't need them for privacy. This
minimalist approach works even for my teenage daughter.
Color is a treat for the eye, and the color of your bedroom should feel
restful and conducive to harmony and quiet. The bedroom is also an intimate
room, and you want it to be pleasing. Blue is often chosen for bedrooms and
meditation rooms because blue's cool energy is calming, restful, peaceful,
and spiritual. Blue helps inspire quiet meditation and soothes you to sleep.
Color therapy with blue has been found to reduce blood pressure.
Green might be a good second choice for a bedroom color because it is
naturally restful (imagine the landscape in early spring as the trees are
budding). It also has a vibrancy about it, so if you go with green, make
sure it is a light green. Some red touches add sensuality, but don't overdo
red in the bedroom because it can be exhausting and too energizing. I
recommend white ceilings because they reflect light and brighten any room.
Lighting has a few important purposes in the bedroom -- for reading in bed,
for finding clothes in a closet, and for giving you a sense of safety and
security. I like sleeping in the deep dark, my daughter likes to have her
door open and the bathroom light on to banish any images from her
imagination, and my elderly mother always needs a night light to help her
feel confident that she won't fall. While light for sleeping is an
individual matter, be sure there is good lighting for reading in bed.
Reading before sleep is a genuine pleasure, and good lighting lessens the
strain on your eyes.
Touch: The amount of enjoyment we get from our skin touching the covers is
determined by the sensual, soft feel of our bedding fabrics. Clean, soft,
and even silky sheets are as seductive against the skin as anything man-made
could ever be. Feather beds -- cloudlike cushions that are placed on the
mattress under the bottom sheet -- are heavenly.
The ideal bedroom temperature for deep sleep is between 55º and 68ºF. During
the winter, place hot water bottles in the bed before crawling under the
covers to make the bed a welcoming, cozy place. My friend Pat places a hot
water bottle in her kids' beds when they're sick. To me, that one small
gesture shows how loving and nurturing a mother she is!
Being cool in the summer is just as important as being warm in the winter.
Sleeping with moisture-absorbing sheets in the summer helps to keep you from
feeling clammy from perspiration during the night. Light flax linen is a
particularly cool and inviting fabric for summer, although it is expensive
(try saving money by finding used linen sheets at estate sales).
How important is your choice of fabric for bedding? Very important! I recall
reading about a study that compared the heart rates of those sleeping under
wool versus polyester, and they reported that the heart rate is lower when
sleeping under wool. On a scale from 1 to 10 (with 10 being wonderful), rate
how you feel in the morning when you wake up. Keep improving your bedroom
environment until you have a full 10.
Your Sixth Sense: Once you have accomplished many of the tasks required to
have a nontoxic and uncluttered bedroom, take some time to sit in there and
absorb how it feels. Open your intuitive mind to give you information about
the room's comfort level.
Reprinted from: Home Enlightenment: Practical, Earth-Friendly Advice for
Creating a Nurturing, Healthy, and Toxin-Free Home and Lifestyle by Annie
B. Bond © 2005 Annie B. Bond. Permission granted by Rodale, Inc., Emmaus,
PA 18098. Available wherever books are sold or directly from the publisher
by calling (800) 848-4735 or visit their website at www.rodalestore.com.