Chemicals in Bath Products
I do not enjoy using certain soaps and conditioners on the market because I can feel them cut the grease on my body, and then I recognize the effects of the -ol molecule as it *enters my body* through eyes, mouth, nose, and I can feel it as it 'cuts the grease' inside my kidneys.
It is a very unpleasant experience. The agents in the bathroom products are quite pervasive. They probably are associated with certain kinds of semi-hormonal or pre-hormonal chemical messengers, to produce an addictive emotional feeling or other neurological or chemical function.
The same story can be told of certain chemical smell agents and perfumes, some colognes. They are alcohol based and have agents that dissolve in alcohol. These enter the body as aerosol through the lungs, eyes, or nose, and produce chemical chain reactions inside the body that are unnatural and unpleasant if you can detect them. Many do not have the perception to feel subtle effects inside their own body.
These products, and the body and mind itself, should be studied without overarching commercialism which seeks to dominate the mind and body. If we medically understood the workings of the body and mind as advertisers and chemical engineers working for commercial organizations understand them, which the FDA and ADA likely do not encourage, we would leap ahead 200 years in medical science and psychology.
It is a very unpleasant experience. The agents in the bathroom products are quite pervasive. They probably are associated with certain kinds of semi-hormonal or pre-hormonal chemical messengers, to produce an addictive emotional feeling or other neurological or chemical function.
The same story can be told of certain chemical smell agents and perfumes, some colognes. They are alcohol based and have agents that dissolve in alcohol. These enter the body as aerosol through the lungs, eyes, or nose, and produce chemical chain reactions inside the body that are unnatural and unpleasant if you can detect them. Many do not have the perception to feel subtle effects inside their own body.
These products, and the body and mind itself, should be studied without overarching commercialism which seeks to dominate the mind and body. If we medically understood the workings of the body and mind as advertisers and chemical engineers working for commercial organizations understand them, which the FDA and ADA likely do not encourage, we would leap ahead 200 years in medical science and psychology.